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2017 Wichita swatting. On December 28, 2017, a fatal swatting incident occurred in Wichita, Kansas, United States. During an online dispute between Casey Viner and Shane Gaskill regarding the video game Call of Duty: WWII, Viner threatened to have Gaskill swatted. Gaskill responded by giving him a false address for his residence, one that was ...
July 5, 2022 at 3:41 PM. The Wichita Eagle. The Wichita police officer who shot and killed Andrew Finch in a now-infamous 2017 swatting incident will face a Sedgwick County jury in an excessive ...
July 3, 2022 at 5:53 AM. The Wichita Police Department has promoted the officer who pulled the trigger in the nation’s first deadly “swatting” call, a move the mayor and two city council ...
August 3, 2022 at 7:10 PM. Wichita police officer Justin Rapp, who shot and killed unarmed Andrew Finch in 2017, told a police supervisor that if he ever ran into Finch’s mother, he would tell ...
In 2018, following the swatting death of Andrew Finch in Wichita, Kansas, members of Seattle's online broadcaster community contacted Whitcomb, then in charge of public affairs and digital engagement for the Seattle Police Department, to express concerns about swatting.
Thomas Johnson (Kansas politician) K. 2016 Kansas–Missouri murder spree; I-70 killer; Michael Kolnhofer; L. Norman Lee (musician) M. ... 2017 Wichita swatting
The swatting resulted in the death of Finch, an innocent man fatally shot by a Wichita police officer who responded to his home at 1033 W. McCormick after Barriss made a fake emergency call about ...
Kansas "Call of Duty gaming community points to 'swatting' in deadly Wichita police shooting. Online gamers have said in multiple Twitter posts that the shooting of a man Thursday night by Wichita police was the result of a "swatting" hoax involving two gamers." See also 2017 Wichita, Kansas swatting. 2017-12-29: Christopher Baird (37)