Two bills making their way through the California Legislature aim to increase penalties for “swatting” crimes and eliminate loopholes that keep authorities from prosecuting incidents in the state.
Swatting typically involves prank calls to law enforcement that trigger a large number of armed police officers sent to a particular address.
While it’s already a crime in California to make a false emergency report that’s likely to cause great bodily harm, the threat must be directed at a specific person. State law does not cover threats against schools, religious institutions, and other public spaces.
The law would allow prosecutors to charge individuals who make credible threats of mass violence against schools and places of worship, even if they don’t name a specific person. Democratic state Sen. Catherine Blakespear from Encinitas and Republican Roger W. Niello from Fair Oaks coauthored the bill.
San Diego County District Attorney Summer Stephan also supported the legislation.
The goal of the bills is to hold people accountable for making threats, recognizing that even fake threats can cause mass panic, school closures, and expensive law enforcement responses. If both bills pass, legislators would combine them into a single law.
The need for legislation was highlighted in October 2024 when a Superior Court judge dismissed a case against a 38-year-old man who had sent hundreds of emails to Shoal Creek Elementary School in Poway, California, northeast of San Diego, threatening a mass shooting at the school.
The judge ruled that the threats didn’t target a specific person, despite a gun and a map of the school found at the suspect’s home. Prosecutors refiled the case, naming the school principal as the target of the threats.
Just a day later, the Claremont Police Department received a phone call in which the caller claimed they were holding a hostage on the Claremont McKenna College campus and threatened to harm the hostage in a bathroom. The caller also claimed to have a bomb and would shoot anyone they saw on campus.
Officers from multiple police departments responded. They searched the campus and various other college buildings on nearby affiliated campuses, but found no one. There were no signs of an active shooter.
According to the plea agreement, Alan W. Filion made over 375 swatting and threat calls, including calls in which he claimed to have planted bombs in the targeted locations or threatened to detonate bombs and/or conduct mass shootings at those locations. The calls were made from approximately August 2022 to January 2024, and targeted religious institutions, high schools, colleges and universities, government officials, and numerous individuals across the United States.
In some instances, armed law enforcement officers entered a targeted residence with their weapons drawn and detained individuals present. Filion ultimately turned swatting into a business, posting on social media that he would swat for a fee.
Rodriguez used a Voice Over Internet Protocol service to place more than a dozen swatting calls.
The group was alleged to have called in bomb threats and swatting attempts at least 25 synagogues in 13 states between July 2023 and August 2023.