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LOL! FLORIDA GIRLS GET IN TROUBLE FOR CREATING A FAKE FACEBOOK PROFILE FOR A CLASSMATE THAT SAY'S SHE'S PART OF THE ITTY BITTY TITTY COMITTY!

A fake Facebook profile has two Florida girls in some real trouble.

The Lee County sheriff's office charged Taylor Wynn, 16 and McKenzie Barker, 15, with cyberstalking after they created a Facebook page in the name of a classmate - complete with their classmate's head on a "nude prepubescent girl's body," according to the police report published on The Smoking Gun.

Next to the doctored photo, the girls added the comment "I am a member of the Itty Bitty Titty Comitty!! <3 (sic)."

Another picture on the fake Facebook page showed the victim's head with her mouth opened next to an adult male's erect penis, according to the police report, with another lewd comment.

Police became involved after a sheriff assigned to the school was notified of the incident. After speaking with numerous students, he called the FBI's Innocent Images Task Force in April.

Two weeks later, the sheriff received information that another Facebook account was created of the victim, with similar art.

While the girls claimed it was all just in good fun, the victim didn't quite see it that way.

"The victim was subjected to numerous incidents of teasing and ridicule for an ongoing period of time as a result of the fictitious Facebook account," investigators wrote in the report.

Even while facing charges, the alleged bullies seemed to have no regrets.

When asked by her mother, in front of police, what would possess her to do such a thing, Wynn reportedly replied, "Because nobody liked her."

Though it may seem like a scene straight out of "Mean Girls," the Florida students weren't the first ones to get into hot water for making a fake Facebook page.

In September 2009, an Illinois mother sued on behalf of her son after a fake Facebook page identified him as being gay, ABCnews.com reported at the time. With the rise of Facebook, ABCNews reported at the time, the number of cases similar to the Illinois lawsuit is rising.

"It's not a surprise," Parry Aftab, the executive director of WiredSafety.org, told ABCNews at the time. "It's not a surprise, and it's sad that it happens as often as it does."


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