Los Angeles Times

Suspect to be extradited

L.A. gamer with history of hoaxes is held in prank call that led to Kansas death.

- By Joseph Serna and James Queally joseph.serna@latimes.com james.queally@latimes.com Times staff writer Jack Leonard contribute­d to this report.

L.A. man accused in fatal 911 hoax to be tried in Kansas.

A Los Angeles man arrested on suspicion of making a 911 call to police in Wichita as part of a deadly “swatting” prank told a judge Wednesday that he will not fight extraditio­n to Kansas.

Tyler Raj Barriss, 25, declined to fight extraditio­n during a brief hearing in a downtown Los Angeles courtroom, and a judge said he should be handed over to authoritie­s in Kansas no later than Feb 2. Until then, he will be held in California without bail.

Barriss kept his head down during the hearing, only speaking to say “Yeah” or “I did” to acknowledg­e the judge’s questions.

Barriss was arrested last week in South L.A. on an arrest warrant issued by Sedgwick County, Kan., authoritie­s said. The warrant is related to a hoax call to Wichita police in which someone claimed he had killed his father and was holding his mother and sibling at gunpoint.

The call prompted a SWAT team to surrounded a Wichita residence and shoot an innocent man who answered the door. Wichita authoritie­s say the man was shot when he lowered his hands toward his waistband. Family members identified the dead man as 28year-old Andrew Finch.

Authoritie­s identified Barriss as the caller.

This is not the first time Barriss has been accused of making false reports of an emergency. In October 2015, the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office charged him with phoning in a bomb threat to KABC-TV Channel 7 in Glendale. Barriss pleaded no contest.

The term “swatting” refers to false emergency calls that prompt police department­s to deploy SWAT teams to an address. Pranksters typically claim that an armed intruder is inside the home.

The FBI estimates that roughly 400 cases of swatting occur annually, with some using caller ID “spoofing” to disguise their number. Swatting cases that result in the death of a victim are less common, however.

An FBI supervisor in the Kansas City, Mo., office, which covers all of Kansas, said the agency joined in the investigat­ion in Wichita at the request of local police.

Gaming websites and news outlets have given heavy coverage to the deadly swatting episode.

The digital security news website Krebs On Security captured some of the tweets reportedly written by the caller under the now-suspended Twitter handle @SWAuTistic.

The tweets contain the address where Finch was shot and killed. The tweets also say the user didn’t kill anyone because he or she didn’t fire a weapon.

The YouTube channel DramaAlert, which covers the gaming community, published a 10-minute interview with a man claiming to be the person who made the swatting call. The interview suggests that a dispute between two online gamers over a $1.50 wager led to the swatting call.

In the interview, the man claims that he had also called in bomb threats to the Federal Communicat­ions Commission and an events center in Dallas. He also said he did not feel entirely responsibl­e for Finch’s death because he did not pull the trigger.

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? TYLER RAJ BARRISS, who is being held without bail in Los Angeles, won’t fight extraditio­n to Kansas.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times TYLER RAJ BARRISS, who is being held without bail in Los Angeles, won’t fight extraditio­n to Kansas.

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