A 28-year-old man was shot by police in Wichita, Kansas, Thursday night after someone called in a false homicide report at his address. On Friday, the man who claims to have placed the call gave an interview on a popular YouTube channel.
The story thatâs being passed around onlineâbut has not yet been confirmed by policeâis that the 911 call was placed as part of a feud between two players of the online first-person shooter game Call of Duty. One of the parties involved wanted to âswatâ the otherâmeaning to send police to his house as a prankâbut he didnât want to place the call himself. Instead, he contacted someone called âSwautistic,â who had previously bragged about swatting players and even shutting down major gaming events by calling in threats.
But the target apparently gave Swautistic a false address, and thatâs where police showed up. An officer shot and killed Andrew Finch, 28, who didnât play video games and appears to have been completely unrelated to the dispute.
On Friday, Swautistic gave an interview to YouTuber Keemstar, who has earned millions of subscribers by covering âdramaâ among online stars like Jake Paul and Danielle âBhad Bhabieâ Bregoli.
In the course of their 10-minute conversation, Swautistic didnât give any personally identifying information, other than to say that heâs over 18 years old and âdoesnât have parents.â
âI was minding my own business at the library when someone contacted me and said âHey dude, this fuckinâ retard just gave me his address and he thinks nothingâs gonna happen. You wanna prove him wrong?’â Swautistic explained.
âAnd I said, âSure, I love swatting kids who think that nothingâs gonna happen.’â
He said the target then contacted him on Twitter, dared him to do something, and gave him an address.
He admits he called the police and created what Keemstar called âa fake hostage situation.â While it has yet to be confirmed, his voice at least sounds similar to the 911 audio Wichita police shared at their press conference earlier in the day.
âAnd then this guy gets killed,â Keemstar said.
âThatâs what happened, I guess,â Swautistic responded.
Although he claims he placed the call, Swautistic doesnât believe heâs at fault because he was âalmost instructed and tauntedâ into trying to swat the address.
Swautistic also admitted to writing a tweet that made the rounds of the Call of Duty community on Friday in which he claimed, âI DIDNâT GET ANYONE KILLED BECAUSE I DIDNâT DISCHARGE A WEAPON AND BEING A SWAT MEMBER ISNâT MY PROFESSION.â
https://twitter.com/Mattcarries/status/946737358480859136
âYeah, the call was made by me, but as far as the whole incident âŚâ he said, starting to talk rapidly. âYou could point the finger at the cop who killed someone, you could point the finger at the person who made the call, you could point the finger at the person who provided the address, who said, âoh look this is where I live, go ahead and swat me, if you do youâre going to go to prison for five years.’â
Throughout the interview, Swautistic attempted to shift the blame to the person who duped him with the wrong address.
Swautistic also admitted to previous swattings, including evacuating a Major League Gaming event in Dallas earlier this year. He said sometimes he swatted for money, but sometimes he just targeted events âfor fun, just to get it on TV.â
âI donât really swat people,â he said, noting that the risk of being caught is much lower for evacuations than for swatting an individualâs home.
Although the Wichita police and federal authorities are investigating the false call, Swautistic didnât seem to have much fear that his arrest was imminent.
âWorried, yeah? But currently, not so much,â he told Keemstar.
âItâs my personal belief that I didnât cause someone to die. I guess. If I could rewind I fucking would, âcause this is all stupid.â
Update 2:39pm CT: According to NBC News and the Associated Press, a 25-year-old man named Tyler Barriss has been arrested in Los Angeles. Barriss allegedly made the false report after getting into the dispute, and according to police, Barriss is the one who gave authorities the fake address.