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This post deals with the subject of suicide and domestic violence and may be triggering for some readers.
Michelle Carter was 20-years-old when she was convicted for involuntary manslaughter after she coerced her boyfriend Conrad Roy to end his life.
After thousands of texts between the pair were examined in court, it was determined that Carter played a significant role in Roy’s death.
“I think your parents know you’re in a really bad place. I’m not saying they want you to do it but I honestly feel like they can accept it,” she texted her 18-year-old boyfriend, Conrad Roy.
On July 13, 2014, Roy’s body was discovered in his truck in a Kmart carpark in Massachusetts.
The story of Michelle Carter and Conrad Roy is the subject of HBO’s new documentary, I Love You, Now Die: The Commonwealth vs. Michelle Carter, directed and produced by Erin Lee Carr.
Watch the trailer for HBO’s documentary ‘I Love You, Now Die’ below. Post continues after video.
The documentary is divided into two parts: the prosecution and the defence. Here are three pieces of information we learnt from the second half of ‘I Love You, Now Die’.
Conrad Roy’s family life
Mattapoisett police officer Dennis Tavares spoke during the trial, recounting attending to the Roy family household after Conrad Roy had been “physically assaulted”, subsequently seeing his father, also named Conrad Roy, be arrested.