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A Grandfather Died in 'Swatting' Over His Twitter Handle, Officials Say (nytimes.com) 141

Mark Herring had a fatal heart attack after the police swarmed his house after a fake emergency call. A Tennessee man was sentenced to five years in prison in connection with the episode. From a report: Mark Herring was at home in Bethpage, Tenn., one night in April 2020 when the police swarmed his house. Someone with a British accent had called emergency services in Sumner County and reported having shot a woman in the back of the head at Mr. Herring's address. The caller had threatened to set off pipe bombs at the front and back doors if officers came, according to federal court records. When the police arrived, they drew their guns and told Mr. Herring, a 60-year-old computer programmer and grandfather of six, to come out and keep his hands visible. As he walked out, he lost his balance and fell. He was pronounced dead that same night at a nearby hospital. The cause of death was a heart attack, according to court records.

Mr. Herring had been a victim of "swatting," the act of reporting a fake crime in order to provoke a heavily armed response from the police. The caller was a minor living in the United Kingdom, according to federal prosecutors. But the caller knew Mr. Herring's address because Shane Sonderman, 20, of Lauderdale County, Tenn., had posted the information online, prosecutors said. On Wednesday, Mr. Sonderman was sentenced to five years in prison after he pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy. "The defendant was part of a chain of events," federal prosecutors said in court documents. The police "arrived prepared to take on a life and death situation," prosecutors said. "Mr. Herring died of a heart attack at gunpoint." Mr. Sonderman's lawyer, Bryan R. Huffman, said he had argued for a lesser sentence but believed five years "was fair in light of Shane's culpability."

"Mr. Sonderman has expressed his remorse on multiple occasions. He has expressed his regret regarding Mr. Herring's death," Mr. Huffman said in an email on Saturday. "Mr. Sonderman's family had also expressed their remorse. There are many families affected by Shane's actions, including his own family." Mr. Herring was targeted because he refused to sell his Twitter handle, @Tennessee, according to his family and prosecutors. Smart, blunt and plain-spoken, Mr. Herring had loved computers since he was a teenager and joined Twitter in March 2007, less than a year after it started, his family said. He knew people wanted his handle, which he chose because of his love for the state, where he had been born and raised, and had rebuffed offers of $3,000 to $4,000 to sell it, his daughter Corinna Fitch, 37, said in an interview.

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A Grandfather Died in 'Swatting' Over His Twitter Handle, Officials Say

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  • Jordan had it right (Score:4, Interesting)

    by bhcompy ( 1877290 ) on Tuesday July 27, 2021 @12:54PM (#61625787)
    Fuck them kids
    • by Geoffrey.landis ( 926948 ) on Tuesday July 27, 2021 @02:04PM (#61626095) Homepage

      ""Mr. Sonderman has expressed his remorse on multiple occasions. He has expressed his regret regarding Mr. Herring's death,"

      Bullshit.

      The only "regret" he expressed is regret at being caught.

      While he was out on bail, "Sonderman was promptly re-arrested for violating the terms of his release, and prosecutors played for the court today a recording of a phone call Sonderman made from jail in which he brags to a female acquaintance that he wiped his mobile phone two days before investigators served another search warrant on his home. [source: https://krebsonsecurity.com/20... [krebsonsecurity.com] ]

      And while out on bond, he continued to harrass targets to take their twitter handles. [source: https://www.msn.com/en-us/news... [msn.com] ]

  • by Anonymous Coward
    While it is hard to assign responsibility for a heart attack (given it was a likely unknown pre-existing medical condition), swatting is never OK, as it is well known people can die, and those involved in the conspiracy knew that, or reasonably should have known that, given all the previous reports.
    • by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Tuesday July 27, 2021 @01:40PM (#61626001)

      While it is hard to assign responsibility for a heart attack (given it was a likely unknown pre-existing medical condition), swatting is never OK, as it is well known people can die, and those involved in the conspiracy knew that, or reasonably should have known that, given all the previous reports.

      Swatting can (often) be deadly. You're right, this is known to all parties at this point, including instigators.

      Therefore, charges and sentences should be appropriate to further create a real deterrent. IANAL, but I'm thinking some degree of murder short of 1st. Hard to argue anything less than that.

      • by shanen ( 462549 )

        I don't know if this should be treated as a rational crime. I think this guy is just insane and should be locked up. Perhaps a rubber room with really stinky rubber? For at least two or three times as many years as he took away from the victim. (And such a nut probably has lots of other victims, too. I'm okay with adding more time because I don't think there's any chance this sociopathic nut can be cured.)

        However, I've long suspected that too much computer use is bad for mental health.

        • However, I've long suspected that too much computer use is bad for mental health.

          Sadly, this growing and rather serious problem, will be dismissed.

          Kind of hard to convince the psychologist that there's a problem with internet addiction when the fucking psychologist is addicted.

          When everyone is an addict, no one is.

          • by shanen ( 462549 )

            Sad ACK. But it could be the resolution of the Fermi Paradox. The negative resolution.

        • think this guy is just insane and should be locked up.

          From a certain angle, one might argue that someone isn't quite right in their headbrain for any major crime. I mean, the average J[oe][ane][hey] isn't going around murdering/raping/carjacking/etc people. IANAL, but I think the standard for courts is not just run-of-the-mill crazy, but a literal inability to tell "right" from "wrong". E.g. If this Shane fellow literally did not know and was incapable of comprehending that swatting was less okay/legal than, say, playing a game of checkers.

          • by shanen ( 462549 )

            Lately I've been wondering if it's actually a sort of mechanical problem in their brains. Broken or missing mirror neurons? There are some parts of our brain that actually help us to understand other people, but they don't work well for some people. When it's sufficiently obvious, they may get labeled as sociopaths.

            But one of my strange new theories is that the same motor neurons might be related to our self-awareness. In some sense they may determine our soul as a kind of recursive reflection of other part

            • It's called "empathy" and it's the ability that normal people have to put themselves into other's shoes; to see how it feels to be them for a moment. Sociopaths and Psychopaths have a damaged or nonexistent sense of empathy, usually.

        • by taustin ( 171655 )

          I think this guy is just insane and should be locked up.

          It's a shame he didn't claim mental illness. Not guilty by reason of insanity, on average, results in twice as long in a mental hospital as the jail sentence that was avoided.

          However, I've long suspected that too much computer use is bad for mental health.

          I suspect you might have cause and effect reversed. That people who are mentally fragile to being with are more likely to spend long hours on the internet, where the consequences of their bad behavior are being encouraged to display more bad behavior, rather than being stuffed in a trash can.

        • by ufgrat ( 6245202 ) on Tuesday July 27, 2021 @08:17PM (#61627857)

          However, I've long suspected that too much computer use is bad for mental health.

          Speaking as someone who's been using computers since December 1979, and has spent the last 25+ years as a system administrator, that's about the worst case of loose thinking I've seen today.

          You might as well claim, since all crazy people breathe oxygen, that extended oxygen consumption is bad for mental health-- or health in general, since everyone who breathes oxygen will eventually die.

          A society which refuses to hold anyone responsible, and allows someone to claim depression from eating junk food as a mitigating factor in a murder trial, and treats people with mental health issues by throwing random medications at them, THAT contributes to poor mental health.

          But in this case, we have someone who callously risks other people dying in pursuit of cold hard cash-- that's just a sociopath, and "blaming computers" (an overly broad term anyway) for their greed is nonsensical at best, and just downright idiotic at worst.

    • by Geoffrey.landis ( 926948 ) on Tuesday July 27, 2021 @02:07PM (#61626105) Homepage

      While it is hard to assign responsibility for a heart attack ...

      from https://krebsonsecurity.com/20... [krebsonsecurity.com] :

      "When Mr. Herring stepped out on the back porch to investigate, police told him to put his hands up and to come to the street.

      Unable to disengage a lock on his back fence, Herring was instructed to somehow climb over the fence with his hands up.

      “He was starting to get more upset,” Billings recalled. “He said, ‘I’m a 60-year-old fat man and I can’t do that.'”

      Billings said Mr. Herring then offered to crawl under a gap in the fence, but when he did so and stood up, he collapsed of a heart attack. Herring died at a nearby hospital soon after."

      • by naris ( 830549 )
        This clown really needs a lot more than 5 years, he needs at least life. He is really the poster child for capital punishment!
    • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

      No, it's not hard to assign responsibility for the heart attack. The responsibility belongs to Mr. Sonderman. He made the call and someone died for it. end of discussion.

  • Dupe? (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward
  • paywalled (Score:3, Insightful)

    by v1 ( 525388 ) on Tuesday July 27, 2021 @01:01PM (#61625821) Homepage Journal

    stop posting articles where the primary link is paywalled.

    • You’re reading a site for tech minded people and can’t figure out how to bypass a paywall?

      https://archive.is/TzZYv [archive.is]

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        If the person posting can't be bothered to do the work, why should I? I just assume paywalled links are not worth reading, and so far I've been right every time.

        • by Jeremi ( 14640 )

          I just assume paywalled links are not worth reading, and so far I've been right every time.

          How would you know, without having read them?

      • You’re reading a site for tech minded people and can’t figure out how to bypass a paywall?

        We can do all sorts of things. But we shouldn't fucking have to.

        • Ah yes the whole "why can't you post everything in metric" debate. Why can't you post in GMT, etc etc?

          • Ah yes the whole "why can't you post everything in metric" debate. Why can't you post in GMT, etc etc?

            Your slippery slope fallacies aren't welcome here. There's good reason to not post things here in metric with the predominantly American site. There's ZERO fucking good reasons for a news aggregator to publish news articles a portion of the people are unable to read. This isn't a case of not understanding TFS or being able to divide miles by 1.6, this is FAILING AT YOUR ONE JOB.

            • News for Nerds [merriam-webster.com]. Aka people who didn't take "no" for an answer; as in "no you can't go faster than sound", "no you can't figure out Pi", or "no you can't access that web site". This is no longer a site for those who can deal with a challenge. It's "please take all the challenge out of things and do everything for me" site. Especially since it's already been demonstrated multiple times how. So no slippy slope needed, when we're already at the bottom waiting for someone to take up the challenge of "no there's

              • This is no longer a site for those who can deal with a challenge.

                I don't read news for a challenge. I do engineer, I physically exert myself through sport. If you feel like the need to exert yourself mentally catching up with news why not quit Slashdot... you know the site which is a news aggregator... as in someone who collates news you may find interesting simply because you're not up to the challenge of finding it yourself. How slack of you.

                Maybe a geek will come along and help.

                Maybe they can help you understand the stupidity of your comment.

  • "Mr. Sonderman has expressed his remorse on multiple occasions. He has expressed his regret regarding Mr. Herring's death," Mr. Huffman said in an email on Saturday. "Mr. Sonderman's family had also expressed their remorse. There are many families affected by Shane's actions, including his own family."

    Mr Sonderman also regrets being caught and blames it on those meddlesome kids.

  • Almost feel like they should retire the twitter handle in memoriam, or reserve it for official use after this.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 27, 2021 @01:06PM (#61625845)

    By all means, punish the swatters to the maximum extent (and pass new laws increasing the punishment), but it's unacceptable that police aren't being held to some account for this as well. A largely non-credible 911 call with questionable caller-ID (e.g., out of area) at a residence with no history of police interaction should not result in a massive response that sends a startled innocent person out of their front door to die on the porch. This isn't the first time.

    When Ofc Justin Rapp shot and killed Andrew Shaver due to a swatting in Kansas, he was not held accountable. And these cops won't be either.

    Police will claim that they respond based on "possibilities" not "probabilities," but that's BS. They are supposed to know their communities. And they shouldn't be letting a game of telephone between false 911 callers, 911 dispatchers, police dispatchers, and fellow police result in an escalation of the perceived situation.

    Among other things, during police academy, every recruit should be woken up in the middle of the night unannounced, and while startled and held at gunpoint with a light in their face be made to follow precise instructions (hands above your head, step this way, face that way, don't pull up your pajama pants that are drooping, etc). Human response reflexes are not aligned with what these cops seem to expect, especially for innocent people who have no history of hostile interaction with police.

    • by flex941 ( 521675 )
      Grr, no mod points when you need them, grr.
    • Among other things, during police academy, every recruit should be woken up in the middle of the night unannounced, and while startled and held at gunpoint with a light in their face be made to follow precise instructions (hands above your head, step this way, face that way, don't pull up your pajama pants that are drooping, etc). Human response reflexes are not aligned with what these cops seem to expect, especially for innocent people who have no history of hostile interaction with police.

      Damn, that is an excellent idea.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      If the cops lose their civil immunity things will change. Guaranteed the bad apples will quit en masse. And why not? Paramedic EMT's lost their immunity decades ago here in NY. If an EMT breaks your ribs while doing CPR on you, your ambulance chaser can hold them liable now.

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 ) on Tuesday July 27, 2021 @02:08PM (#61626109)

      Precise instructions?

      I've been held at gunpoint in this kind of situation. I have a common name and the US government has apparently decided to make the screen say "OMG PANIC SHIT SHIT SHIT" in giant red letters whenever someone with that name crosses the border.

      They don't yell precise instructions. You've got a dozen hyped up dudes yelling a bunch of different things at the same time. You just put your hands up as high as you can and pray you don't sneeze until they calm down enough to start yelling instructions one at a time.

      Don't stop praying you don't sneeze though.

      • This.

        I've been on the other side of a door with someone shouting on the other side. Had NO idea it was police. Had NO idea what they wanted. (Turns out it was an office alarm that brought them.) Was completely unintelligible, even worse than the Peanuts adult voice you get over bullhorns/PA systems.

        Oh! Reminds me of police using a PA system in their car on the road. No idea what they were talking about, I pulled into a rest stop, they did their Peanuts adult voice noises for a bit then drove off. The

    • Among other things, during police academy, every recruit should be woken up in the middle of the night unannounced, and while startled and held at gunpoint with a light in their face be made to follow precise instructions (hands above your head, step this way, face that way, don't pull up your pajama pants that are drooping, etc). Human response reflexes are not aligned with what these cops seem to expect, especially for innocent people who have no history of hostile interaction with police.

      There is a huge need for better training for the police.

    • Police will claim that they respond based on "possibilities" not "probabilities," but that's BS. They are supposed to know their communities.

      How are they supposed to "know" their communities to this extent while respecting things like the 4th Amendment and privacy? Especially when we demand the cops remove their surveillance systems (rightfully) citing privacy concerns?

      • by SvnLyrBrto ( 62138 ) on Tuesday July 27, 2021 @03:35PM (#61626515)

        Easy. Three simple steps:

        1) Require the police to actually live in the community they serve. This is basic common sense for other reasons too. They're supposed to be "first responders" along with firefighters and paramedics. They can't respond to shit in the case of an earthquake, for example, if they're not actual members of the community; but mere mercenaries brought in from out of town on the other side of the bridges and/or BART tunnel, all of which could closed due to either damage or an abundance of caution.

        2) Get them out of their cars and onto foot patrol. Have them drop in... individually, not in force... into the local businesses to get to know the owners and their needs and concerns. Have them spend time at the bus and train stops getting to know the commuters. Have them ride the busses and trains to get to and from work themselves. As with #1 above, make them be PART of the community they serve; and squash with extreme prejudice any notion they develop that they might be ABOVE the community.

        3) Get them out of their fortress-like precincts and disperse them in small numbers into miniature police stations like Japan's Koban [wikipedia.org] police boxes. Make them be visible, but in small non-threatening numbers. Some of those Kobans are manned solo, and they usually top out at 10. Put them at major intersections, at train stations, in the parks, at shopping centers, and bus/train transfer stops. Stock them with first-aid kits, extra COVID masks, snacks and candy for the kids, and dog treats. Make them get up and out and help the public, giving directions, helping seniors cross the street, getting the proverbial cats out of trees, et cetera. As with #1 and #2 above, make then KNOW their communities, by BEING PART OF the communities.

    • by ami.one ( 897193 )

      Absolutely

  • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Tuesday July 27, 2021 @01:08PM (#61625855)

    "Mr. Sonderman has expressed his remorse on multiple occasions. He has expressed his regret regarding Mr. Herring's death," Mr. Huffman said in an email on Saturday.

    From this NYT article [nytimes.com]

    After he pleaded guilty on March 22, Mr. Sonderman continued to “conspire with others to harass people online in order to obtain control of their social media handles,” federal prosecutors said in court records.

    So he's expressed "remorse" and "regret", but does he actually feel it? And when was this, after he was convicted? Because it doesn't seem like it was after he was arrested *and* pled guilty if he kept doing it.

    • Does not matter. The victim is still dead and it's still his culpability. It matters not one whit what he feels.
      • Does not matter. The victim is still dead and it's still his culpability. It matters not one whit what he feels.

        I agree, just point out some possible hypocrisy and/or disingenuousness by the defendant and/or his lawyer.

        • by Mal-2 ( 675116 )

          And I think he should be charged for activities after he was arrested for the first one, because there's no "I didn't know it could go that badly" defense. Sociopaths gonna sociopath, but once detected, it's not like we just have to let them.

    • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

      Well we can't really know what is in a man's head/heart now can we. However yeah based on his actions and the timeline we might infer that he is a little less than remorseful.

      However its also true that sometimes people don't really understand the consequences until that human face gets put on it and they are confronted. It might have been 'the person on the other side of the screen' is a abstract concept for some until they are made plainly real to them in person. If we don't entertain at least the possibi

    • So he's expressed "remorse" and "regret", but does he actually feel it?

      A punishment should fit the crime. All this kid did was call the cops. ... Knowing the guy could get killed. ... Because of a twitter nickname.

      I propose removing his testicle through use of hammer and anvil, just so this fucking filth doesn't accidentally breed.

      • So he's expressed "remorse" and "regret", but does he actually feel it?

        A punishment should fit the crime. All this kid did was call the cops. ... Knowing the guy could get killed. ... Because of a twitter nickname.

        I propose removing his testicle through use of hammer and anvil, just so this fucking filth doesn't accidentally breed.

        Actually this kid posted the victim's info online and a kid in the UK made the call. From TFS/A:

        The caller was a minor living in the United Kingdom, according to federal prosecutors. But the caller knew Mr. Herring's address because Shane Sonderman, 20, of Lauderdale County, Tenn., had posted the information online, prosecutors said.

        Still, I don't disagree that his punishment should be harsh. Not sure about the testicle thing, but certainly hope he's popular in prison gen-pop.

    • by taustin ( 171655 )

      He read the script his lawyer gave him. Of course he did. If he didn't, the judge would find a way to make him wish he had, maximum sentence already or not.

  • This won't be rehabilitative, it will be sheer retaliation. Which means he won't learn any respect for life and those he has hrmed (directly or indirectly) will lose what respect they have. That's probably not good. I don't advise lighter sentances, indeed, I'd insist on a minimum tariff where he stays in prison that long no matter what but if it takes longer to get him to truly understand and have empathy, then he should stay in until the job is done.

  • An old BBS guy (Score:5, Informative)

    by DominoTree ( 803219 ) on Tuesday July 27, 2021 @01:27PM (#61625955)
    It's worth mentioning that he was the creator of the QWK offline mail format and was also interviewed in the BBS documentary https://www.theregister.com/20... [theregister.com]
  • Everyone knows the rules "Guns are always loaded" and "Don't aim at what you don't want to shoot" and so on, this rule should simply be common sense.

    "Directing a gun held by someone else is no different from aiming it yourself."

  • Felony murder? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by RoccamOccam ( 953524 ) on Tuesday July 27, 2021 @01:59PM (#61626077)
    Wouldn't this fall under the category of felony murder [crimlawpractitioner.org] for both the minor and Sonderman. Sonderman and the minor colluded in an attempt to force Herring to sell his Twitter handle to Sonderman - correct? I would expect that would be considered a felony, therefore felony murder.
  • Just call it incitement for murder. Problem solved!

  • So... I take it his twitter handle is now available?

  • Gently push him out to sea towards Cuba, and shoot him if he tries to come back to shore.

    I can't image what this person's contribution is that would tip the balance in favour of the country being better off with him in it.

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