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Late 80s Hokie

Joined: 10/29/2001 Posts: 23139
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Really? See pasted article inside


A feud between two Call of Duty players led to the death of a 28-year-old Kansas man, who was shot and killed by police after a fraudulent 911 call sent a SWAT team to the man’s private home. The news was first reported by local newspaper The Wichita Eagle, which cites numerous now-deleted tweets in which Call of Duty players take responsibility for participating in or observing the intended prank, which came after an argument about an online wagered match reportedly worth just $1.50. One player allegedly provided a fake address to someone with a history of calling in fake threats. That person, later identified and arrested by the LAPD, proceeded to embroil the innocent stranger in the feud, according to independent cybersecurity journalist Brian Krebs.

The move, known as swatting, involves a disgruntled internet user calling in a fake threat of violence, typically a murder and hostage situation invented by the caller, and doing so anonymously by using software to mask their identity and location. That results in an excessive display of force from police, who have no other information to go on and typically respond to such calls with an extraordinary amount of aggression.

It’s unclear whether an act of swatting has ever resulted in someone’s death before, but numerous people in the past have been severely injured in such situations over online feuds that often do not involve the victim in any way whatsoever. SWAT teams also have a disturbing history of killing innocent people in their own homes, regardless of the source of the threat. The alleged perpetuator of the swatting attack, who went by the Twitter handle “SWauTistic” before changing his handle and then deleting his account entirely, reportedly admitted to calling in a false bomb threat against the Federal Communications Commission over the net neutrality decision, according to Krebs. Police today identified the man as 25-year-old Los Angeles resident Tyler Barriss.

In this case, Wichita local Andrew Finch, whose family members say did not play video games and was a father of two young boys, answered his door only to face down a SWAT team-level response. Allegedly, one officer immediately fired upon Finch, who later died at a hospital. It’s unclear why Finch, who is said not to have had a weapon on him, was fired upon. The Wichita Eagle reports that the police department is investigating the issue, which occurred late Thursday night.

Me Again. Yeah, I'm doubling down!

(In response to this post by WestyHokie)

Posted: 02/08/2018 at 3:26PM



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Current Thread:
  Next to the neighbor's window. ** -- MikeVT85 02/09/2018 10:31AM
  Did they have a warrant? -- Naelbis 02/08/2018 2:50PM
  B- ** -- fordham 02/08/2018 3:04PM
  Shun ** -- Brown Water 02/08/2018 2:38PM
  It's just so sad that the standards for our... -- Freddyburg Hokie 02/08/2018 2:32PM
  Well, at least the Lounge -- Late 80s Hokie 02/08/2018 5:28PM
  Even sadder is..... -- 48zip 02/08/2018 3:34PM
  Well they were just following procedure -- vt_mughal 02/08/2018 2:17PM
  Wow. That's crazy! -- 48zip 02/08/2018 2:17PM
  Ridiculous -- BRVT 02/08/2018 2:14PM
  That seems extreme -- WestyHokie 02/08/2018 2:08PM
  Really? See pasted article inside -- Late 80s Hokie 02/08/2018 3:26PM
  Sue them ** -- 83Hokie 02/08/2018 1:59PM
  So...is she hot? ** -- ElbertoHokie 02/08/2018 1:54PM

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