Austin American-Statesman

3 indicted in fatal ‘swatting’ prank

Hoax not meant for victim, who simply was living at address.

- Niraj Chokshi ©2018 The New York Times

A federal grand jury indicted three men this week in a case in which a man in Wichita, Kansas, was killed by the police after a fake crime was reported as a prank.

The hoax, called swatting in an allusion to SWAT teams, was never meant for the victim, Andrew Finch, 28, though. He simply had the misfortune of living at the wrong address.

Now, two men accused of instigatin­g the police response, Tyler Barriss and Casey Viner, and the intended target himself, Shane Gaskill, face a series of federal charges ranging from making false or hoax reports to obstructio­n of justice, according to a grand jury indictment unsealed Wednesday. Barriss is also facing involuntar­y manslaught­er charges in state court.

In an interview days after the shooting, Lisa Finch, Finch’s mother, criticized both the swatters and the police.

“My son would have not opened the door had he known there were cops out there,” she said. “Not one time did they announce themselves. Not one time.”

On Tuesday, the officer who killed Finch, Justin Rapp, testified at a preliminar­y hearing for Barriss in state court that Finch hadn’t complied when instructed to put his hands up and made a gun-drawing motion, according to The Wichita Eagle. Rapp said he did not see a gun in Finch’s hands. Prosecutor­s had previously said they would not charge the officer, according to The Eagle.

According to the indictment, the tragic series of events began Dec. 28, when Viner, 18, and Gaskill, 19, were playing the videogame “Call of Duty: WWII” with each other online.

At some point, they began to argue and, upset, Viner enlisted Barriss, 25, to swat Gaskill. It didn’t take long for Gaskill to figure out what was happening, though, and he began prodding Barriss in messages online.

“You’re gonna try and swat me its hilarious,” he told Barriss after providing him with an old address, according to the indictment. “I’m waiting buddy.”

Soon after, Barriss, of Los Angeles, contacted the police in Wichita using a phone number with a local area code.

He told a dispatcher that he had killed his father, was holding his mother and brother at gunpoint, had doused his house in gasoline and was considerin­g committing suicide, according to the indictment. When asked, he provided the address Gaskill had shared — and where Finch was living.

The police responded and, at some point, Finch stepped out onto the front porch, where he was ultimately shot just before 6:30 p.m. His mother had previously said that he emerged from the house to investigat­e noises he had heard from his living room.

Over the course of the next few hours, Gaskill exchanged messages with Viner and Barriss, antagonizi­ng them for failing to swat him. But, by about 9:50 p.m., he had learned what happened and began warning Barriss to cover his tracks.

“Need to delete everything,” he wrote in one message, according to the indictment. “This is a murder case now.”

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