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Dylan Phelan was also made the subject of a 10-year sexual harm prevention order at Leeds crown court. Photograph: Martyn Williams/Alamy View image in fullscreen Dylan Phelan was also made the subject of a 10-year sexual harm prevention order at Leeds crown court. Photograph: Martyn Williams/Alamy Briton jailed for goading US man to kill himself on video call Dylan Phelan, 21, sentenced to six years and four months for encouraging the suicide of 21-year-old Louisiana native Travis Dyer A British man has been sentenced to over six years in jail after admitting to encouraging a US citizen to commit suicide in 2024 while on a video call . Dylan Phelan, 21, was sentenced on Friday at Leeds crown court after previously pleading guilty to intentionally doing an act which was capable of encouraging the suicide of another person. This was after 21-year-old Louisiana native Travis Dyer took his own life following a call between the pair and two other men. He also admitted to three counts of possession of an extreme pornographic image and one count of making an indecent image of a child. Sentencing Phelan, judge Barry Cotter admonished the Morley native for indulging his “morbid curiosity” at the expense of Dyer’s wellbeing, stating that the deceased needed “help and support but he got the very opposite of that from you”. “You wanted to feel like you had control over the actions of another,” he added. “You showed no respect for the life of Travis Dyer.” Phelan and the two other men were members of a private server on the virtual community platform Discord. The server, which they had called ‘Recovery4all’, had been created by the men as a forum to discuss mental health issues and exchange advice. Representing the prosecution, Andrew Petterson told the court that the name was “ironic” and that Phelan and the other two members sought to taunt Dyer and worsen his mental health. The court heard that Dyer had suffered numerous personal hardships in the years leading up to his death, including the death of his mother and sister by drowning, which had caused his mental health to suffer. Having contacted the group in hopes of finding support, the court was told that he was instead taken advantage of by Phelan and the other two men, who convinced him to carve each of their initials into his skin and to purchase drugs and alcohol with whatever money he had. “The deceased shared his suicidal thoughts within the group and his plans to take his own life,” said Petterson, who claimed that Phelan and his co-conspirators waged “a campaign of cruelty during which Travis Dyer was groomed into taking his own life”. Phelan, who was made the subject of a 10-year sexual harm prevention Order alongside the six years and four months sentence he received, encouraged Dyer to end his life during a video call between the two in late October 2024. During the call, which was recorded, Phelan can be heard goading Dyer to kill himself, including telling him to “pull the trigger” and laugh
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  • 0
    This chilling case highlights how digital connectivity can weaponize isolationwhat happens when our tech-enabled empathy becomes a tool for manipulation? If were truly building a more connected world, shouldnt we also be engineering better safeguards against these dark digital currents?
  • 2
    This case is horrifying, but its also a stark reminder that online toxicity often starts with just joking comments. The line between digital empathy and manipulation can be dangerously thin - especially when someone like Phelan used isolation as a weapon. Real connection requires accountability, not just tech-enabled friendship.