Bogus 911 calls played at 'swatting' trial of Ottawa teen - Action News
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Bogus 911 calls played at 'swatting' trial of Ottawa teen

Some chilling but bogus 911 calls were played at the trial of an Ottawa teen facing 34 charges of using the internet for "swatting" in three provinces and five U.S. states.

Fake bomb threats called in to schools in Alberta, Quebec, Ontario and 5 U.S. states

Day 1 of Ottawa teen swatting trial

9 years ago
Duration 2:19
An Ottawa teen is facing 34 charges of 'swatting' - calling in fake emergencies - in three provinces and five U.S. states.

Some chilling but completely bogus911 calls were playedat the trial of an Ottawa teen facing 34 charges of using the internet for "swatting" in three provinces and five U.S. states.

Crown prosecutorKerry McVeypresented her opening statement on Tuesday, alleging the 17-year-old used a Twitter account to solicit requests on where to call in fake emergencies a practice known as "swatting" and taunt police.

McVey playedrecordingsfrom two fake 911 calls in Stockton, Calif., which were made in the spring of 2014.

The first call from March 30, 2014, was a pretend hostage taking where the caller said there were three hostages and asked for $100,000 in a clear plastic bag. The second call, from April 9 of last year, was a nerve gas bomb threat to Sierra Middle School in Stockton.

The Crown then played a recording from a fake bomb threat at Georges-Vanier School in Laval, Que., where the caller told the dispatcher to send body bags as the dispatcher tried to express sympathy.

Pretend bomb threats

The boy, who can't be named due to provisions in the Youth Criminal Justice Act, walked into the Ottawa courtroom on Tuesday with his parents by his side.

During the Crown's opening statement, McVeyalleged the teen used an anonymous internet phone number to send thousands of dollarsworth of pizza deliveries to victims before escalating to bomb threats, fake hostage takings and reports of gunmen on the loose.McVey said the boytargeted schools, shopping centres and homes.

Police previously said the teen alsoboasted about making money from the hoaxes by posting photos of a bank account that paid out in the online currency known asbitcoin.

The Crown said it would present evidence including the recordings of fake 911 calls allegedly found on the accused's computer, as well as logs from Skype and a Twitter account.

Youth Criminal Court JudgeMitchHoffman, who's presiding over the case,saidhe has never heard of "swatting" and needed to learnmore about Twitter.

The teen was arrested in May 2014 and originally charged with at least 60 charges, including:

  • Public mischief.
  • Mischief to property.
  • Uttering death threats.
  • Conveying false information with intent to alarm.

The Crown will focus on 34 of those charges during this trial,but McVey saidauthorities in Florida are going to mount their own case.

The Crown also said witnesses will include police officers from Canada and the U.S., computer forensic officers with Ottawa police, the accused's former classmate, an "accomplice" from Laval and a California teenager who was allegedly terrorized by the accused.

The case resumes on Wednesday with the Crown's witnesses.

With files from The Canadian Press