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Crime United States Games

Kansas 'Swat' Perpetrator Will Now Plead Guilty To Dozens More Swat Incidents (nbcnews.com) 196

An anonymous reader quotes NBC News: The California man behind a years-long string of hoax 911 calls -- including one that ended in a Kansas man's death -- wants to plead guilty to all charges, court documents revealed. Tyler Rai Barriss, 25, intends to waive his right to trial and admit guilt to a 46-count federal indictment, according to a document he signed on Oct. 18 and was filed in U.S. District Court on Wednesday. Barriss faces up to life behind bars for his dozens of acts of "swatting" -- calling police to falsely report a serious crime, in hopes of drawing a massive response to the home of an unsuspecting target.... According to the court records, Barriss will admit to dozens of "swatting" incidents all over America between 2015 and the end of 2017, The false alarms connected to Barriss happened in Ohio, Nevada, Illinois, Indiana, Virginia, Texas, Arizona, Massachusetts, MIssouri, Maine, Pennsylvania, New Mexico, Indiana, Michigan, Florida, Connecticut and New York.
Barriss performed SWATs if clients sent him $10 over PayPal -- occasionally demanding "upwards of $50," according to a new (possibly pay-walled) article on Wired. A Call of Duty player hired Barriss to SWAT a teammate who'd caused them to lose a $1.50 wager, but his intended target supplied a false address across town which resulted in the fatal police shooting.

Both gamers are now "awaiting trial on lesser charges," reports NBC.
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Kansas 'Swat' Perpetrator Will Now Plead Guilty To Dozens More Swat Incidents

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    you have to be plenty heartless do something like this without any remorse

    • by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Saturday October 27, 2018 @01:51PM (#57545467)
      I think the more fucked up part was that he only charged $10. When it comes down to it, everyone eventually sets a dollar amount (whether they consciously believe they do or not) for the value of human life, but $10 is really lowballing it.

      Though, I suppose the guy who paid the $10 for the swatting over losing a $1.50 wager is even worse.
      • by cunina ( 986893 ) on Saturday October 27, 2018 @02:32PM (#57545657)
        They were hard-core gamers, though. Ten bucks might be about right.
      • He never intended to kill. He was just an idiot who didn't realist the possibly consequences of his actions. So in his mind, $10 is the cost of ruining someone's evening.

        • Whether he intended to kill is an interesting psychological question. Many gamblers continue, not to _win_, but to _lose_. The same is true for many people engaged in dangerous or self destructive behavior.

        • by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Saturday October 27, 2018 @04:21PM (#57546085)
          He might not have wanted anyone to die, but you'd have to be pretty naive to argue that he attached a 0% probability to that actually happening. I did plenty of stupid shit in my youth that could have resulted in my death, but I don't think I ever thought there wasn't a chance of it happening, merely that it was just incredibly low or just an acceptable risk for the enjoyment and thrill I might get out of it.

          Even then, I don't think I could have jumped through the mental hoops necessary to rationalize calling a swat team on someone would have no chance at all of ending with someone being unjustly killed. Maybe you could argue that someone could be pissed off enough to do it as an act of exceptionally poor judgement in the heat of the moment, but this person was a dispassionate third party.
          • I believe there is a huge difference between "I did plenty of stupid shit in my youth that could have resulted in ***MY*** death" (emphasis added) and doing something to put someone ELSE at risk.
        • Other swats have resulted in well publicized tragic outcomes before he made his. Bullshit he didn't know this.
      • by gtall ( 79522 )

        Hmmm...what about the people who give their own lives so that someone or others may live?

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Saturday October 27, 2018 @02:17PM (#57545583) Homepage Journal

      Somebody's got to be on the left end of the emotional intelligence bell curve.

      • by Kjella ( 173770 )

        Somebody's got to be on the left end of the emotional intelligence bell curve.

        As a distribution sure but the real spacing is that you have "normal" stupid people and the genuinely retarded. Same on the EQ scale, you have the "normal" insensitive people and genuine psychopaths/sociopaths. You got serial killers and whatnot that's even further on the left end than this guy. Bottom 5% and bottom 1% can be very, very different things.

  • Good (Score:5, Interesting)

    by The Evil Atheist ( 2484676 ) on Saturday October 27, 2018 @01:46PM (#57545437)
    Now arrest the fuckers who procured his services.
    • The summary specifically says, 'Both gamers are now "awaiting trial on lesser charges," reports NBC.'

      What gets me is: both? The intended victim is also awaiting trial? I'm sure there's some reason for that, I'm just curious.
      • > What gets me is: both? The intended victim is also awaiting
        > trial? I'm sure there's some reason for that, I'm just curious.

        Gamer A got mad at Gamer B. Gamer B gave out a false address. Gamer A then paid Barriss to do a fake 911 call to trigger a swat raid that killed an innocent resident at the wrong address. Both Gamer A (who paid for the 911 call) and Gamer B (who gave someone else's address) are being charged.

        • Wait, giving out wrong addresses is criminal now?

          That's gonna show those bitches that give me fake phone numbers, I'll sue!

      • Re:Good (Score:5, Interesting)

        by The Evil Atheist ( 2484676 ) on Saturday October 27, 2018 @03:16PM (#57545809)
        The summary also talks about dozens of other incidents. Who ever procured his services for dozens of other potential murders should be arrested.
      • by fazig ( 2909523 )

        Viner and Gaskill had been partners in a game of "Call of Duty" that day. When one particular session ended badly, both teammates blamed each other and Viner reached out online to Barriss and asked him to "swat" Gaskill, prosecutors said.

        Barriss then taunted Gaskill in a Twitter direct messages, before Gaskill challenged the California man to swat him, according to court records. Gaskill even gave Barriss the address to target: a home where Gaskill had once lived that was now occupied by Finch's family.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 27, 2018 @01:50PM (#57545461)

    Every time the police just shrugs and gets off free.

    "We didn't do anything. Someone said there was a situation at this address, so we just bust the door down and shot whoever was inside. It's not our fault"

    And the worst part is that you Americans just accept that this is the way it is and has to be. You just yell at the guy who made the phone call, but have nothing to say about the vaccuum-headed police and their inability to investigate or even think before firing their weapons.

  • by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Saturday October 27, 2018 @01:57PM (#57545491)

    Now fix the on-call violence delivery service. At least add:
    - accountability for police
    - mandatory fact-finding before believing whatever story a caller wants to tell
    - body cameras with recordings available to the public (maybe with some controls if you're scared of the public having access to the information for whatever reason)
    - specific trading requirements for SWAT teams, with presumed liability for failure to train
    - a duty for the police to make a genuine attempt protect the life and dignity of everyone they encounter

    • Now fix the on-call violence delivery service.

      Had this criminal not placed a fake call to police, none of this would have happened, would it?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      When a violent crime is happening and lives are hanging in the balance, there's no time for your little checklist. Unfortunately, some lives will be lost when people don't follow the commands they are given. The cops in this case are the victim as well. Do you think they are happy with the outcome, do you think perhaps it weighs on them for the rest of their lives as well? The criminal is the guy who places the fake call. Put the blame where it belongs!

      • by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Saturday October 27, 2018 @02:25PM (#57545633)

        When a violent crime is happening and lives are hanging in the balance, there's no time for your little checklist.

        Plenty of time to gun down innocents though.

      • by sjames ( 1099 ) on Saturday October 27, 2018 @04:11PM (#57546035) Homepage Journal

        There's plenty of blame to go around. The person who deserves none though is the guy who was just looking to see what all the commotions was about and probably died wondering who the police were talking to and why they were in his neighborhood.

      • by vbdasc ( 146051 ) on Saturday October 27, 2018 @04:50PM (#57546179)

        When a violent crime is happening and lives are hanging in the balance, there's no time for your little checklist.

        Actually, in this particular case there was plenty of time to think. In a hostage situation, you simply don't rush things. Unless you're incompetent police, that is.

        Unfortunately, some lives will be lost when people don't follow the commands they are given.

        What if the guy who is given commands happens to be deaf? A foreigner who doesn't understand the language? Slow-witted? Intoxicated? The police command just becomes a death sentence, according to your logic. It shouldn't be this way.

        The bottom line is, IMHO, that both Barriss and the police bear the bulk of responsibility for this unfortunate incident, and neither should be allowed to avoid paying the price.

      • Especially in a hostage situation time is on YOUR side as the police. And if you know that it is a hostage situation, you must expect that the person answering the door is a hostage. The very first thing you have to verify is the identity of the person, If you find out that it's the hostage taker or if he tries to get back inside, you still have all the time in the world to shoot if you're so inclined.

        Usually it is not necessary, though. Hostage takers want something, else they would already do what they th

    • by alexo ( 9335 ) on Saturday October 27, 2018 @02:59PM (#57545749) Journal

      Now fix the on-call violence delivery service. At least add:
      - accountability for police
      - mandatory fact-finding before believing whatever story a caller wants to tell
      - body cameras with recordings available to the public (maybe with some controls if you're scared of the public having access to the information for whatever reason)
      - specific trading requirements for SWAT teams, with presumed liability for failure to train
      - a duty for the police to make a genuine attempt protect the life and dignity of everyone they encounter

      I'll settle for just the first one, the rest are either included in it or will naturally follow.
      Unfortunately, it will never happen.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 27, 2018 @02:18PM (#57545591)

    Swatting is just one of the reasons why associating any online accounts you have with your real identity is a terrible idea. This happened because a guy lost a counterstrike match. Another teammate was mad at him, they got in an argument, the guy tried to dox him though his steam profile linked to a facebook page, and ended up getting a completely random person killed as a result. You put your real info on those social media pages, and that's the police kicking down your door and you getting killed. People ask "what do you have to hide". Apparently it's a bunch of jackbooted thugs kicking down your door at 11:30pm because some pathetic waste of flesh on the internet who was mad over losing a $1.50 bet decided to pay someone to anonymously call in a hostage situation.

  • Tyler Rai Barriss, 25, intends to waive his right to trial and admit guilt to a 46-count federal indictment, ...

    Forty-six counts? Apparently, this guy *really* misunderstood the slogan, "You're either SWAT or you're not."

  • by Joe_Dragon ( 2206452 ) on Saturday October 27, 2018 @03:20PM (#57545823)

    over an $1.50 bet some payed $10 to get back?
    Maybe over an $100 bet but $1.50???

  • by beheaderaswp ( 549877 ) * on Saturday October 27, 2018 @03:41PM (#57545921)

    I remember a time when a gamer saved the life of an elderly gamer by calling an ambulance when he became delirious.

    That might have been in the first year of World of Warcraft. Maybe Dark Age of Camelot. It's been a long time.

    Gamer culture sure has changed,

    • No. It's just more exposed now. Hell, I can recall people getting into fairly dangerous fights over D&D.

      Flame wars have been around since internet day one (maybe month one). There have been dicks and mentally and socially challenged gamers since early games like WoW, FFS. There are also good people gaming, you just don't hear much about them because, well, they behave.
    • by Ogive17 ( 691899 )
      That's because those of us who were gaming back then mostly grew up prior to the internet. We learned civility through human interaction.

      Today's games in their teens/twenties have been exposed to the internet their whole lives.

      As a society, we're fucked.
    • Today he'd probably turn it into a YouTube video named "Listen to the death of this gamer!"

  • This kind of shit isn't, and never, EVER should be acceptable.
    This kind of thing needs to be treated with a heavy hand.

  • Gun control (Score:3, Insightful)

    by blindseer ( 891256 ) <blindseer.earthlink@net> on Saturday October 27, 2018 @04:03PM (#57546005)

    I see a lot of anger in the comments so far directed towards the police, not just the officers in this swat incident but generally. Well, think of this the next time there's another call to hand over all our guns to the government because, "you can just call the police". Well, someone did call the police and, if the comments here are to be believed, the police are incompetent, bloodthirsty, both, or worse.

    Is it too much to ask for both that we don't rely on the police for everything and when they do come that they are competent, intelligent, and well trained? Remember that the police come from the public. If the police officers never saw a gun until they arrive at the academy then they are going to be poorly trained on the proper use of a firearm. We cannot put the gun genie back in the bottle. Guns exist and the world is better for it.

    Let's not forget that, again according to comments here, there is an orangutan in the Oval Office tossing feces all over Twitter. You want him to have all the guns? Remember folks, don't create a government that you are not willing to give to your opposition because your friends might not always be in charge.

    Now, return to your cop bashing.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.

      Odd I live in a society where I don't need to be armed to be free, nor do I worry about police turning up believing I'm a terrible threat such that they'll shoot first and ask questions later.

    • by Kohath ( 38547 )

      For the record, I'm not cop bashing, I'm bashing their modern-day policies and attitudes. I want the police to adopt a new attitude of protecting life and serving the public.

    • Countries where gun ownership is illegal or heavily controlled still manage to produce highly trained armed police officers with very good weapons handling abilities...

      The UK for example has a very well trained armed response program, and gun ownership here is very much an oddity. We also have an extremely well trained and professional army.

      You do not need an armed populace to produce a professional armed police force. What you do need to do is have the police force trained in weapons use - and you should

    • "Trained, uniformed police officers cannot be trusted with guns, therefore citizens should have access to guns with minimal limit or control". Textbook non sequitur - your conclusion does not follow your premise. Well, maybe it does if you also assume that a counter-government revolution is inevitable in the near future, but that's one HELL of a premise to smuggle in as an assumption.

      Part of the problem is that police have to assume everyone they interact with is potentially armed. They have to show up to t

    • Well, judging from Europe and how the police works there... maybe the police would still knock on doors if they could expect you to open the door instead of fire when they do?

    • by alexo ( 9335 )

      I see a lot of anger in the comments so far directed towards the police, not just the officers in this swat incident but generally. Well, think of this the next time there's another call to hand over all our guns to the government because, "you can just call the police".

      Can you? [wikipedia.org]

  • P.S. I put swat in quotes because the games isn't sending a swat, the police are.
    How come the "swatter" isn't charged only for filing a false report?
    The police shouldn't just take any report, anon or not, and assume it is real.
    The police shouldn't SWAT unless it is needed.
    Using the lives are at stake answer doesn't help because the police don't know that, they assume that.
    The weird part is that the gamers can ruin 2 lives, the person killed by the police and the cop who killed him - through remorse.
    He may n

  • I don't really have anything to say beyond the subject line.

  • Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Saturday October 27, 2018 @10:07PM (#57547295)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion

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