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Crime The Almighty Buck The Courts Games

California Man Sentenced To 20 Years In Deadly Kansas 'Swatting' (fox4kc.com) 232

slipped_bit writes: Tyler R. Barriss, 26, who pleaded guilty to multiple counts of "swatting" attempts, including the case that caused an innocent man to be killed by police in 2017, has been sentenced to 20 years in prison. The case in 2017 was all because of a dispute between two online players over a $1.50 bet in the "Call of Duty: WWII" video game. A total of 51 federal charges related to fake calls and threats were made against Barriss. "Barriss' prosecution in Wichita consolidated other federal cases that had initially been filed against him in California and the District of Columbia involving similar calls and threats he made," reports FOX 4 Kansas City. "Prosecutors had asked for a 25-year sentence, while the defense had sought a 20-year term."

"The intended target in Wichita, Shane Gaskill, 20, and the man who allegedly recruited Barriss, Casey Viner, 19, of North College Hill, Ohio, are charged as co-conspirators," the report adds. "Authorities say Viner provided Barriss with an address for Gaskill that Gaskill had previously given to Viner. Authorities also say that when Gaskill noticed Barriss was following him on Twitter, he gave Barriss that old address and taunted him to 'try something.'"
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California Man Sentenced To 20 Years In Deadly Kansas 'Swatting'

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    "while the defense had sought a 20-year term."

    "Well son you might have been looking at a long stretch, but I managed to get you off with 20 years!"

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 29, 2019 @07:57PM (#58355786)

    Instead of pointing the gun at yourself, point it at someone else.

    Only a matter of time before it went off and killed someone.

    Twenty years seems light considering the number of times he swatted people.

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday March 29, 2019 @07:59PM (#58355794)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Friday March 29, 2019 @08:42PM (#58355958)

      This guy does deserve the sentence he got.

      Perhaps.

      But the cop who pulled the trigger, and murdered the unarmed victim in cold blood perhaps should serve some time as well.

      • by yorgasor ( 109984 ) <ron@@@tritechs...net> on Friday March 29, 2019 @08:51PM (#58355984) Homepage

        Absolutely. For some reason, it seems he's getting off without so much as a reprimand.

        • by Koby77 ( 992785 )
          That is the problem with swatting: cops show up with adrenaline, and the innocent risk getting shot when they are actually no threat at all. In Kansas, there is a law which essentially transfers the blame from the police that they commit over to the instigator of the event, in this case Tyler Barriss. So that's why the officer got off with no punishment. The law says that the perpetrator is to blame for the events that happened.
      • by Anonymous Coward

        If you don't read what exactly the kid did, you don't have a right to comment. He specifically tagetted the officers on the scene and stayed on the phone escalating what he was telling them that was going on inside a room the cops had no eyes on.

        The cop opened the door expecting a shooter about to execute a number of people and rigged up to a bomb that would go off after he completed his task. He should never have been put in that position. It was a killer's approach to get someone else to kill another pers

        • by Cederic ( 9623 ) on Friday March 29, 2019 @09:06PM (#58356036) Journal

          If you don't read what exactly the kid did, you don't have a right to comment. [...] The cop opened the door expecting a shooter about to execute a number of people

          Given that the policeman didn't open the fucking door and did shoot an unarmed man I think it's pretty clear that you don't think you have a right to comment.

          You would rather other people act to protect you and die than you do it yourself because cops are bad in your eye

          How can I put this. I could have done a better job than that policeman, and I'd seriously fucking hope he's never called out to my house because he's demonstrably more likely to fucking kill me than anybody he's allegedly there to protect me from.

          I don't hate the police, I just expect the law to apply to them. Including murder charges when they murder unarmed people standing in the door of their own home.

        • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Friday March 29, 2019 @09:07PM (#58356042)

          The cop opened the door expecting a shooter about to execute a number of people

          Nonsense. He was standing on his front porch, unarmed, with his hands visible, and the cop shot him from across the street.

          Go watch the videos on YouTube.

          Or read the description of the shooting [wikipedia.org].

        • You would rather other people act to protect you and die

          Not the OP, but as a veteran who was willing to die to protect other people, fuck yes thatâ(TM)s what I want and expect from LE. Donâ(TM)t like it, get another job.

    • by sheramil ( 921315 ) on Friday March 29, 2019 @11:31PM (#58356322)

      This guy does deserve the sentence he got. If his jail sentence means others will learn not to do horrendous acts that endanger peoples lives then GOOD!

      They'd better keep a close eye on him when he's making his weekly phone call.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • They have tear gas, flashbangs, rubber bullets, bean bag rounds, tasers, all of which will put someone on the ground WITHOUT filling them full of holes, yet despite the SWAT units having all these options AND more body armor than a soldier in Iraq AND often hiding behind shields or cars when engaging...their default state is to ventilate.

        That's totally unfair.

        You left out "while outnumbering the suspect by 20 to 1".

    • Yes. Before video games, noone ever commited stupid and/or violent crime.

  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Friday March 29, 2019 @07:59PM (#58355798)

    Considering he actually got someone killed, and his sentence helps send a message to other potential swatters... the minimum amount of fla, err, sentence doesn't seem quite enough.

    On the other side of this coin how is it possible after years of swatting action, that it's still really possible to swat anyone? It seems at this point like just a single source call should not be quite enough to trigger such an extreme response, or more recon should be done, or something.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 29, 2019 @08:00PM (#58355804)

    Serves zero time.

  • The sentence is fair, for the SWAT call was the trigger for the events that eventually lead to the homeowners death. It also shows how additional training for police response would be a good thing to try to handle the losers trying to abuse the system to cause harm to others.

    • Swatting is a sport in the US. They train you from a very young age and it's going on all over the place. Collateral damage is not a concern in the United States

    • The problem is 'what' training. When you repeatedly tell the officer to shoot if there is fast motion where you can't see both hands, that's what they're going to do. Telling them the same thing more often is not going to make them stop. You have to actually change the thing you're telling them to do.

  • by bmimatt ( 1021295 ) on Friday March 29, 2019 @08:10PM (#58355836)
    How long did the guy who actually pulled the trigger and sent the deadly bullet get?
    • by Anonymous Coward

      DA did not press charges.

    • How about the idiots who hired and put a gun in the hand of the actual shooter. Police officers have real power, they have to pass physiological exams, they have to be approved to carry a weapon. This is how you arrest someone https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] - arrest of Toronto Van attack killer
  • Remorse (Score:4, Insightful)

    by The Evil Atheist ( 2484676 ) on Friday March 29, 2019 @08:42PM (#58355956)

    “If I could take it back, I would, but there is nothing I can do,” Barriss told the court. “I am so sorry for that.”

    Uh, no, you cunt. You showed that you have no remorse throughout the whole ordeal.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Indeed. That shitbag even snuck online in the jail and bragged about getting away with it, and that he'd do it again. 20 years is too good for him. I vote for a rail gun human cannonball launch into LEO. You get electrocution, vacuum death, and a nice meteor burning up at the end. Now that's Monday night rehabilitation!

  • People still blaming the cops on this one. Get a clue, please. This is the US. Guns outnumber people. It's just a cold, hard fact: US cops have to deal with a population that's swimming in guns, and it's their responsibility to somehow keep the "peace" So they assume that pretty much everyone they encounter is packing, which means they're going to escalate to gunfire very, very quickly in response to anything outside of "normal, quite street scene".

    Cops are like this because of the choices we've made
    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Saturday March 30, 2019 @05:34AM (#58356766)

      People still blaming the cops on this one. Get a clue, please.

      We have a clue. The police responded to a complete anonymous tip with deadly force and no attempt to even identify what the situation is let alone diffuse it. In any other country the police officer would be in jail. There are levels of escalation and the side with an overwhelming advantage in this one sided confrontation responded with unwarranted deadly force.

      Have you seen the Hateful Eight? "Anybody moves a little weird....little sudden--gonna get a bullet. Not a warning. Not a question; a bullet. Let me hear you say, 'I got it'." See even fucking Quentin Tarantino when writing a bloodbath knows how to communicate a warning.

      The swatter orchestrated an incredibly dangerous situation and is the one to blame for this

      You've boiled a complicated situation escalated by many people down to blaming a single person. You sir are an idiot.

    • I would just point out that it WAS a "normal, quite street scene" until the cops showed and executed that guy.

    • by MobyDisk ( 75490 )

      I can see how someone who has watched TV news their entire life, and never met anyone who owns a gun, might form the opinion that you have. The trade-off that you suppose does not exist: there is something else going on that I think most non-gun-owners just don't see. Let me try to help you bridge the gun culture gap that I see in America.

      I live in a suburb about 20 minutes outside of one of the most dangerous cities in America. When I moved here, I didn't realize how many people nearby me have guns. A

      • It's not a gun culture, more like a gun fetishism. And I say that as a former firearm owner.

  • Charging the target (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Krakadoom ( 1407635 ) on Saturday March 30, 2019 @06:33AM (#58356826)

    It just seems weird to me that the intended target was charged as a co-conspirator. Was it for giving a fake (old) address? Seems a really low bar to co-conspire in something, if you can get charged for misdirection against and evading someone actively trying to cause you harm.

    • He gave out the wrong address knowing that something could happen to the person living there. Thats highly irresponsible. He didn't have to misdirect or evade, he could have given him nothing.
    • by Kjella ( 173770 )

      It just seems weird to me that the intended target was charged as a co-conspirator. Was it for giving a fake (old) address? Seems a really low bar to co-conspire in something, if you can get charged for misdirection against and evading someone actively trying to cause you harm.

      Depends on what glasses you put on. From the victim's point of view he's effectively the mastermind who used Barriss as his stooge to send the cops as hit men. He goaded and taunted Barriss into doing it, that he pretended to bring the harm on himself only makes him more liable as the one pulling the strings.

      Let's try an analogy: You've been sleeping with the wife/daughter of dangerous/violent criminal, but they don't know who you are. You taunt them with intimate details about her body/bedroom and they thr

  • We cannot have a society that will kill on a stranger's word.

Beware of all enterprises that require new clothes, and not rather a new wearer of clothes. -- Henry David Thoreau

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