<b>Florida Teen Live-Streams His Suicide Online</b>
<b>Abraham Biggs, 19, Was Egged On by Fellow Bloggers, Cops Say</b>
<b>By EMILY FRIEDMAN</b>
Nov. 21, 2008
112 commentsFONT SIZE [![http://a.abcnews.com/assets/images/font-sm_off.gif](http://a.abcnews.com/assets/images/font-sm_off.gif)](javascript:void(0);) [![http://a.abcnews.com/assets/images/font-md_on.gif](http://a.abcnews.com/assets/images/font-md_on.gif)](javascript:void(0);) [![http://a.abcnews.com/assets/images/font-lg_off.gif](http://a.abcnews.com/assets/images/font-lg_off.gif)](javascript:void(0);) [EMAIL](http://app.abcnews.go.com/sendtofriend/SendToFriend?id=6306126) [PRINT](http://abcnews.go.com/print?id=6306126) [SHARE](http://www.addthis.com/bookmark.php) [RSS](http://my.abcnews.go.com/rsspublic/scitech_rss20.xml) A Florida teenager who used a webcam to live-stream his suicide Wednesday was reportedly encouraged by other people on the Web site, authorities told ABCNews.com.
"People were egging him on and saying things like ‘go ahead and do it, faggot,’ said Wendy Crane, an investigator at the Broward County Medical Examiner’s office.
Abraham Biggs, 19, of Pembroke Pines, Fla., had been blogging on an online body-building message board and had linked to his page on Justin.tv, a live video streaming Web site, where the camera rolled as he overdosed on prescription pills, according to Crane.
Biggs, who had reportedly been discussing hissuicide on the forums, also posted a suicide note on a body-building forum, which has since been taken down, in which he wrote, “I hate myself and I hate living.”
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“I have let everyone down and I feel as though I will never change or never improve,” Biggs wrote in the posting. “I am in love with a girl and I know that I am not good enough for her. I have come to believe that my life has all been meaningless. I keep trying and I keep failing. I have thought about and attempted suicide many times in the past.”
The video and blog postings have since been removed from the sites, but Crane, who has seen both, said that at first viewers thought the suicide was a hoax.
“The bloggers said that Biggs had threatened to kill himself before and had faked it, so at first they didn’t believe him,” said Crane. “Gradually, as you read the blog further into the day the bloggers start commenting on how Biggs isn’t moving.”
Crane said comments on the thread included an exchange about whether the image of Biggs’ motionless body was a still photograph or a video, and eventually resulted in one of the site’s visitors calling the police, who tracked down the teen through his computer IP address.
According to Wired magazine, online viewers watching the video ranged from “OMG” – Internet slang for oh my god – and LOL – an abbreviation for laughing out loud.