A  spurned Facebook friend request became the center of a family feud that  led a Long Island woman to literally drive over her cousin with a  minivan.
The driver, Melanie Spanopoulos, actually hit her cousin twice  with the vehicle after learning that her relative, Giselle Penagos, had  gotten in contact with a man on Facebook who’d denied Melanie’s friend  request, according to the New York Post.
Spanopoulos was charged with assault yesterday and released on a  $20,000 bail. Penagos had to undergo emergency surgery for a shattered  pelvis and broken leg on Monday. An unidentified man rescued her that  morning and rushed her to her father’s house in Queens. A local  policeman told the Post that if the unnamed good Samaritan hadn’t picked  her up she could have gotten hit by another driver. Or she could have  died of exposure because the temperature was close to zero.
Spanopoulos learned  that Penagos gotten in touch with the guy on Facebook while the two  women were driving home from a bar; he’d accepted Penagos’ friend  request after denying one from Spanopoulous. She pulled over the van to  focus on arguing, and Penagos got out. Peagos refused to get back into  the vehicle, and Spanopoulos leapt out of the car and started wrestling  with her cousin. Then Spanopoulosgot back into the minivan and ran over  her cousin once, put the vehicle in reverse and hit Penagos a second  time.
Now Facebook itself didn’t cause this  conflict, but rather allowed these two girls to attempt to contact the  gentleman when they might not have otherwise. Jealousy really started  this family feud, and it’s very likely the girls may have had spats in  the past that would have increased tensions between them. It’s tragic  how frequently people overreact to things involving the social network  and get violent.
Unfortunately, the more entrenched the social network gets in  people’s daily routines, the more emotional people seem to get about the  site, and they’re not always expressing happy feelings.  Other than  continuing to release statements expressing regrets and cautions on how  to use Facebook, I can’t think of anything the company could do to  prevent these violent incidents from happening and risking unwanted  negative publicity. Do you have any ideas on how to address this problem
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