The stepmother of a 14-year-old girl accused of bullying another Florida girl before her suicide was arrested and charged with child abuse after a video depicting the woman beating a boy was posted on Facebook, a sheriff said Friday.
During a news conference, Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd said the arrest of 30-year-old Vivian Vosburg on two counts of child abuse with bodily harm and four counts of child neglect is a shocking chapter in a months-long tragic story in Central Florida.
Judd said Vosburg is the stepmother of one of two girls charged with felony aggravated stalking earlier in the week.
Officials say the girls, 14 and 12, bullied and harassed 12-year-old Rebecca Sedwick before she climbed a tower at an abandoned concrete plant and hurled herself to her death Sept. 9.
It was a Facebook comment over the weekend that Judd said led him to arrest the girls.
He repeated the online post from the older girl almost word for word at a news conference last week.
"‘Yes, I bullied Rebecca and she killed herself but I don't give a ...' and you can add the last word yourself," Judd said.
He identified the girls and showed their mug shots during the news conference, but AP generally does not name juveniles charged with crimes.
Vosburg identified herself as the teen's mother when she appeared on CNN and ABC to say the girl didn't bully Rebecca and that she checked her stepdaughter's Facebook every night.
Vosburg was booked into the Polk County Jail on Friday evening and it's unclear whether she had retained an attorney. A voice-mail message left on her home phone wasn't returned.
Judd said after detectives arrested Vosburg's stepdaughter, people from the community saw her on TV -- then sent tips to the law enforcement agency, urging them to look at the Facebook page of another of Vosburg's children.
Detectives discovered a video posted in July 2013. According to the arrest affidavit, the video shows two boys fighting on a bed, then Vosberg steps in and begins punching and hitting the boys. One of the boys falls off the bed and appears to not move. Judd said none of the children were injured.
Judd, who showed the chaotic, minute-long video during the news conference, said there were four other children in the home at the time.
"This clearly indicates to us that this appears to be a normal way of life," he said. "They're laughing and cussing and throwing the F-bomb around. Then they're posting that conduct for all to see."
Judd did not release the names of the victims or their relationship to Vosburg, stating only "these are children she has access to. Vivian in this context was in charge of their well-being."
The video was up on the family member's Facebook site as recently as this morning Judd said. He questioned why no one took it down during the bullying investigation.
Child welfare authorities have been called to investigate.
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