A Thursday night police shooting in Wichita, Kansas may be linked to a Call of Dut<\/em>y <\/em>dispute.<\/p>
Witchita police received a call at 6:15pm on Dec. 28 reporting a deadly hostage situation, according to local newspaper The Wichita Eagle<\/a>.<\/p>
Related: <\/strong>On Twitch, SWAT teams are becoming dangerous props for trolls<\/strong><\/a><\/p>
The victim’s mother, Lisa Finch, who was present at the time of the shooting, blamed the police and the alleged swatting prank for her son’s death. “That cop murdered my son over a false report in the first place,” Finch said in a video<\/a> posted to The Eagle. “My son was not a gamer.”<\/p>
Finch added that her son was unarmed, and there were no guns in the house.<\/p>
A document of the Call of Duty<\/em> match, which names the two players allegedly involved, is available at daily tournament site UMG Gaming<\/a>.<\/p>
Livingston told The Eagle that the police are currently investigating whether or not the call was a deadly prank. More information will be released during a 4pm CT press conference on Facebook Live<\/a>. Dot Esports has reached out to Wichita police.<\/p>
The Wichita shooting may be the first time a swatting prank has ended in death. Swatting has become prevalent<\/a> in gaming and streaming communities. The situation is often a dangerous combination of confusion and chaos for both the police and the victim.<\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"