
Top Massachusetts attorneys have mixed opinions about the involuntary manslaughter conviction of Michelle Carter, but they agree on one thing the ruling has caused a seismic shift in the intersection of technology and the law.
The decision will be shaping the way that future prosecutors handle these types of cases, said Boston-based criminal defense lawyer Joseph Simons.
Michelle Carter, then 17, told her 18-year-old boyfriend Conrad Roy III to get back in his truck as it filled with carbon monoxide in 2014. Judge Lawrence Moniz found Friday that Carters instructions constituted wanton and reckless conduct.
Judge Moniz may have set a dangerous precedent with his decision, said longtime Quincy, Mass. attorney Bob Harnais.
You open up the door to a direction where words now can amount to weapons, this is absolutely all new territory Harnais said.
Is she a criminal because she didnt talk him out of it? Thats a big jump, Harnais said.
Another Massachusetts defense lawyer, J. Drew Segadelli, applauded the judge for his careful consideration of Carters damning text message to Roy to get back in the vehicle.
That was his lynchpin where he indicated that the behavior was wanton, hes inferring intentional, and as such he found her guilty, Segadelli said.
Local attorney Kevin Reddington, who was in the courtroom when the judge read his verdict, said the judge gave a very well reasoned decision that is consistent with the law.
Reddington predicted that an appeal will be an uphill battle because the states highest court has already ruled that Carter was virtually if not physically present at her boyfriends suicide through her text messages and phone calls.
If the decision is upheld the first-of-its kind case will have major national ramifications, Reddington said.