In the U.S. and Canada, police agencies are seeing a rise in a type of hoax dubbed “swatting”. Here’s how it works: 1) a caller reports a hostage situation to the police department [i.e. “I’ve killed two people and I have hostages!”], 2) SWAT Team shows up at reported hostage situation guns a-blazing, 3) no actual hostage situation is going on [ i.e. empty house/building, or prank victim’s home], 4) caller and his accomplices enjoy their “bragging rights”.
The typical swatter is a male in his 20’s or 30’s, and swatter groups tend to be behind multiple swatting hoaxes. Even worse, when swatter groups receive media attention or brag about their exploits, police agencies have noted that it tends to spawn “copy-swats”.
While these guys apparently find swatting quite amusing, they can face federal charges of conspiracy (max. penalty 5 yrs in prison) and fraud (max. 20 years in prison). Diverting police officers away from fighting actual crime puts innocent people in danger and is a massive waste of tax payer dollars. The Feds are not taking these offenses lightly.
If you are thinking swatting might be a good prank to pull on someone – don’t do it. If you’ve gotten into other kinds of trouble with the law, give The Wright Firm a call at (972) 353-4600 or check us out on the web at www.thewrightlawyers.com!
Original article can be found here: http://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2011/08/10/SWAT-teams-responding-to-swatting-hoaxes/UPI-31561313022441/
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