Ohio gamer pleads guilty in fatal swatting case

An Ohio gamer pleaded guilty today to conspiring to set up hoax calls to Wichita police that led to what is believed to be the nation’s first death during a swatting incident, U.S. Attorney Stephen McAllister said.

Casey S. Viner, 19, North College Hill, Ohio, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy and one count of obstructing justice.

In his plea, Viner admitted he argued with co-defendant Shane Gaskill while playing Call of Duty World War II online.

Viner contacted co-defendant Tyler Barriss and asked him to swat Gaskill at 1033 W. McCormick in Wichita. Barriss was sentenced last week to 20 years in federal prison for making the hoax calls to Wichita police.

Police responded to 1033 W. McCormick believing they were dealing with a man who had shot his father and was holding his family at gunpoint. In fact, Gaskill no longer lived at the McCormick address he had given Viner and Barriss.

Andrew Finch, who lived at the McCormick address, came outside to face police. As he stepped onto the porch, police told him to put up his hands. When he unexpectedly dropped his hands, he was shot and killed by a police officer.

In his plea, Viner admitted soliciting Barriss to swat Gaskill and providing Barriss with the McCormick address.

Viner admitted that when he learned of Finch’s death he performed a factory reset of his iPhone in an effort to destroy evidence of his communications with Barriss and Gaskill.

Sentencing is set for June 26. Both parties have agreed to recommend a sentence of two years on federal probation, including six months home confinement except for approved travel. A special condition prohibits Viner from taking part in gaming for two years. Viner’s cell phone will be subject to inspection by the U.S. Probation Office.

McAllister commended the FBI, the Wichita Police Department and his co-counsel Assistant U.S. Attorney Debra Barnett for their work on the case.

More than half of Kansas is at risk for flooding this spring

by Brian Grimmett, Kansas News Service

Major flooding on stretches of the Missouri River from Nebraska and Iowa through Kansas and Missouri resulted in several breached levees and significant damage to cities, towns, and farmland in March. Forecasters at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration say the threat of even more flooding isn’t over yet.

According to NOAA’s spring flood outlook, flood risks will remain significantly high for the duration of spring. And not just in the Missouri River basin.

Here’s what the report has to say about three of Kansas’ major waterways.

Missouri River Basin: Major flood risk

Flooding in the upper Missouri River basin, which includes parts of northeast Kansas, has already broken records this year.

Meteorologists at NOAA say a number of unusual circumstances added up to a major problem.

It started with a large amount of late spring snow in the Dakotas and Minnesota. Then rapid snowmelt and a “bomb cyclone” dropped even more water on already saturated or still frozen ground.

“It was like falling on a paved street,” said meteorologist Bob Holmes. “It had nowhere to infiltrate, there was no natural infiltration, and so every bit of that ran off.”

Additional spring rain and melting snow will prolong or expand the flooding that is already happening.

The outlook predicts that the Missouri River from Kansas City to the Kansas-Nebraska border has greater than a 50 percent chance of major flooding this spring. “Major” meaning flooding that causes extensive inundation of buildings and roads and prompts large-scale evacuations.

This map depicts the locations where there is a greater than 50 percent chance of major, moderate or minor flooding through May 2019. (NOAA map)

Kansas River Basin: Moderate flood risk

The areas that feed into the Kansas River basin do not have nearly as much extra snowpack as the feeders of the Missouri River basin. The greatest risk in the Kansas River basin instead lies with the chance of greater than normal rainfall falling on saturated ground.

That’s one of the reasons why NOAA’s spring flood outlook only puts the Kansas River basin at risk for moderate flooding — flooding with some inundation of buildings and roads, but less cause for evacuations.

The Kansas River basin also includes several reservoirs used for flood control, such as Milford Lake which receives water from the Republican River, and Tuttle Creek Lake which receives water from the Big Blue River.

Because the Kansas River ultimately flows into the Missouri, which is already at record highs, the reservoirs have been set to release only the minimum amount. So the lakes are at higher than normal levels.

“We have folks on the upper end of Tuttle Creek who have bottom ground, farm ground, coming into Tuttle Creek that is underwater right now,” Earl Lewis, acting director of the Kansas Water Office, said.

Tuttle Creek is 35 feet above normal, and at 40 percent of its capacity for flood storage. Some of the campgrounds around the lake have delayed their opening until the end of April because of the high water.

Arkansas River Basin: Minor flood risk

Unlike the other two rivers on this list, the Arkansas isn’t as likely to burst its banks this year. However, the NOAA forecast does predict a risk for minor flooding that would lead to minimal property damage, but could pose some public threat such as the flooding of roads and low lying areas.

The greatest risk to the Arkansas will come from spring thunderstorms that drop a large amount of water in a short amount of time. Couple that with ground that’s saturated and you have a recipe for flooded streets and small creeks overflowing.

The often-repeated advice from experts in situations like those: “Turn around, don’t drown.”

Brian Grimmett reports on the environment, energy and natural resources for KMUW in Wichita and the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KMUW, Kansas Public Radio, KCUR and High Plains Public Radio covering health, education and politics. Follow him on Twitter @briangrimmett.
Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with
proper attribution and a link to ksnewsservice.org.
See more at https://www.kcur.org/post/more-half-kansas-risk-flooding-spring.

New Sporting KC defender coming from Toronto FC and Chicago Fire

Sporting Kansas City has signed 27-year-old defender Nicolas Hasler, the club announced.

Hasler, whose contract runs through the end of the 2019 MLS season, has been added to the Sporting KC roster and will occupy an international roster spot.

Hasler has made more than 200 club appearances since turning professional in 2009, including 39 MLS matches split between Toronto FC from 2017 to 2018 and the Chicago Fire from 2018 to 2019.

He spent the first eight years of his career in his native Liechtenstein, where he starred for FC Vaduz and won six major trophies with the club.

As one of the country’s most decorated players this decade, Hasler has scored three goals in 59 caps for the Liechtenstein Men’s National Team since 2010 and was named Liechtensteiner Footballer of the Year in 2015, 2017 and 2018.

After rising through the youth ranks and kickstarting his professional career with FC Balzers in 2009, Hasler joined fellow Liechtensteiner club USV Eschen-Mauren for the 2010-11 season. Standout performances with his first two teams prompted his move to FC Vaduz, a club based in the Liechtensteiner capital of Vaduz that competes in the Swiss Football League.

Hasler garnered Liechtensteiner Young Player of the Year accolades in 2011 and 2012, becoming a regular starter for Vaduz and helping the side gain promotion to the top-flight Swiss Super League after scoring seven goals in 37 games during the 2013-2014 campaign.

In a successful six-year spell with Vaduz, Hasler appeared in five separate editions of the UEFA Europa League, won five consecutive Liechtensteiner Cups from 2013 to 2017 and scored 15 goals in 158 competitive matches.

More trophies awaited Hasler in his first MLS stint with Toronto FC. He scored three goals for the Reds in his first MLS season, helping Toronto to a historic treble consisting of the Canadian Championship title, MLS Supporters’ Shield and MLS Cup.

He tallied three assists in 14 MLS matches for the Canadian side in 2018, also logging five appearances in the 2018 Scotiabank Concacaf Champions League as Toronto fell to Guadalajara on penalty kicks in the finals.

Hasler was traded from Toronto to the Chicago Fire last July, where he started eight of 10 MLS matches to end the season. He played in Chicago’s first three league games this year before arriving in Kansas City.

Hasler has been an integral member of Liechtenstein’s national team since debuting for the senior side in 2010. He represented the country at the U-19 through U-21 levels-competing in qualifiers for the 2010 UEFA European U-19 Championship and the 2011 UEFA European U-20 Championship-while also cementing a spot with the senior team by age 20. He appeared seven times each in qualifying for the UEFA Euro 2012 and 2016 tournaments and totaled 17 starts in qualifiers for the 2014 and 2018 FIFA World Cups.

Born and raised in Vaduz, Hasler opened his Liechtenstein scoring account in a 2014 World Cup qualifier against Bosnia and Herzegovina in October 2013. He bagged his second goal in a friendly versus Finland in 2017 before adding a third last November in a UEFA Nations League draw with Armenia. Hasler most recently started in both of Liechtenstein’s UEFA Euro 2020 qualifiers last month against Italy and Greece.

Sporting also announced that 22-year-old forward Daniel Salloi has obtained his green card and no longer occupies an international spot on the club’s roster. Sporting now has eight international players on its roster: Hasler, Botond Barath, Yohan Croizet, Andreu Fontas, Felipe Gutierrez, Krisztian Nemeth, Johnny Russell and Abdul Rwatubyaye.

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