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The girl's death was headline news nationally Friday, with
#RIPAmanda trending across Twitter and the Amanda Michelle Todd memorial Facebook page garnering more than 30,000 "likes." Cyber-bullying experts and criminologists suggested laws be strengthened to allow police to trace cyber bullies through the Internet. British Premier Christy Clark posted a video on YouTube deploring the tragedy. Bullying "isn't a rite of passage," she said. "Bullying has to stop." The British Columbia gym where Amanda was a cheerleader posted a statement on its Facebook page. "I ask that we all watch her video and share her story so that her loss is not in vain," the statement read. "Allow this to be her legacy. Allow us to all look around and find the next Amanda before another precious spunky teenager is lost." Shock, sadness and recriminations poured out on a Facebook page devoted to her, with one signatory accusing others of having participated in the bullying. Irena Pochop, communications manager for the Maple Ridge and Pitt Meadows school district east of Vancouver, confirmed Amanda was enrolled in the district and had changed schools this year. She would not address the girl's specific case but said the district had a detailed system in place to protect victims.
[Associated
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