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In April of this year, influencer Ashley Jenay tragically passed away at a luxury resort.
There were a lot of questions surrounding the death of the newly engaged beauty.
Investigators concluded that she died by suicide after months of contemplating suicide.
They also found that she consulted ChatGPT for information about ending her life.

When Jenna went to the luxury resort in Tanzania, she didn’t go alone.
The influencer – whose real name is Ashley Robinson – was there for a Christmas break with her fiancé Joe McCann.
Then that Christmas trip turned into an engagement trip after McCann proposed and said yes.
According to Tanzanian police, a hotel employee found Gina unconscious in her room. The employee tried to open the door first, but received no response.
She was found hanging on the clothes rail of her closet using a robe belt provided by the hotel.
Jenna was taken to hospital, but eventually died on April 9.
The immediate cause of her death was cerebral hypoxia caused by strangulation and suffocation.
However, when it came to the manner of death, investigators found that she died by suicide.
Police in Zanzibar determined that she was suffering from suicidal depression.
This painful news comes after some questioned McCann following an alleged disagreement while on vacation.
“How much Valium will kill me?”
Zanzibar Deputy Director of Criminal Investigations Zubiri Chimber also revealed other details about the influencer’s tragic death.
Before her death, Jenae asked ChatGPT, an LLM “AI” program, for advice about ending her life.
“How much Valium will kill me?” She apparently requested a slop in March.
Other letters Jenae sent to family and friends indicated depression.
Some of the texts, shared by Chembera, even appear to be farewell messages.
This finding by investigators places Jenny’s death on a growing list of deaths linked to “artificial intelligence” chatbots.
Whether someone with AI psychosis kills a relative, someone uses a chatbot to plan a mass shooting, or someone asks a chatbot for advice about ending their life, these machines write barely Like people, but they lack the mental capacity to help someone get help.
If these snipers had their hands they would be stained with blood. In fact, their creators—the “innovators” in charge of the companies that make these machines—have hands.
It will likely be years before people in power have the moral fortitude and courage to end this useless, harmful technology instead of helping it enter every sector of life in search of a paid market.
For now, perhaps Gina’s grieving family can take legal action. Sometimes, a lawsuit is the closest we can get to justice.

