Girl Tries to Kill Family; Sheriff's Office Blames…Slender Man?

Slender Man, Slender Man/Does whatever a Slender canEarlier this month, a Florida
teenager tried to burn down her family’s home while her mother and
brother were inside it. Here’s how ABC News opened its
story
on the crime:

A 14-year-old girl was arrested after allegedly setting
her family’s house on fire in what authorities suspect is the
latest case of Slender Man-inspired violence.

Slender Man is a character in a variety of online stories,
films, and games. This past spring, two girls stabbed a classmate
as part of a bizarre plan to prove the fictional creature was real.
It was the sort of crime that gets a lot of press attention because
of how singularly strange it is. But many reporters seemed to think
it was not a weird one-off but a harbinger of a new trend, and a
short burst of Slender Man
media hysteria
followed, with journalists attempting to link
the mythical monster to a variety of crimes. Even Jerad and Amanda
Miller’s
shooting spree
in Las Vegas got
roped in
, on the grounds that Jerad, who made money by dressing
up as various characters and posing for photos, had been known to
wear a Slender Man costume.

So what’s the supposed Slender Man connection in the new story?
Here’s how one local outlet, WFLA-TV,
covered the arson
:

Detectives say the girl told them that she decided to
set the home on fire while reading the online book “Soul Eater,”
which made her upset about past bullying and her mother
disciplining her. The teen sprayed a rum and bleach mixture onto a
towel and bed sheet that she put on the floor of the family’s
garage. She then set them on fire and walked out of the garage,
according to an arrest affidavit….

The teen had also visited sites related to The Slender Man,
according to investigators. She admitted to using the websites
Creepypasta.com and SoulEater.com, which are associated with The
Slender Man.

From this, it sounds like she felt she decided to kill her
family because she felt mistreated—not an unusual motive for this
sort of crime. Apparently Soul Eater (described here as an
“online book,” though she was probably actually referring to
this
anime and manga series) played a role in her thought process.
And…

And that’s it. She also “admitted” to “using” (which I assume
means “reading”) Creepypasta.com, a vast depository of
online horror stories that is “associated with The [sic] Slender
Man” in the sense that he is one of the many characters one might
encounter there. But I’m not sure why that’s relevant.
(“SoulEater.com” does not appear to exist.)

So how did we get the idea that Slender Man might have inspired
the fire? Is this leap something the press did on its own, or was
it following someone else’s lead?

Here’s ABC News again:

“She had visited the website that contains a lot of the
Slender Man information and stories,” Eddie Daniels of the Pasco
Sheriff’s Office told ABC News. “It would be safe to say there is a
connection to that.”

Ah.

A few more piece of press coverage before we go. While WFLA
mentions Slender Man without offering a reason to think he’s
connected to the crime, and while ABC News puts Slender Man in its
lede but at least uses conditional language, The New York
Post
‘s
headline
 claims forthrightly that the arsonist was
“obsessed” with Slender Man. (The text of the Post piece
offers nothing to support this.)
Gawker
,
BuzzFeed
, the New York
Daily News
, and
The Daily Mail
use the word “obsessed” as well; the only
evidence of obsession that any of them offer are that she wrote
about the character and posted about him on Facebook.
And this
outlet
lays blame squarely on the fictional monster’s
shoulders:

The first 10 words of the article are “Slender Man has inspired
another act of teenage violence.” Well, he’s certainly inspiring
something.

[Via
Infocult
.]

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