Just three days ago, on Thursday, November 10th, Adin got swatted in the middle of his stream for the third time. Now, he found out that he is about to get swatted once again. He even listened to the fake caller's acting like he got shot.
This is when he found out he is about to get swatted again:
Adin even called 911 in hopes to resolve the situation. He asked if it was possible a single officer to come over, because it was a fake emergency. He was assured that the officers are fully aware of it, and that 'at that specific time' they couldnt send one.
Once the officers arrived, Ant (his bodyguard) was already outside waiting for them and managed to save the day. He came back inside and assured Adin everything was good and that the situation was resolved.
A lot of people don't realize how dangerous swatting is. In our previous article about Adin's swat on Thursday, we explained what swatting is and how it ruined one family's life:
What does Swatting mean?
In the online Livestream community, getting swatted is when a viewer calls the police on the streamer (after somehow figuring out where the streamer lives), saying that he (the streamer) has commited /or is about to commit/ a crime (e.g. murdered people, bomb threat) and that he is unstable mentally and very dangerous. The police has no choice but to take such calls seriously.
'A SWAT team is a group of police officers who have been specially trained to deal with very dangerous or violent situations.'
Such fake calls are very dangerous and can be fatal. In 2017, Two 'Call of Duty' players got into an argument on Twitter, which escalated and [Player A] threatened to swat [Player B], then [Player B] gave [Player A] a 'fake' address, which address actually belonged to a father of two, who tragically lost his life.