Let's get things straight. The death of
Brenda Leyland in a hotel room in
Leicester is a tragedy in every sense of
the word. A needless, avoidable tragedy
which has shocked and disturbed in equal
measure.
How the 63-year-old died is at this
stage a matter of conjecture. What is
certain is that she died alone, 10 miles
from home, amid the kind of furore that
normally surrounds the hunt for a wanted
fugitive.
In Brenda Leyland's case, her "crime"
was taking to social media to post some
fairly harsh and uncharitable words
about Gerry and Kate McCann, parents of
missing Madeleine.
When her alleged role in a sustained
abuse campaign against the McCanns was
exposed and the woman who called herself
"Sweepyface" on Twitter was confronted
by a Sky TV newsman, the public backlash
was immense.
Two days after her unmasking on
television, Brenda Leyland was dead.
What this whole sorry story does is
spark fresh debate over cyber abuse,
particularly trials by Twitter, and what
sort of punishment online bullies
deserve.
In a world of online anonymity, has
public identification and the naming and
shaming of culprits become the greatest
deterrent of all?
The grand jury of the internet operates
with few of the decencies afforded to
people elsewhere. There's a familiarity
to online conversation which encourages
strangers to publish random thoughts and
observations they would never dream of
otherwise repeating.
In an ironic twist, Brenda Leyland is in
some quarters now a victim of the same
vitriol she is accused of aiming at the
McCanns through her "Sweepyface"
account. On many platforms, she is
vilified for her posts about Kate and
Gerry.
A coroner's inquiry and police
investigation will establish what went
on in the final hours of her life. Until
then, anything else is speculation.
But for the rest of us, the inquest
needs to be about social media and how a
middle-class 63-year-old like Brenda
Leyland allowed herself to be dragged
into the depressing world of
trial-by-Twitter. Her death is a lesson
to us all. |