Australian actress starts fundraiser to cryogenically preserve son, who died by suicide after bullying
A mother in Australia is raising money to cryogenically preserve her 13-year-old son’s body after he died by suicide following “months of brutal bullying,” according to the online fundraiser.
Clare McCann, an actress and filmmaker from New South Wales, launched the fundraiser on Sunday, explaining that her son, Atreyu McCann, died May 23.
She wrote that her teenage son “took his own life after months of horrific bullying at his public school.”
The mother explained she repeatedly asked her son’s school and the Department of Education and Children’s Services to intervene, “but nothing was done. No one stepped. And now, my beautiful boy is gone,” the fundraiser says.
The New South Wales Department of Education did not immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday.
McCann told 7News Sydney that from the moment her son started high school, he was subjected to bullying. Even following her son’s death, she said no students were disciplined.
“None of them were suspended, none of them were expelled. I feel completely let down,” she told the Australian outlet.
McCann is seeking $300,000 AUD to preserve his body within the next seven days — “or the opportunity for him to live again will be lost forever.” Cryopreservation is the concept of freezing humans as soon as they die, with the hope of reviving them using future medicine.
“If we miss this window, we lose the chance for any future revival that science may offer. This is about hope and justice. Refusing to let my son’s story end in silence,” McCann wrote.
In the fundraiser, she said that she planned to use the money for the “immediate cryopreservation and legal transportation,” medical and legal services for the procedure and a trust in her son’s name.
McCann said she wants to use the money raised to ensure “this never happens again.”
“Please help us preserve our beloved Atreyu and give his life the dignity and future that his school stole from him,” the fundraiser said.
Australia’s only cryogenics facility is on board to try.
“100% sure — we’re not certain. No guarantees. But there’s a reasonable probability,” Peter Tsolakides of Southern Cryonics told 7News.
According to the company’s website, its mission is to promote “scientifically based cryonic suspension as a credible option for life extension.” The website says cryonic suspension involves encasing a body, cooling it to a vitrified state over several days, placing it in a stainless-steel vessel, and long-term maintenance of a liquid nitrogen storage environment to prevent the deterioration of tissues “for centuries if necessary.”
As of Tuesday afternoon, over $7,300 AUD had been raised.
You may be interested

Karol G Announces New Album ‘Tropicoqueta’
new admin - Jun 09, 2025[ad_1] The news comes on heels of Colombian star's summer single 'Latina Foreva' Karol G is officially entering a new…

Apple’s Spotlight upgrades in MacOS Tahoe have power users in mind
new admin - Jun 09, 2025This year’s WWDC is shaping up to be surprisingly focused on power users. There are lots of new personalization ideas,…

California congresswoman reacts to ICE raids, Trump’s National Guard deployment
new admin - Jun 09, 2025California congresswoman reacts to ICE raids, Trump's National Guard deployment - CBS News Watch CBS News California Rep. Sara Jacobs…