Mother of Amanda Todd, victim of cyberbully, frustrated by Dutch sentencing delay
RICHMOND, B.C. — The mother of Amanda Todd, the British Columbia teenager who took her own life after years of cyberbullying and sextortion by a man from the Netherlands, said the latest delay at a Dutch court has added to her “never-ending story.”
Carol Todd said she hoped to learn the court had converted a 13-year Canadian sentence imposed on Aydin Coban in B.C. last fall, after he was convicted of harassment and extortion in the relentless online stalking before the 2012 death of her daughter.
“Justice for Amanda is still important, and still very much needed in order to close that chapter for not only me, but for everybody in the world who has followed her story,” Todd told reporters at the Vancouver International Airport Thursday.
The conversion would have integrated Coban’s Canadian sentence into a Dutch prison term imposed earlier for similar crimes.