17-year-old alleged ‘serial swatter’ charged after police say he made threats throughout the country
17-year-old alleged ‘serial swatter’ charged after police say he made threats throughout the country
A teenager “serial swatter” from California is believed to be responsible for hundreds of swatting incidents and bomb threats throughout the US according to a pretrial detention motion. Now he has been extradited to Florida to face charges for a swatting incident at a m...
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It seems like this swatting thing could be used on anyone including CEO’s and politicians 🤔
25 2 ReplyWouldn't work. They get a different justice system.
20 0 ReplyIt has been happening to politicians already. Niki Haley had it happen to her family this past week. Now it's in the news and is a big deal.
My question is why do the police just randomly trust every call they get? I feel like there could be more safeguards in place on that side.
20 2 ReplyBecause it's better to respond to a false positive than to ignore a false negative
13 1 ReplyHow?
1 1 Reply"Sorry your daughter and wife were raped and murdered right before your eyes. See we thought it was a prank call so we didn't respond"
You can replace that scenario with any other and it still fits.
3 1 ReplyWho said anything about not responding? There's a wide gulf of scenarios between not investigating a lead and swatting a random address.
1 1 ReplyI did when I said it's better to respond to a false positive than ignore a false negative
2 0 Reply
Not if you’re the false positive that gets a grenade thrown in your baby’s crib.
11 11 ReplyAnd that's worse than ignoring a real threat?
"Sorry, we didn't send help because we thought this was a prank."
Use your brains.
13 6 ReplyI think it's possible that might just maybe a middle ground between going equipped for the third world war and ignoring the call.
To suggest otherwise is just accepting that the police are heavily militarized and I don't think that sensible.
Swatting is nowhere near as big a deal in other countries so clearly it's a solvable problem.
8 6 ReplySwatting is nowhere near as big a deal in other countries so clearly it’s a solvable problem.
Why isn't as big a deal in other countries, though? Time to put on our critical thinking caps!
Is it because they have more measures in place to identify false threats? Does this also coincide with LE ignoring real threats?
Is it because their population doesn't see the value in swatting as much as other nations'? (i.e. do they have fewer incels?)
Is it something else?
12 5 ReplyIt's because the police don't carry around assault rifles as a matter of course that's why.
If there is a hostage taker you want to negotiator not an attack force. If a negotiator goes to the property and it's a false flag no issue.
Sending in an armed force is literally the worst response in both real and false situations.
3 3 ReplyIf there is a hostage taker you want to negotiator not an attack force. If a negotiator goes to the property and it’s a false flag no issue.
You clearly don't know the history behind why the SWAT teams were created. Educate yourself and then come back to us.
1 4 Reply