Los Angeles Times

‘Pokemon Go’ attacker sentenced

Man pleads no contest in 2016 assault on teen who was playing the game in Long Beach.

- By James Queally james.queally@latimes.com Twitter: @JamesQueal­lyLAT

A 57-year-old man got a seven-year prison sentence Wednesday for assaulting a teen who was trying to catch virtual monsters.

Jayson Lingen, who was accused of smashing a metal pole over the head of a “Pokemon Go” player in Long Beach last year, pleaded no contest to one count of assault with a deadly weapon, the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office said.

The attack happened while the 17-year-old was playing the popular mobile phone game — which involves players roaming the real world and attempting to capture Pikachu and other little monsters from the video game series — in downtown Long Beach, prosecutor­s said.

Prosecutor­s said Lingen yelled at the victim, then struck him in the head with a metal pole. Police arrested him a short time later.

Lingen, who was previously convicted of assault with a deadly weapon in 2013, faced up to 13 years in state prison if convicted at trial.

The victim was treated at the scene but was not hospitaliz­ed, according to Cynthia Arrona, a Long Beach police spokeswoma­n. Prosecutor­s did not immediatel­y comment on a motive.

“Pokemon Go” enjoyed a strong wave of popularity when it was launched in July 2016, generating so much user traffic that its servers often crashed. As of January, the game had earned more than $1 billion in revenue, according to Niantic Inc., the San Francisco software developmen­t company behind the game.

The game’s ability to distract players, who are often glued to their phones while walking around in search of fire-breathing lizards, turtles armed with water cannons and other Darwinian nightmares, has drawn the concern of law enforcemen­t.

Last summer, Los Angeles police said they had received reports of people trespassin­g on private property in search of Pokemon. A number of Southern California law enforcemen­t agencies issued warnings that players should remain alert while playing the game, as distractio­ns made them more likely to walk into traffic or become the victim of a crime.

Two teens playing the game in San Francisco told police a thief snatched one of their phones last July, and another pair of players said they were carjacked at gunpoint in Antelope, Calif., a week after the game launched. In Southern California, two men suffered moderate injuries last July when they accidental­ly walked off a bluff in Encinitas while playing the game, police said. The same day, a man was stabbed in an Anaheim park while playing the game.

A “Pokemon Go” player was also stabbed in Oregon last summer, and criminals in Missouri targeted players, according to media reports.

The game has also helped police on some occasions. Two Marines were searching for Pokemon in Fullerton last year when they noticed a man bothering children at a playground and helped police detain him. Detectives later learned the man was wanted for attempted murder in Monterey County.

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