This always makes me wonder why this is even possible in the US. Why can anyone just make an anonymous call and have a death squad kick in someone's door? Sure the guy who does the calling is guilty, but why is it so easy to do, shouldn't there be at least some reconnaissance done before you decide to do something so invasive?
Calling him a troll is understating the crime he has committed.
I can't speak to the legal situation, but from a layman perspective, murder or at least harassment with the intent to inflict bodily harm seem more appropriate.
In 2020 swatting someone in the USA must be seen as equivalent to hiring an armed gang of street thugs. (From the victims/attackers perspective at least. The SWAT team acted appropriately given what they knew).
The attacker did it out of greed and willingly accepted a potential deadly outcome.
> We're told Sonderman scoured the internet looking for interesting and desirable usernames on social networks, from Instagram to Twitter, and pressured people to hand over those accounts.
> The goal was to obtain the usernames and then sell them to others for a profit
> “Judge Norris said he was giving Sonderman the maximum sentenced allowed by law under the statute — 60 months in prison followed by three years of supervised release, but implied that his sentence would be far harsher if the law permitted.”
The problem a penal system should be trying to solve is to turn someone who's a threat to society into someone who is not. I know that in the US it fails on many levels. However, it doesn't mean that the law should stick to the rigid framework of minimal sentences in cases like that.
Cold blooded murderers have gotten away with much less, people with an amount of weed that can easily dissapear in the coin pocket of your jeans have gotten much more.
Pretty sure one of the CA gubernatorial contenders outright ran over somebody in their car, killing them, and never saw a day in a cell. Money means just about everything w/regards to crime in the U.S.
Is The Register (a UK news outlet) not mentioning the involvement of a UK minor in the death for legal reasons? Obviously there's a limit on details they can give about him, but according to other stories he's the one who made the actual call and is getting off without consequences.
Man dies of a heart attack after minors swatted him over his rare Twitter handle - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=27900825 - July 2021 (558 comments)