Saturday, November 4, 2017

Top 10 Violent Crimes Tied To Video Games

Via listverse.com by James Cahill

Video games are a favorite pastime of children and adults alike, and with the expansion of the Internet, gaming has become bigger than ever. It’s hardly an obscure hobby enjoyed only by a fringe group of potentially dangerous weirdos.

With that being said, video games have a long and disturbing history of being tied to violent criminals and have even been touted as the direct inspirations for some of the most heinous crimes that the world has ever seen. These are some of the most infamous crimes tied to video games.
 
10. New Hyde Park Crime Spree
Grand Theft Auto IV

In New Hyde Park, New York, on June 26, 2008, a group of teenagers went on a crime spree. First, three of them violently mugged a man in a grocery store parking lot. After that, the gang marched through the streets of New Hyde Park until they encountered a woman in her car. After stealing a pack of cigarettes from the woman, they proceeded to smash a van using one of the baseball bats they had brought to the crime scene.[1]

The woman called the police, and the teens were apprehended. When asked about their motives, the teens stated that it was the video game Grand Theft Auto IV that led them to commit these crimes.

9. Nathon Brooks
Loss Of Game Consoles


In 2013, 14-year-old Nathon Brooks was grounded and prohibited from playing video games after receiving a detention in school. He decided to do something about it.

The night after he was grounded, Brooks acquired his parents’ .22 Smith & Wesson revolver and shot them as they slept.[2] Fortunately, both of his parents survived, and Nathon was sentenced to 15 years in prison for his violent and senseless attack on his parents.


8. New South Wales Youth Crime Spree
Multiple Games


Unlike other entries on this list, this entry does not deal with a specific crime but a multitude of crimes, all which have been tied to video games by police. In 2012, New South Wales in Australia was dealing with a sharp increase of teenage violent crime. Knife crime in particular was of concern to police after teens were killed, injured, and arrested as a result of carrying knives.

Police commissioner Andrew Scipione stated that he believed that video games where the player is rewarded for killing, raping, and causing mayhem were at the root of the problem. He also believed that a lack of proper parental skills were to blame, as when parents were called to pick up their children, they were completely unconcerned at the situation their kids were in.[3]
 
7. Devin Moore
Grand Theft Auto: Vice City

Devin Moore is an American murderer who is believed to have been inspired by the game Grand Theft Auto: Vice City. On July 7, 2003, Moore was brought into an Alabama police station on suspicion of car theft. At the time, Moore had no criminal record, and he cooperated with the police. After being booked by officer Arnold Strickland, Moore jumped him, grabbing his gun and firing three shots, one hitting Strickland in the head.

Officer James Crump heard the shots and responded. Moore, however, fired three shots at Crump, hitting him in the head, similar to officer Strickland. Finally, Moore ventured down the hallway and encountered 911 operator Ace Mealer and shot him in the head like his other victims. Moore then proceeded to steal a police car and flee the station, only to be apprehended four hours later in Mississippi.

At the trial, Moore’s lawyers argued that he was led to commit murder due to a life full of physical and mental abuse as well as his affinity for violent video games. Moore was a fan in particular of Grand Theft Auto: Vice City. In this game, players can steal cars, murder police officers, and commit acts of torture against fellow criminals. After his arrest, Moore made statements such as, “Life is a video game. You’ve gotta die sometime.” On October 9, 2005, Moore was sentenced to death by lethal injection.[4] He is currently on Alabama’s death row.
 
6. Daniel Petric
Halo 3


Daniel Petric was an American teenager who shot both of his parents in 2007, killing his mother and severely wounding his father. This was after they confiscated his copy of Halo 3, which was forbidden in the household. Petric used his father’s 9-millimeter handgun to commit the murders. The handgun was looked in the same case as the game, and when Petric took the gun, he also took the game. After he shot both of his parents, he fled with the game after his older sister and her husband arrived to watch a Cleveland Indians game. Petric was arrested in the family van shortly after, with Halo 3 still in the front seat.

At trial, Petric’s defense attorneys argued that due to a snowboarding accident that had left Petric bedridden, he developed an addiction to the Halo franchise after playing it at friends’ houses, leaving him unable to go without the game, which caused him to snap. This strategy did not work, and Petric was convicted and sentenced to 23 years to life in prison.

5. Evan Ramsey
DOOM

Evan Ramsey’s childhood reads like a “How to Make a Killer” manual. When he was seven years old, his father was imprisoned after an armed standoff with police inside a local newspaper office. As a result, his mother became an alcoholic, and Evan and his siblings were sent to various foster homes. Evan was sexually abused in at least one. He was also heavily bullied in school due to lack of intelligence and was often called names such as “spaz,” “braindead,” and “retard.”

Two weeks after his father was paroled, Evan committed his own crime. According to police reports, 20 people knew of his plan, and two helped Evan by teaching him how to use a shotgun and by telling him about how famous he would become. On February 19, 1997, he went to his high school armed with a shotgun. Ramsey killed the school principal and a student before wounding two others. He then attempted to kill himself by a shotgun blast to the head. He was unable to pull the trigger and surrendered to police when they arrived.

It has been largely believed that Ramsey had been imitating the video game DOOM when he committed the murders. He was a known player of DOOM, and his weapon, a 12-gauge shotgun, is one frequently used in the game. Evan’s father, Don, told the media that he believed that his son was mimicking the game at the time of the shooting. Finally, in an in-prison interview, Evan stated that he blamed DOOM for the shooting. At the trial, Ramsey was charged as an adult and sentenced to roughly 200 years in prison with a chance of parole in 2066.
 
4. Dawson College Shooting
Super Columbine Massacre RPG!


The Dawson College shooting was the third fatal school shooting in the city of Montreal’s history. On September 13, 2006, Kimveer Gill open fired on the street outside Dawson College and made his way into the school, continuing to fire. When he arrived in the cafeteria, he began shooting at random and taking hostages. After a standoff with the Montreal Police, in which Gill was shot in the arm, Gill committed suicide by shooting himself in the head. The only other fatality was an 18-year-old woman named Anastasia Rebecca de Sousa, with 19 others injured in the chaos.[7]

In response to hearing that Gill played his game, Super Columbine Massacre RPG! creator Danny Ledonne allegedly threw up. Ledonne then proceeded to remind the public that his game was not meant to train shooters. Despite the reports, Gill did not write about Super Columbine Massacre specifically in either his journal or online web pages when he spoke of video games.
 
3. Adam Lanza
Multiple


Adam Lanza was the man who massacred 27 in the Sandy Hook school shooting on December 14, 2012. Lanza first shot his mother while she was asleep and then drove to Sandy Hook Elementary School armed with his mother’s guns and butchered 20 children and six adults. Lanza was described by all who knew him as a socially awkward loner who spent most of his time playing video games such as Call of Duty and Gears of War in his bedroom at his mother’s house, where he lived.

According to some sources, Adam racked up 83,000 kills playing online, with 22,000 being head shots. He also spent large amounts of time researching school shootings going back to 1981 and practicing shooting using pellet guns.[8] In addition to his strange behavior, he barred his mother from entering his room and would only communicate with her through e-mail.
 
2. Columbine High School
DOOM


This one needs no introduction. On April 20, 1999, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold entered Columbine High School and opened fire on students and teachers, killing 12 students and a teacher before turning their guns on themselves. When the carnage was over, many people asked why these two teens had committed such a heinous act. From anger and isolation to mental illness, there were many different theories. One of the most prevalent to this day is the effects of the video game DOOM on Harris and Klebold.

Both Harris and Klebold were avid fans of the game, with Harris using it as a basis for a creative writing school project and creating his own levels of the game and posting them online.[9] These levels were later named “The Harris Levels” after the shooting. With the game’s intense violence, it was a clear connection for most to tie DOOM to the massacre. In a cruel twist of fate, a video game based off of the shooting called Super Columbine Massacre RPG! was released by independent developer Danny Ledonne and was tied to the 2006 Dawson College shooting, as detailed above.
 
1. Anders Breivik
Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare 2

Anders Breivik is the deadliest mass shooter in human history, claiming the lives of 69 young adults at a youth political camp in Norway on July 22, 2011, after killing another eight by bombing a government building, making the total death toll 77. Breivik was politically motivated by what he believed to be the “Islamization” of Norway at the hands of the Norwegian Labor Party. This rage is what led him to attack their youth camp, believing that the next generation of the Labor Party had to be eliminated.[10]

According to his Manifesto, Breivik was an avid player of the games World of Warcraft and Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2. Breivik wrote that he played World of Warcraft for relaxation, while he used Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 as a training simulator, having played the game using a hologram device in order to make the gameplay appear three-dimensional. This version of Call of Duty had previously fallen under controversy due to its level “No Russian,” in which players commit a terrorist attack at an airport against innocent civilians.

Breivik was sentenced to containment, which is a minimum of ten years in jail and a maximum of 21 years but can be extended indefinitely based on the offender’s danger to the public. This is the maximum sentence available under Norwegian law.

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