Selfies are narcissistic, often unnecessary and, now, apparently fatal.
A woman was murdered at the weekend, allegedly by her ex, after posting a selfie with her new boyfriend to Facebook.
A News Limited story – originally published under the title ‘Selfie that led to fatal stabbing’ – says police claim the selfie was the “catalyst” for the brutal stabbing in suburban Townsville.
Dane Andrew Pilcher, 36, has been charged with murdering his ex-girlfriend, 32-year-old Corinne Henderson.
The former soldier allegedly broke into her Idalia apartment on Saturday night and fatally stabbed Ms Henderson.
Police allege Pilcher became jealous after Ms Henderson uploaded a selfie on Saturday showing her with her new boyfriend at the Townsville Cup races.
And the reports say police believe that selfie “led to a fatal stabbing”.
But a selfie didn’t kill Ms Henderson and implying she is responsible for her own tragic demise because of her choice to publicly display her happiness is just plain wrong.
This victim-blaming teeters dangerously close to suggesting the legal defence of provocation applies in this situation.
Related: Selfies kill more people every year than shark attacks do.
The defence – which still stands in South Australia, Queensland and New South Wales – allows violent men to have their murder charge reduced to manslaughter by claiming they were ‘provoked’ by the victim.