Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
International

US Teen Accidentally Shoots Himself Dead Live On Instagram

IANS, 18 Apr, 2017 01:28 PM
    A 13-year-old boy accidentally shot and killed himself live on Instagram as his friends watched in horror. Malachi Hemphill of Forest Park, Georgia, was found unconscious by his mother Shaniqua Stephens and her daughter after they heard a loud bang from his bedroom.
     
    "I heard a big boom. I couldn't tell if it was a gunshot or what. I just knew that it was something that was wrong," the boy's mother Shaniqua Stephens told WXIA-TV.
     
    She and her daughter ran upstairs and found him. 
     
    "We kicked in the door. We found him just laying there in a pool of blood," Stephens recounted.
     
    "My daughter screamed and said, 'Mom turn his phone off!' As I proceeded to look at his phone he was on Instagram Live," she said.
     
    Hemphill was live on the social media site Instagram handling the gun when it went off. He was rushed to Grady Hospital where he died.
     
    "This is just a pain that will never go away. He was my only son. He was just 13. Just the thought of me seeing him on the floor will never leave my brain," she said.
     
     
    Stephens said it was an accident and not an intentional suicide.
    Several of his friends were watching when the shooting happened last Monday. Stephens said they rushed to her house afterward.
     
     
    "There was about 40 to 50 kids outside. I guess these were the kids that were watching on live in the area. I guess when it happened they just ran over here," she said.
     
    She has been told that someone asked why he did not have a clip in the gun and told him to put a clip in the gun. 
     
    "As he put the clip in the gun, that is when the gun went off," Stephens said.
     
    Stephens, however, was not completely sure how Malachi got the gun. She was told he got the gun from a friend who got it from someone else.
     
    She said it was hard to keep track of his activities on social media even though she and her husband Ernest monitored his profiles often.
     
    She said she hopes parents get the message to keep a vigilant eye on what children are doing and who they are doing it with.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    B.C. To Announce Latest Numbers Around Illicit Drug Overdose Deaths

    B.C. To Announce Latest Numbers Around Illicit Drug Overdose Deaths
    The number of fatalities in the province last year reached 755 up until the beginning of December, following a record-breaking 128 deaths in November.

    B.C. To Announce Latest Numbers Around Illicit Drug Overdose Deaths

    18 Million More Uninsured If Obamacare Killed, Not Replaced

    18 Million More Uninsured If Obamacare Killed, Not Replaced
    Spotlighting potential perils for Republicans, the report immediately became a flashing hazard light for this year's effort by Donald Trump and GOP lawmakers to annul Obama's law and — in a more complicated challenge — institute their own alternative.

    18 Million More Uninsured If Obamacare Killed, Not Replaced

    Canadians Travellers Appear Undeterred By Fatal Shooting In Mexico

    Canadians Travellers Appear Undeterred By Fatal Shooting In Mexico
    Canadian travellers and expats appear undeterred by a fatal shooting at the popular Mexican resort town of Playa del Carmen this week, saying the area remains safe despite what they consider an isolated tragedy.

    Canadians Travellers Appear Undeterred By Fatal Shooting In Mexico

    Pakistani Mom Promised Her Daughter A Wedding Reception. Instead, She Burned Her Alive

    Pakistani Mom Promised Her Daughter A Wedding Reception. Instead, She Burned Her Alive
    Zeenat Rafiq had been married to her husband for just one week when her mother showed up at the couple's home in June offering to throw them a wedding celebration.

    Pakistani Mom Promised Her Daughter A Wedding Reception. Instead, She Burned Her Alive

    Indian-Americans Get 1% Representation In US Congress: Forbes

    Indian-Americans Get 1% Representation In US Congress: Forbes
    Indian Americans, who comprise around one per cent of the US population, now for the first-time ever also make up one per cent of the US Congress.

    Indian-Americans Get 1% Representation In US Congress: Forbes

    Microsoft's Satya Nadella Not Nervous Of Donald Trump

    US President-elect Donald Trump does not make India-born Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella nervous, and he is confident about the tech giant's place as a job creator.

    Microsoft's Satya Nadella Not Nervous Of Donald Trump