9-year-old death blamed on video games

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A 9-year-old wrestling fan jumped off his Brooklyn apartment roof wearing a homemade parachute in a fatal imitation of his favorite video game character, friends said.

The broken body of Damori Miles was found on the ground outside the Albany Houses about 7 p.m. Tuesday.

Wrapped around his body was the string and plastic bag he used for the parachute, police sources said. The boy died at Interfaith Medical Center an hour later.

"It's terrible. The kids try to imitate what they see and they think they can fly," said family friend Sumore Murrel, 29.

The third-grader was supposed to have a Tuesday night play date with Murrel's two children, Shakar, 11, and Kevin, 9, but never showed. "His older sister came knocking on the door looking for him at 7:30. She had no idea he was dead. None of us did," Murrel said.

It turned out the boy, who received special education instruction, had left his 10th floor apartment and walked up to the Crown Heights building's roof.

Shakar, Damori's best friend, said his pal was imitating his favorite PlayStation2 game, "WWE SmackDown vs Raw."

"He tried to do a swan dive like Jeff Harding does in 'SmackDown.' That was his favorite game. He played it all the time," Shakar said.

"That was what he was trying to do. If I would have seen him up there, I would have told him not to do it."

The roof door was open Wednesday morning, and the alarm that should have gone off was broken, neighbors said.

"I was sitting inside and I heard a thump. I looked out my window and saw the boy on the ground. He was on his back and his clothes were ripped off," said Chiquita Jones, 25.

"The door to the roof should have been locked. Damori didn't have to die."

Damori's mother told detectives she went to the store and returned to find her son on the ground, police sources said.

The tragedy prompted Murrel to rethink whether her kids can play the wrestling games.

"I need to keep a better eye on what they are playing or watching. Kids are so impressionable," she said.

Robert Zimmerman, a spokesman for World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE), said the video was designed for ages 13 and up and none of the characters use parachutes or jump off buildings.

"The death of Damori Miles is a tragedy and our condolences go out to his family," he said. "We should allow the authorities to conduct a full investigation... including insecure roof access, before conclusions are made about this unfortunate incident."

source

*sigh* it's not the game people, it's the dumb*** parents who can't teacher their kids right.
 
Just one of those incidents that should not have happened. And folks always encourage others not to try stunts like that on television.
 
Stupidity.
It seems to be contagious now-a-days.
 
You know, I am kinda pissed at this, first off

"The door to the roof should have been locked." - Hmm, close the door, lock the door, problem solved.

Number two, you see the rating on the game, use it bitch, its what its there for. and if you dont, explain that those things arent real, or they are very dangerous. Ugh
 
Hmhmhm, Kids have been trying to fly forever, video games, TVs, computers, heck even books(as we know then) haven't been around as long as kids have tryed to jump off of something and fly... It's not video games, it's human nature.
 
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