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Alleged SWATter will plead guilty to dozens of serious new federal charges

The long list of charges includes bank fraud, involuntary manslaughter, cyberstalking and wire fraud.

Tyler Rai Barriss – the 25-year-old man from southern California who SWATted an innocent man who was killed in a subsequent police shooting – will plead guilty to 46 new federal charges, according to local news outlets in Kansas, where victim Andrew Finch lived and where Barriss is in prison.
A federal indictment unsealed on Wednesday also names two other men who were allegedly involved in the fatal SWATting incident: Casey Viner, of Ohio, and Shane Gaskill, of Wichita, Kansas. Both have been charged and have pleaded not guilty to multiple charges.
The new charges, filed in California on Wednesday, also list four unindicted co-conspirators: Twitter user “@INTERNETLORD” of Des Plaines, Illinois; “@TRAGIC” of Gulf Breeze, Florida; “@THROW” of Grand Rapids, Michigan; and “@SPARED” of Greenwood, Missouri.
According to prosecutors, Gaskill was the intended victim of the SWAT, which grew out of a Call of Duty game in which two teammates were disputing a $1.50 wager. Apparently, one had accidentally “killed” a teammate in the first-person shooter game.
According to court documents, Gaskill at one point saw that Barriss (@SWAuTistic) was following him on Twitter, so he allegedly gave him what turned out to be a former address – a house that he owned and which Finch was renting – and taunted Barriss to go ahead with the SWAT.

What @SWAuTistic is pleading guilty to

SWATting, which takes its name from elite law enforcement units called SWAT (Special Weapons and Tactics) teams, is the practice of making a false report to emergency services about shootings, bomb threats, hostage taking, or other alleged violent crime in the hopes that law enforcement will respond to a targeted address with deadly force.
In the recording of the emergency call that cost Finch his life, a man said he’d shot his father in the head. The caller also said he was holding his mother and a sibling at gunpoint in a closet. He said he’d poured gasoline all over the house and that he was thinking of lighting the house on fire and committing suicide.
Police surrounded Finch’s Wichita home, prepared to deal with a hostage situation. Finch, curious about the flashing police lights outside, went to the door. He then followed police instructions to put up his hands and move slowly. But at some point, authorities said, Finch appeared to be moving his hand toward his waistband as if he was going to pull out a gun.
A single shot killed Finch. He was dead by the time he reached the hospital. Police said the innocent man was unarmed.
Barriss was arrested in December 2017, charged a month later, expressed barely tepid remorse that veered off into

I DIDNT GET ANYONE KILLED BECAUSE I DIDNT DISCHARGE A WEAPON AND BEING A SWAT MEMBER ISNT MY PROFESSION

… and allegedly took advantage of a buggy inmate kiosk a few months after that in order to call himself an eGod and Tweet more threats to “SWAT someone’s ass”.


@SWAuTistic – one of Barriss’s alleged aliases – claimed credit for placing dozens of these calls, calling in bogus hostage situations and bomb threats at roughly 100 schools and at least 10 residences. He also claimed responsibility for bomb threats against a high school in Florida and a bomb threat that interrupted the net neutrality vote.
He was also reportedly responsible for evacuations over a bomb hoax call at the Call of Duty World League Dallas Open in December 2017.
Barriss has also been charged with calling in bomb threats at government buildings in Washington, DC, including the headquarters of the FBI and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).
According to the new charges, Barriss made dozens of hoax threats between September 2014 and December 2017 to places around the country, including that he had shot people at homes; planted bombs at Harvard University, a shopping center, schools and other buildings; and that he had planted bombs in a high school and a movie theater and was outside each armed with a gun.
He allegedly targeted high schools, hotels, television stations, shopping centers, an apartment complex, a Philadelphia museum and West Virginia University.
The long list of charges includes bank fraud: one such alleges that Barriss and a co-conspirator used someone else’s credit and debit card to purchase a NASA hat, a belt and shoes. He’s also been charged with involuntary manslaughter, making false/hoax reports to emergency services, cyberstalking, making interstate threats, making interstate threats to harm by fire, wire fraud, and conspiracy to make false/hoax reports.
His trial was originally set for 1 October, but his defense attorney said he needed more time to prepare. His new trial date is 7 January 2019.


16 Comments

I’m all for reinstating public hangings. It may not work as a deterrent, but on the other hand it just might. I’m willing to err on the “it just might” side.

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This is clearly manslaughter, they should get the max. But police should not be so gung-ho to execute citizens for twitching.

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It’s a tough call. Going for a weapon and firing it from arms raised position takes way less than a second. The cops are well-trained, so they know that their reaction time has already used up 0.12 of that less than a second.
A guy shouldn’t be killed for twitching, yes, but it’s not an easy situation to resolve.
I know if I’M ever on the receiving end of a swatting incident, I’m going to do exactly as I’m told, and no more. Until the situation has been cleared up, I’m a saint.

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Unless rules of engagement has changed, SWAT doesn’t get to shoot you just because you have a firearm. It needs to be discharged or used in a threatening manner such as pointing it at someone. It’s unauthorized use of deadly force otherwise.

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When you’re suddenly confronted with a bunch of cops that’s armed to the teeth and out to get you, chances are, you’re not going to keep it cool, and mistakes are easily made when you’re under that kind of pressure. I’ve been arrested once in a somewhat spectacular fashion, (I didn’t actually do anything but apparently I looked like a suspect on the run) My first reaction to the arrest was to GTFO because that’s just how your body reacts. Fight, Flight, Fright and all that. Luckily Dutch cops are trained to try to deescalate first and shoot a good while later so it ended civilized, and not riddled with bullets in a road side ditch. It should be a cop’s job to take civilian stupidity in account, or he/she shouldn’t be a cop in the first place.

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There are ways a well trained officer can neutralize a potential threading person without executing him. My father was qualified state troopers to aim at knees which stop aggressive behavior. The Swat officer seemed to untrained or at very least lacked experience. This professional should be held responsible for his actions

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What piece of trash Barriss is. Got an innocent man killed over a video game and $1.50. I hope he rots in prison for a very long time.

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Mr. Barriss definitely belongs in prison and I hope he stays there for a long time. One unfortunate aspect of this case, however, is that his criminal acts provide a convenient scapegoat to allow the trigger-happy SWAT officer who killed an innocent man to get off with no criminal charges. When a civilian makes a deadly mistake, there are criminal consequences. When a cop does it, it seems the worst they might receive is losing their job. Two crimes were committed that day; only one has been prosecuted.

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The police need new training where they get to be on the receiving end of a raid. It might teach some to keep the brain engaged if they see it from the other side.

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I always giggle when I see a reference to Call of Duty. First, it recalls a “call of nature”, and second, it reminds me of when, many decades ago when I was in short pants my parents would get after me to do my “duty” in the toilet. So, it’s kind of a twofer.

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Let’s see, how about an eye for an, a kids for a life. These digs and their so called lawyers do not deserve to walk on God’s green earth

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Absolutely correct on the trigger happy stuff. I’m a disabled combat Marine, and I certainly learned quick enough to take that extra 3 or 4 seconds for a heads up to make sure of what you’re shooting at. The consequences could be very dire! Simpering Fi

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