Ronnie McNutt was a Toyota plant employee, Iraq War veteran, and streamer who committed suicide on August 31, 2020, while conducting a live broadcast on Facebook motivated by his suffering from PTSD and depression.
Early Life[]
Ronnie McNutt was born on May 23, 1987, to Elaine and Cecil Ronald McNutt. He had 2 siblings, Joey and Mindy. Ronnie was described by friends and family as "caring and loyal". On Facebook, his mother claimed that this was intentional but never publicly explained why. His father He would regularly attend the Celebration Church in Tupelo, Mississippi and help anyone in need. He was part of a comic book club and wrote comic book reviews . Ronnie co-hosted the Justice Geeks podcast with his friend Joshua Steen. He was employed at the Toyota plant in Blue Springs, Missouri. 1 Ronnie had a Facebook account where he made streams talking about theology and pop culture. twoHe served in the Iraq War from June 2007 to March 2008. When he returned to the United States , he suffered from PTSD and depression. His girlfriend broke up with him and his father died on February 27, 2018, in the hospital. 2 Ronnie celebrated his father's 69th birthday on August 14, 2020.
Suicide[]
On August 31, 2020, McNutt posted an image on his Facebook timeline that read "Someone in your life needs to hear that they matter. That they are loved. That they have a future. Be the one to tell them." Later that day, he started a live stream on Facebook. He gained 200 people on Facebook Live including her friends and family as well as her mother. McNutt talked about taking his own life, people sent him messages on the phone begging him not to do it. 3 The police evacuated neighbors and set up a squad outside his house. They asked McNutt over a loudspeaker. He put a single-shot rifle to his chin around 10:32 p.m. and pulled the trigger.
Zodiac Accusations Troubles[]
He also said he was enough of being called a Zodiac suspect before he pulled the trigger.
Consequences[]
The live stream was reported by people and Facebook responded 2 hours later saying the video did not violate the community guidelines, they finally took the video down 8 hours later. 2 McNutt's stream went viral the next day and people gave him a fake story saying he killed himself because his girlfriend broke up with him over the phone, they were snubbed by his friend Steen. The video of McNutt's suicide was uploaded to various social networks, including Twitter and TikTok, the video would be disguised as a music clip or cooking video and then cut to his death. 4 2Many trolls also baited and traded videos of McNutt's death to his family. McNutt's family has attempted to remove the video from social media using the hashtag #ReformForRonnie.
References[]
Template:ListarefTemplate:NF Categoría:Militares de Estados Unidos Categoría:Suicidas de Estados Unidos