Watching a "Swatting" Slowly Unfold 246
netbuzz writes That online gamers have been victimized has unfortunately allowed us to see what "swatting" looks like from the perspective of the target: terrifying and potentially deadly. A similar type of criminally unnecessary SWAT scene played out Saturday night when a caller to police in Hopkinton, Mass., claimed to be holed up in the town's closed public library with two hostages and a bomb. The library stands within eyesight of the starting line for the Boston Marathon. An editor for Network World, there by happenstance, watched for two hours, and, while it was a hoax and no one was hurt, his account highlights the disruption and wastefulness these crimes inflict.
call the library ? (Score:5, Insightful)
Wouldn't it be smarter for the police to call back the library, and ask if there's anything going on ?
Re:call the library ? (Score:4, Insightful)
If there's a real incident in progress, this wouldn't work. They'd either not answer, or be compelled by the people with guns to tell the cops that everything is a-okay.
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If they don't answer (during regular operating hours) you at least have a confirmation that something is going on. If they answer, but they are compelled to lie to the police, I'm sure the police can figure that out. They can listen for trembling in their voice, background noises, or ask the person to say something about a book if there's an emergency going on.
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Die Hard [imdb.com] begins with this plot line. Even in the movie, they still send a cop [imdb.com] to investigate ...
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Re:call the library ? (Score:4, Informative)
I agree, nobody would answer. From the summary, nobody even has to read the article for this one:
Re:call the library ? (Score:5, Insightful)
If the incident was called in by the perpetrator, wouldn't you expect him to want the staff to confirm his story? Why would he lie?
In fact, in most any hostage scenario I'd expect the perpetrators to want the staff to confirm their story - the whole point is to extract concessions, is it not? Ditto for a "suicide by cop" scenario. I'm having a hard time coming up with any scenario where the perpetrators would hole up in a public building and NOT want police and media attention.
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I'm having a hard time coming up with any scenario where the perpetrators would hole up in a public building and NOT want police and media attention.
How about the some dickwad wants to cream his jeans watching the SWAT drama unfold from the building across the street scenario; or even some wanabe perp reconnoitering the police response to fine-tune an intended future attack scenario?
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And how does he NOT want police/media attention on the purported target in either of those scenarios? In fact, those are *exactly* the sort of scenarios where a call to the main desk would help prevent a lot of wasted resources.
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I'm having a hard time coming up with any scenario where the perpetrators would hole up in a public building and NOT want police and media attention.
How about the some dickwad wants to cream his jeans watching the SWAT drama unfold from the building across the street scenario; or even some wanabe perp reconnoitering the police response to fine-tune an intended future attack scenario?
That dickwad then might go do an interview with network world... That guy's story doesn't sound super plausible to me.
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I dunno, let's say...
Robbing a bank? You take people hostage so they don't act unpredictably until you get your cash. Then you run away, letting everyone go. You
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Re:call the library ? (Score:5, Interesting)
Why would the hostage taker first call 911 to say there's a hostage situation, and then deny it when they call him back ?
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There is no guarantee they pretend to be the hostage taker. They could very well pretend to be a hostage.
Re:call the library ? (Score:4, Informative)
Not in this case, which is what I was talking about. Naturally, you can't always call back, but it doesn't hurt to explore options like these before bringing in the big guns.
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Am I missing something here? A hostage calls 911 and reports the situation. They call the library the hostager picks up, says everything is fine here.
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Yeah - you're missing that it's the supposed hostage taker that called 911. If it was a hostage, sure, maybe. Then again, what exactly is the point of taking hostages in a public building if you *don't* want police/media attention?
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Then again, what exactly is the point of taking hostages in a public building if you *don't* want police/media attention?
They said I had six books out already, I know I only had five... these things tend to spiral.
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Agreed. *IF* it were a claimed hostage making the call. Which it wasn't. And even if it was, it seems extremely unlikely that the hostage would just happen to be using an anonymized phone service. Not impossible, but it should send up a major red flag.
In fact I'd love to see some statistics on the percentage of anonymous 911 calls that end up being legitimate. I suspect the number is extremely low - maybe not quite zero, but low enough that the default assumption should be that it's a prank call. Still
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
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closed public library
Re:call the library ? (Score:5, Funny)
Han Solo: [sounding official] Uh, everything's under control. Situation normal.
Police Officer Calling: What happened?
Han Solo: [getting nervous] Uh, we had a slight weapons malfunction, but uh... everything's perfectly all right now. We're fine. We're all fine here now, thank you. How are you?
Officer: We're sending a squad up.
Han Solo: Uh, uh... negative, negative. We had a reactor leak here now. Give us a few minutes to lock it down. Large leak, very dangerous.
Officer: Who is this? What's your operating number?
Han Solo: Uh...
[Han shoots the phone]
Han Solo: [muttering] Boring conversation anyway. LUKE, WE'RE GONNA HAVE COMPANY!
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I see that working out well. Unless of course it isn't a hokes and the crazy guy with the hostages answers the phone with the police on the other line asking if things are ok because they just received a call. Which will end with a "I'm sorry someone wasted your time but everything is fine here." Or even worse "What the police?! Alright assholes which one of you called the pigs *gunshot* *gunshot* *screams* *heavy breathing* no no everything is fine."
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Alright assholes which one of you called the pigs
Read the article: "Police say they received the first of the perpetrator’s two calls just before 5:30 p.m."
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hokes
hoax
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I knew that didn't look right. Damn it where were you spell check?
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hokes
hoax
okey doke
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okey doke
okey doax
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"Where's Dewey?"
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My college decided to switch over to the Library of Congress indexing system as a demonstration for Library Month and quickly found that changing back was to much work so it stuck; so sometimes Dewey isn't here, even at the library.
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If they are police and not librarians, how would they know what question to ask and what the correct answer would be that only a librarian would know? And even if they had that prepared ahead of time, what if the original call came from a hospital, or a Best Buy, or Taco Bell? Should they ask what are the ingredients in a Nacho Bell Grande? Then when the terrorists get it wrong, they will know to go in guns a blazing!
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Wouldn't it be smarter for the police to call back the library, and ask if there's anything going on ?
In the rest of the civilized world the police has methods to approach situations like these in a more controlled manner, yes. But in the US, there is an incredible strong fear-based "what if?" premise to the narrative. Which leads to police methods working fine in other countries being ridiculed.
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Or just check where the call originated from? AFAIK all legitimate 911 calls have a location that is provided by the cell phone network to the 911 center. If the call is some sort of anonymous VOIP call that you can't verify where it originated from, DO NOT send the SWAT without figuring out what's going on...
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Why would he use an anonymous VOIP service to call the police, only to tell them exactly where he is?
You've made your decision then?
Not remotely! Because anonymous VOIP service comes from Australia, as everyone knows. And Australia is entirely peopled with criminals. And criminals are used to having people not trust them, as you are not trusted by me. So I can clearly not choose the library in front of me.
Truly, you have a dizzying intellect.
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Wouldn't it be smarter for the police to call back the library, and ask if there's anything going on ?
what, and miss an opportunity to scare the fuck out of^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H demonstrate their readiness and capability to the good citizens of Hopkinton? what Hopkinton obviously needs is a show of force from their police, less the taxpayers get it into their heads that reason and logic is more important than killing terrorists, even fake ones like the idiots responsible for this particular swatting.
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They could send a few police cars on their way, and then make a phone call right away. Depending on the call, they can call back the police with only a minimum of wasted money.
Re: call the library ? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: call the library ? (Score:4, Insightful)
the police could be sued if they wasted any time at all. That would include calling the closed library
Responding to a prank call also wastes time. Somebody could be planning to rob a bank, and make a prank hostage call at a business at the other side of town to distract the police.
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A smart bank robber would do it 3 or 4 times. Perhaps once while they're inside the bank.
Keep them really busy running all over town.
Maybe even have a small smoke bomb go off somewhere.
Re: call the library ? (Score:4, Informative)
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You do what you want, I'll do what I want.
You'll probably make more money from the script. I'll probably make more money from the robbery.
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That whooshing noise was not a jet flying over your head...
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Re: call the library ? (Score:4, Insightful)
A smart bank robber...
...already did it. Without leaving his desk. And not only did you never notice, the police will never even hear that it happened.
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The REAL trick though is getting the laws changed so that you can fleece the public of billions of dollars and have it all be perfectly legal.
Wait..were you not talking about wall st??
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the police could be sued if they wasted any time at all. That would include calling the closed library
Responding to a prank call also wastes time. Somebody could be planning to rob a bank, and make a prank hostage call at a business at the other side of town to distract the police.
Yeah, my immediate reactions was "I wonder what's getting robbed on the other side of town while they are busy 'responding in force' to the fake call?"
The whole "responding in force" thing seems to be a growing phenomenon; it will probably on be a matter of time before SWAT teams are called in when J-walkers are cited (except in San Francisco, where J-walkers have right of way, and are allowed to obstruct traffic indefinitely).
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Wasn't this in an episode of The Simpsons? Homer realized he had an unexpanded "J" and traveled to places of his youth in search of answers, only to find out the full spelling was "Jaywalkers"?
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Nope. It was just "Jay."
Re: call the library ? (Score:5, Insightful)
There are a lot of checks that they can at least attempt to perform before storming the building in body armor.
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But it might be a white, christian person on the phone!
In which case their death would not be politically sensitive, and they could relax and go get doughnuts.
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Related to the Boston Marathon how? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Clickbait? Really?
Given that there was actually a bombing at the Boston Marathon, how is this clickbait?
The proximity to a place which has already had one terrorism incident pretty much means "what the hell else would you expect the police to do but treat it seriously?"
You think a police department which has already lived through his kind of thing is simply going to say "nahh, we don't believe it"?
I don't think you understand what clickbait actually means. The author isn't just dropping the name of that t
Re:Related to the Boston Marathon how? (Score:4, Insightful)
He most certainly is dropping the "Boston Marathon" name to get more clicks. If it was actually relevant enough to base the article title on, then the implications, history, and potentially different police response would all get talked about in the article. As it stands, it's only mentioned once in an otherwise unnecessary last paragraph. Because it's clickbait.
Re:Related to the Boston Marathon how? (Score:4, Informative)
The Boston Marathon is on April 20th. So a hostage situation on April 5th would be unrelated. It would be like saying "Armed robbery at Pizza parlor within sight of the Statue of Liberty" knowing that the Statue of Liberty can be seen for miles away. Or maybe "Armed robbery at Pizza parlor visited by Barack Obama" when Barack Obama was there last year.
Domestic Terrorism? (Score:5, Interesting)
Would it be overkill to consider swatting a form of domestic terrorism?
It places people in imminent threat of bodily harm, definitely spreads fear - and the one that seems to tip the scales for me is that it intentionally disrupts the police's ability to respond to real threats and is basically derailing society's ability to defend itself.
Okay, labeling it terrorism would probably be too much, but things like swatting strike me as attacks on society itself - which to me falls under my own definition of terrorism.
Re:Domestic Terrorism? (Score:5, Insightful)
Let me put this clearly. We don't need a damn new enforcement of terrorism laws that they then can use to throw at the books of everyone and their grandma. There are laws already on the books for dealing with this from filing a false police report on up.
What they need to do to put a stop to this is start putting people in jail for it and make people realize they cannot fake a call to 911 anonymously. Once the story makes the rounds that if you do it you will go to jail people will stop doing it. That's all you need to do, start putting the pranksters in prison for a year or so and giving them a felony record in the process and this will stop. But you have to prove to the public that if you make one of these calls you will be caught.
But as long as the police departments treat it as a non-crime by not investigating it's only going to get worse. The for profit policing that the war on drugs had created discourages the police from pursuing real crime that's not tied to drugs.
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And if anyone is injured or killed, then accessory to attempted murder or murder.
If any property is damaged, full liability right up to taking your pension, property and garnishing of wages.
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Well, is that even true?
I've come to the conclusion that caller ID is completely worthless, because people just change it to anything they want .. because corporations fought to get exemptions to spoof caller ID because their business depends on it.
I question if it is true that you can't call 911 anonymously. Because it would appear it happens all the damned ti
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There are two caller ID's. The first is a spoof-able public bullshit version. There is a second private version that's unspoof-able (its assigned by the telecom). Though I would love to see a law that made caller ID truth a requirement the unspoof-able version could easily be used. You just need to require that all VOIP providers and PBX's keep logs for 90 days so they can be subpoenaed.
Though I agree, I'd like to see congress change the law on Caller ID and require that it be real information and punishab
Re:Domestic Terrorism? (Score:4)
Maybe. But there would be less risk of imminent harm if the police were less trigger-happy, better trained, more respectful of non-police, and more accountable for their actions.
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90% of what SWAT is "legitimately" used for is domestic terrorism if you use the same standard. When Maryland adopted a law that forced police departments to keep track of where and why they deploy SWAT and publish it (this happened after they mistakenly raided a house of a mayor in one of the small towns), the stats for the first year have immediately shown that people complaining about needless escalation were right all along [maryland.gov] - over 90% of the time SWAT is used to serve search (not arrest!) warrants, half
The only reason this SWATTING nonsense works (Score:5, Insightful)
Is because of the predictably over-the-top military reaction by the police.
Why kick someone in the balls when you can shine a laser pointer at his crotch, and have his dog bite him there?
De-escalate police reactions and you'll see this go away.
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you clearly did not watch the docudrama "Die Hard".
NW's Bad Precedent Encourages More Swatters (Score:3)
>> An editor for Network World....his account highlights the disruption and wastefulness these crimes inflict.
Or encourages other people to aim their hoaxes at other cities with high per-capita media, such as New York, LA, DC...in the hopes they get national attention too.
"Swatting" doesn't capture the crime. (Score:5, Interesting)
Better to call it "terrorism by proxy".
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Better to call it "terrorism by proxy".
Would it be overkill to consider swatting a form of domestic terrorism?
Sure, why not? The word's been rendered meaningless already.
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the use of deadly force is authorized
An anonymous phone call should not be the basis of authorization of deadly force.
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Re:Completely and utterly false explanation... (Score:5, Interesting)
and it makes our existence more coarse.
We are living in the fall of The Republic and the beginning of The Empire.
This is similar to how for hundreds of years it was forbidden for Roman Troops to enter the city. Then they did.
It was forbidden to go armed into The Forum. Then they did.
It was forbidden to go armed into The Senate. Then they did.
How to encourage swatting. (Score:3)
To encourage more swatting simply:
1. Post videos of swatting online.
2. Post interviews of swatted people onlne.
Also works for mass-shootings.
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BS, copycat crimes are a proven thing, google it.
What YOU SAID is not logical at all. Deterrents rarely work, how's that 3 million people prison system thing going? Cost much?
Could it be... (Score:2)
I think the solution is obvious (Score:5, Informative)
The solution is to re-examine SWAT team usage nation wide, and how they are used and for what. Until we do, SWATing will always be a threat. The solution is to fix the vulernbility by replacing a dangerous and broken system with one that works better.
this will get fixed... (Score:5, Insightful)
when it affects someone in power.
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How about 20 years to life in prison for perps?
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Longer sentences tend not to work on crazy people. If they had long-term thinking ability and discipline, they probably would not do stupid things to begin with.
Longer sentences look good on paper and politically, but often just cost tax payers more than the crime damage potential because locking people up is expensive. It might be a better deal to have more cops than more jails, for quicker response.
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Hard to SWAT someone from a prison cell.
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Hard to SWAT someone from a prison cell.
If you can't get a cell phone into anything short of a Super-Max (where you are locked in the Hannibal Lector cells), then you simply do not have friends on the outside, and you don't know the right guard.
This is why prisons need cell phone jammers (but of course, most prisons do not have them).
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Hard to SWAT someone from a prison cell.
There was a news story in the UK recently about a prisoner who escaped by emailing fake release instructions to the prison from his cell phone.
Just because people are in prison doesn't mean they can't communicate with the outside world.
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Wasn't that last guy convicted guilty of some 19 "swattings"?
Plus, I don't discount the Deterrence effect.
BlowBack (Re:Privacy battle) (Score:2)
Yes, before he was caught. A sentence of a billion years probably wouldn't have prevented those 19.
I do. A cost/benefit analysis suggests we often over-detain for "feel good" political reasons.
In some cases it makes the problem WORSE because the thought of long sentences makes the chasee take bigger risks. One rapist told investigators he killed his under-age victim because the penalty for murder was only slightly more than the rape sentence. The "jail math" thus
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Actually I think a shorter sentence and a very blatant and publicly announced requirement to reimburse the people for the cost of the SWAT response, the local business to be reimbursed for lost revenue, the Public to be reimbursed for the cost of the prisoner's room and board costs, the public to be reimbursed for the costs of the Perpetrator’s Parole/Probation . Also it goes without saying that SWATTING is terrorist act, so you'll be on the no-fly list and banned from having a cell phone and any in
Re:Privacy battle (Score:4, Insightful)
No actual guns blazed in this scenario. Lots of people milled about, but not a single shot was fired.
Did you have some kind of point to make?
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No actual guns blazed in this scenario. Lots of people milled about, but not a single shot was fired.
Yes, but in other scenarios, guns do blaze, flashbangs are thrown into cribs, and bad things happen. That nothing happened this time is news.
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You don't have to fire a shot to be "guns blazing".
Yeah, but I'm not sure what the hostage takers would think if the SWAT arrived, just for them to throw all their guns into a large bonfire in front of the library.
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No the real problem is the police having essentially a para-military mindset
Yes but you are still blaming the wrong people for the incidents. It's like blaming the explosion on the explosive. The one who lights it up is the one that caused the explosion, no the chemicals. You're using the .01% rule as your argument and that's why it's not valid.
In my opinion, every police officer should be tried before a jury for every shooting
A good start would be making them 100% accountable by putting body cams. I've said this a million times. People keep saying the police has too much power. The power isn't the problem, it's the lack of accountability. Without the body cams th
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you are still blaming the wrong people for the incidents. It's like blaming the explosion on the explosive.
Not every situation has someone who's 100% to blame, and someone who's 100% blameless. Our binary way of thinking is part of the problem. It's why we can't say that "muggers are a problem, but putting yourself in a position where you have a high chance of getting mugged is also problematic." Actually, that's not so controversial, but replace "mugging" with "rape" and watch the sparks fly.
Yes, the ma
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My point is that we focus too much on the 0.01%. The real issue is the hoax call. That needs to be addressed first. Authorities can very easily be made accountable as suggested previously. Heck, why not pay for the equipment with the savings from not having to answer all those hoax calls?
The militarization of police has been problematic, and maybe that's a temporary, transitional issue, or maybe it's a natural consequence of heading in the wrong direction
I tend to see this as an exaggeration of reality. The media plays a great role at making it look worst than it really is.
But police departments are not inanimate objects
No they aren't and at no point do I shell them from the truth but we need to determine if the ratio of