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erronis

(22,761 posts)
Fri Jan 16, 2026, 05:41 PM 5 hrs ago

US boy, 11, allegedly shoots father to death after Nintendo Switch taken away

Source: The Guardian

An 11-year-old Pennsylvania boy allegedly shot his father to death after previously having his Nintendo Switch handheld gaming system taken away.

...

Police were dispatched to the family's residence at about 3.20am, after a report of an "unresponsive male". The news site says that officers found a 42-year-old man named Douglas Dietz dead in bed from a gunshot wound to the head.

...

The son then allegedly admitted to "removing the gun from the safe, loading bullets into it and walking over to his father's side of the bed", according to the affidavit. "He pulled back the hammer and fired the gun at his father," the affidavit adds.

When asked what he believed would happen when he fired the gun, the boy responded that he was "mad" and that he had "not thought about that", according to investigators.

Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jan/16/boy-allegedly-shoots-father-nintendo-switch



Another short quote from the article:
As put in court documents obtained and reported by WGAL News 8, the case illustrates how easily children can access guns in the US, where firearms are ubiquitous.

28 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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US boy, 11, allegedly shoots father to death after Nintendo Switch taken away (Original Post) erronis 5 hrs ago OP
What a sick segment of society we have in this country that worships guns among all things. hlthe2b 5 hrs ago #1
Without a gun, it would be much harder for an 11 yr old to kill an adult male. Irish_Dem 5 hrs ago #2
At least it was in a safe. The boy found the key in a drawer. erronis 4 hrs ago #7
My nephew was getting into my brother's gun safe when he was 5 and 6. Igel 3 hrs ago #13
Parents often underestimate their child's intelligence and perseverance. Irish_Dem 2 hrs ago #20
This is still parental abuse/neglect/negligence. Irish_Dem 2 hrs ago #19
There is something disturbed about the kid iemanja 1 hr ago #21
Absolutely. This child is not your usual...ect, ect.. He shouldn't be in society. chouchou 1 hr ago #23
Yes of course. An 11 y/o child does not kill his father in cold blood without a back story. Irish_Dem 1 hr ago #24
IPer the article, it was a keyed lock, not combination. The boy knew niyad 35 min ago #26
I guess at least one less gun worshiper now. erronis 5 hrs ago #3
Beyond mean DenaliDemocrat 4 hrs ago #10
Another gun death approved by Charlie Kirk Norrrm 3 hrs ago #14
This happened in South Central Pennsylvania in a very small county (Perry) Wiz Imp 4 hrs ago #4
40 years ago (1986), my friend's son was seven years old. no_hypocrisy 4 hrs ago #5
Wow - that's horrible - sorry for your friend/family. erronis 4 hrs ago #8
40 Years ago DenaliDemocrat 4 hrs ago #11
They had cable . . . . . no_hypocrisy 4 hrs ago #12
Why did the kid have the combination? BidenRocks 4 hrs ago #6
Thought the same thing myself NickB79 4 hrs ago #9
Key lock, not combination, and the boy knew where the key was. niyad 34 min ago #27
Welcome to trump's America. mwb970 3 hrs ago #15
Guns make a scary noise. Aussie105 3 hrs ago #16
more information - cab67 3 hrs ago #17
Thank you for that article. It paints a very sad picture. What a horrible loss. erronis 3 hrs ago #18
There is going to be a lot of commentary offered by both sides. . . Collimator 1 hr ago #22
The father was careful to keep guns locked in the safe FakeNoose 50 min ago #25
Yes! This is EXACTLY why guns PoindexterOglethorpe 4 min ago #28

hlthe2b

(112,937 posts)
1. What a sick segment of society we have in this country that worships guns among all things.
Fri Jan 16, 2026, 05:44 PM
5 hrs ago

Had the child not had access to that gun, how different that incident might have gone. Granted, there are other ways to commit an act of violence, but at least more survivable (and which might afford an option for that child to receive intervention)

Irish_Dem

(80,052 posts)
2. Without a gun, it would be much harder for an 11 yr old to kill an adult male.
Fri Jan 16, 2026, 05:50 PM
5 hrs ago

And why does a minor child have access to the gun safe?

erronis

(22,761 posts)
7. At least it was in a safe. The boy found the key in a drawer.
Fri Jan 16, 2026, 06:09 PM
4 hrs ago

It's hard to safety-proof a home with guns in it. Maybe fingerprint locks - but the US doesn't allow those.

Igel

(37,401 posts)
13. My nephew was getting into my brother's gun safe when he was 5 and 6.
Fri Jan 16, 2026, 06:58 PM
3 hrs ago

It was in his closet. And he figured out he could listen when my brother unlocked it to get his pistols for silhouette shooting, leaving pre-dawn. That, and he had time to just tinker with it when he was supposed to be asleep and didn't feel like sleeping. Don't count sheep, count 00 - 00 - 00 - 00, 00 - 00 - 00 -01, 00 - 00 - 00 - 02 ...

Irish_Dem

(80,052 posts)
20. Parents often underestimate their child's intelligence and perseverance.
Fri Jan 16, 2026, 08:12 PM
2 hrs ago

Your nephew is scary smart.

Irish_Dem

(80,052 posts)
19. This is still parental abuse/neglect/negligence.
Fri Jan 16, 2026, 08:11 PM
2 hrs ago

There is no point to a locked safe if the child can unlock the safe.

The parent was totally irresponsible and paid for it with his life.
And now his child will face some harsh penalties perhaps and have to live with the fact
he killed his own father.

iemanja

(57,450 posts)
21. There is something disturbed about the kid
Fri Jan 16, 2026, 09:07 PM
1 hr ago

He doubtless presented himself as violent long before this. I do wonder how he knew the combination to the gun safe.

chouchou

(2,839 posts)
23. Absolutely. This child is not your usual...ect, ect.. He shouldn't be in society.
Fri Jan 16, 2026, 09:28 PM
1 hr ago

I have no answers, just questions.

Irish_Dem

(80,052 posts)
24. Yes of course. An 11 y/o child does not kill his father in cold blood without a back story.
Fri Jan 16, 2026, 09:31 PM
1 hr ago

Of course there were some red flags and problems in the past.
All the more reason there should be no guns in the home at all.

niyad

(129,801 posts)
26. IPer the article, it was a keyed lock, not combination. The boy knew
Fri Jan 16, 2026, 10:18 PM
35 min ago

where the key was.

erronis

(22,761 posts)
3. I guess at least one less gun worshiper now.
Fri Jan 16, 2026, 05:51 PM
5 hrs ago

Sorry - that was mean. But they need to consider the "unintended consequences". Something many RW types don't do.

Norrrm

(4,088 posts)
14. Another gun death approved by Charlie Kirk
Fri Jan 16, 2026, 07:00 PM
3 hrs ago

Charlie Kirk: “It’s worth to have a cost of, unfortunately, some gun deaths every single year so that we can have the Second Amendment”

https://www.mediamatters.org/charlie-kirk/charlie-kirk-its-worth-have-cost-unfortunately-some-gun-deaths-every-single-year-so-we

Wiz Imp

(9,085 posts)
4. This happened in South Central Pennsylvania in a very small county (Perry)
Fri Jan 16, 2026, 05:54 PM
4 hrs ago

For what it's worth, Perry County is ultra right wing (Trump got over 74% of the vote in the county).

no_hypocrisy

(54,373 posts)
5. 40 years ago (1986), my friend's son was seven years old.
Fri Jan 16, 2026, 05:58 PM
4 hrs ago

His mother improvidently put a TV in his bedroom as a pacifier.

Naturally, the kid stayed up all night watching shows and was catatonic in school the next day from lack of sleep.

My friend took fatherly steps to correct this. He removed the TV while his son was at school.

His wife/the kid's mother actually laughed that their son was going to attack his father with a baseball bat in retaliation.

Fast Forward: Last April (the kid was now 45 and still living at home), the son literally attacked his father with a baseball bat after a long Half-Nelson around his neck, nearly killing him.

The story in the OP doesn't surprise me at all. In the minds of some kids/sons, taking out their father solves everything wrong in their lives.

erronis

(22,761 posts)
8. Wow - that's horrible - sorry for your friend/family.
Fri Jan 16, 2026, 06:12 PM
4 hrs ago

It makes me think of some other long-term family issues that lead to real trouble over time.

DenaliDemocrat

(1,723 posts)
11. 40 Years ago
Fri Jan 16, 2026, 06:17 PM
4 hrs ago

Tv ended at midnight and white snow came on after the national anthem. So ???????

NickB79

(20,258 posts)
9. Thought the same thing myself
Fri Jan 16, 2026, 06:14 PM
4 hrs ago

Maybe the father trusted his son enough to have access to firearms; that was clearly a mistake. I take my 15 yr old daughter hunting and target shooting with me, so I trust her with a 12-gauge shotgun in a deer stand. She's a great kid, but even I don't give her a spare key to the gun safe.

Aussie105

(7,663 posts)
16. Guns make a scary noise.
Fri Jan 16, 2026, 07:20 PM
3 hrs ago

And, in the right state of mind, you may think they also solve a lot of problems.

Forgetting they create bigger problems.

But 11 year old boys - and even those up to full male brain maturity, around 25 - don't think that far ahead.

(25 was the age I was at when I got married and had one child on the way, and realized that having multiple guns around the house and a big motorcycle for late night 'clear the head' hoons wasn't too smart.)

Collimator

(2,085 posts)
22. There is going to be a lot of commentary offered by both sides. . .
Fri Jan 16, 2026, 09:09 PM
1 hr ago

. . . of many issues that the relate to this event. Or should I say multiple sides? Each person looking on from their position will cite this boy's behavior as "proof" of the validity of their evaluation.

There will be some who will say that the boy should have been disciplined more often, and/or more harshly. A completely different approach to notions of discipline will be touted by some as the only answer.

Others will point to ingrained ideas about autism. Some will insist that toxic masculinity is to blame while others will tell you that men and boys are undervalued in an increasingly "feminized" world.

And there will be many who will claim that it was the video game(s) that made the boy violent, while ignoring the gun. Another that will be ignored will be the family's race if they are White. That will only become germane if the family is Black.

None of it changes anything, of course.

FakeNoose

(40,328 posts)
25. The father was careful to keep guns locked in the safe
Fri Jan 16, 2026, 10:03 PM
50 min ago

... so how was the boy able to open the safe and get the gun?
Why bother with a safe if the guns and ammo are available to anyone?
Lots of question here.....

PoindexterOglethorpe

(28,474 posts)
28. Yes! This is EXACTLY why guns
Fri Jan 16, 2026, 10:49 PM
4 min ago

are so wonderful. I mean, if there had not been a gun in the house, what would the 11 year old have used? Knife, screwdriver, hammer? They would be so messy, so less kill-reliable.

Oh, wait, I'm sorry. I mean had there not been a gun readily available someone would still be alive, right? Hmm, wonder what difference having a gun or not having a gun in the home would make? Gosh, I can't begin to guess.

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