A 19-year-old Canadian beaten to death live on Facebook.

B00Mer

Keep Calm and Carry On
Sep 6, 2008
44,800
7,297
113
Rent Free in Your Head
www.getafteritmedia.com
Teen girls allegedly post Facebook video of brutal beating that killed high school student [WARNING: DISTURBING CONTENT]



A 19-year-old Canadian high school student was allegedly beaten to death by teenage girls who livestreamed a video o of the brutal attack. The video is reportedly still circulating on Facebook despite a request from the victim’s family to remove it.

According to CBC News, Serena McKay, 19, was killed Sunday night what the Royal Canadian Mountain police have ruled a homicide. Two teenage girls, ages 16 and 17, have reportedly been arrested in connection to her death.

MTO News published a link to a video believed to have captured a portion of the alleged attack, which is included below:

WARNING: Video contains graphic violence and disturbing images

McKay was reportedly a student at Sagkeeng Anicinabe High School, as were the alleged attackers. The school principal Claude Guimond told CBC News that McKay was set to graduate this year, and told the news outlet he had watched the brutal video.

After seeing what I saw on the video, you know what? There’s nobody in their right mind [that] would do something like that, unless they were extremely high on whatever and just totally, like, out of it.



While police are reviewing the video as part of the death investigation, they have not confirmed the victim in the video is McKay.


source

They beat her to death, they don't deserve to be shielded because of their youth. And BTW, they have rotten parents who had no idea how to raise children. Those girls deserve life in prison.

This is becoming the NORM on Facebook

Facebook...the New soft Ogrish....when such videos make it to FB, even before they make it to LL, you know something is changing.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
35,811
3,031
113
RCMP reviewing video of alleged beating that killed Manitoba First Nation teen
THE CANADIAN PRESS
First posted: Wednesday, April 26, 2017 04:44 PM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, April 26, 2017 04:51 PM EDT
SAGKEENG FIRST NATION, Man. — The killing of a 19-year-old high school student and a graphic video believed to be linked to the death has shocked a small Manitoba First Nation that has seen more than its share of tragedy.
RCMP said Wednesday they were reviewing the video circulating on social media to determine whether it was indeed connected to the death on the Sagkeeng reserve, 120 kilometres northeast of Winnipeg.
They also said they had arrested two girls, 16 and 17 years old, on charges of second-degree murder.
RCMP would not identify the victim, but community members said she was Serena McKay. The two accused cannot be identified under the Youth Criminal Justice Act.
All three were students at the Sagkeeng Anicinabe High School, said principal Claude Guimond.
“We’re not a very big school. We only have about 220 students here ... and all three of the students in the video, I know them personally and it was hard to take,” Guimond said.
“Tuesday we had a healing ceremony for our students and staff ... and one of the recurring things that came out was how social media — Facebook, you know — made things even worse by people reposting the video.”
The video shows a young woman lying bloodied on the ground and barely conscious as she is repeatedly kicked and punched in the head. It appears to have been taken on a cellphone. Female and male voices can be heard.
McKay is the woman being attacked in the video, Guimond said.
RCMP would only say the victim’s body was found Sunday night, near a home in Sagkeeng, about two hours after she was reported missing to the detachment in the neighbouring town of Powerview.
Counsellors were brought in this week to help students and staff at the school deal with the death. A vigil was planned for the community on Thursday evening.
Sagkeeng, a community of some 3,000 residents, was also the home of 15-year-old Tina Fontaine, whose body was pulled from the Red River in Winnipeg in 2014. She had left Sagkeeng just two months earlier. Her father, Eugene Fontaine, was beaten to death on the reserve three years earlier.
The small community has seen several other cases of missing and murdered indigenous women, including 17-year-old Fonessa Bruyere, who was killed in Winnipeg in 2007.
Guimond said gang activity and drug use have encroached on the community from the city.
“Over the last 10 years, what I’ve noticed is that more and more of the gang influence is filtering on to the reserve from Winnipeg,” Guimond said.
“With gang activity comes drug trafficking and stuff like that, and that’s what’s killing our youth here.”
Sagkeeng Chief Derrick Henderson said everyone is trying to come to terms with the latest death.
“It’s been tragic and it’s pretty sombre right now.”
— By Steve Lambert in Winnipeg
Serena McKay. (Facebook)

RCMP reviewing video of alleged beating that killed Manitoba First Nation teen |