Crime 'I killed Daddy': Pennsylvania boy, 11, shoots dad after Nintendo Switch taken away, courts docs say

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DUNCANNON, Pa. -- An 11-year-old boy faces homicide charges after shooting and killing his father in Perry County, according to Pennsylvania State Police.
WGAL News 8 obtained court documents that reveal new details about what happened the morning of Tuesday, Jan. 13, in Duncannon Borough.

Officers responded to a home on South Market Street around 3:20 a.m. for an "unresponsive male" and found Douglas Dietz, 42, dead from a gunshot wound to the head, according to the documents.

Douglas was found in his bed in the bedroom he shares with his wife, which is connected to their son's bedroom by a closet, according to the affidavit.

After investigating, police identified Douglas' 11-year-old son, Clayton Dietz, as the suspect.

According to the court documents, Douglas' wife told police she was asleep when a loud noise woke her, and she smelled something similar to fireworks. She said she tried to nudge Douglas, but he didn't move. She then heard what she thought was water dripping, but when she turned on the light, she realized it was blood, according to the documents.

Police said Clayton then entered the bedroom and shouted, "Daddy's dead." Troopers at the scene also said they heard Clayton tell his mother, "I killed Daddy."
Officials noted that Douglas and his wife adopted Clayton in 2018.

It happened on their son's birthday, police say. According to the court documents, the couple went to bed shortly after midnight after singing happy birthday to Clayton.

Clayton told investigators that he had a good day with his parents. "When his dad told him he needed to go to bed, he got mad at him," the documents stated.

When police asked Clayton what happened, he said, "I shot somebody," according to the affidavit. "He admitted that he had someone in mind whom he was going to shoot, whom he identified as his father," the documents said.

The wife told police there was a gun safe in the bedroom, but she denied knowing where the key was kept, according to investigators.

Clayton said he found the key in his father's drawer and unlocked the safe in an attempt to find his Nintendo Switch, which was previously taken away from him, according to the documents.

Clayton admitted to "removing the gun from the safe, loading bullets into it and walking over to his father's side of the bed," the affidavit stated. "He pulled back the hammer and fired the gun at his father."

When police asked Clayton what he thought would happen when he fired the gun, he said that "he was mad, and he had not thought about that," investigators stated.

According to state police, Clayton was taken into custody and charged with criminal homicide.

Clayton was denied bail and is being held at the Perry County Prison, where a hearing is scheduled for Thursday, Jan. 22.

WGAL News 8 Reporter AJ Sisson spoke to a neighbor who expressed shock, saying they didn't expect something like this to happen in their community.

"They're very kind. I mean, I didn't talk to them much. They, you know, kept to themselves over there and just seemed pretty nice. I didn't expect this," said Jesse Weldon, lifelong Duncannon resident.

Weldon lives just down the road and was outside during the Pennsylvania State Police's investigation, but barely knew the people inside. Neighbors who spoke off-camera say this street used to be a tight-knit community, but not many know each other nowadays.

"Have you ever seen something like this here in the area?" asked Sisson.

"Not really. Not this close. I mean, you hear about it, like, not like right next door to people, you know?" said Weldon. "I remember the 90s when stuff was just transitioning, technology, and from now back to then, so much has changed."

The Susquenita School District in Perry County released a statement late on Wednesday afternoon, expressing sympathy to the community following the shooting.

"We recognize that in a close-knit community such as ours, events like this can affect our students. Our school counselors and psychologists are available to provide support to any students in need."

(The-CNN-Wire & 2026 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.)
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This allegedly is the family
2-2.jpg

found here https://bestguides.site/douglas-die...eloved-resident-has-died-in-a-fatal-shooting/
 
I'm going to sperg here and say that half the problem is that the parents have their own screen addictions.

For example, my 11 mixed-race kids are all playing Sega Genesis while I sit here shitposting.

The family that stares vacantly into a screen together, something something.
 
This, and the fat nigger in school beating the shit out of the teacher because she took away his switch some time back does point towards that console either being a device that radiates violent tendencies, or is an autism magnet.

I was about 11 or 12 when I learned where my dad kept the key to the gun rack and I can say with complete honesty that despite him being actually abusive (taking away our nes would have been a cause for celebration compared with his usual punishment for any infraction) I never thought about using them to kill him, no matter how bad it got.
 
Seriously, taking the Nintendo switch off the hands of an autistic kid is a very dangerous move.
 
then we are weird future tense for a confession, "He admitted that he had someone in mind whom he was going to shoot."
This is not future tense, lern 2 grammer. This is premeditation. He confessed to deciding to murder the man instead of, as it often happens in the Post Videos of People Dying thread, just nigging around with a gun.

edit: ESLs disagreeing

As for why he came into the room, he could've run away right after shooting the man (in case he'd be chased or whatever), and then come back to check.
 
Skip the trial and throw the kid feet first into a woodchipper. If he did that at 11 over a switch he's going to do alot worse as an adult and end up in prison or death row anyway
Come on, the kid is 11, make it a clean death. Save the woodchipper for the pedos.
 
I dunno, this is a strange story. Sounds very cold blooded for a kid and the details are odd. He sneaks in the room, finds the key, opens the safe, loads the gun, and shoots it at the sleeping father, and then leaves the room. Then, Mom wakes up from the noise of the gunshot, figures out Dad has been shot, and then the kid comes back in the room? And then we are weird future tense for a confession, "He admitted that he had someone in mind whom he was going to shoot."
I thought it was strange as well. I know we don't need every gory detail, but she's woken up and isn't screaming and pissing herself scared? Gunshots aren't gentle, and untrained children aren't crack shots who can hit a dome shot like that. I don't even buy that it was luck. So, what, he walks up to the bed and temples dad? How does that not get anything more than a nudge out of mom? How did she not get tagged too (presumably they sleep together)? The kid "pulled back the hammer"? What are we dealing with, some fixed open-sight wheelgun? And he Chris Kyle'd dad from the doorstep, left, came back, and told mom he did it? I don't buy this story.
 
Hmm...
According to the court documents, the couple went to bed shortly after midnight after singing happy birthday to Clayton.
Parents went to bed after midnight, and they let their kid stay up that late.
The wife told police there was a gun safe in the bedroom,

Clayton said he found the key in his father's drawer and unlocked the safe

Clayton admitted to "removing the gun from the safe, loading bullets into it and walking over to his father's side of the bed," the affidavit stated. "He pulled back the hammer and fired the gun at his father."
Gun safe is in the bedroom. This kid is able to go in there, rummage through a drawer looking for his vidya, finds the key, unlocks the gun cabinet, gets out the gun, loads it, and shoots his father, walks out. The parents never wake up for any of this, the mother doesn't wake up till the shot, and doesn't see the kid leave.

Was the kid a sperg ninja? Or were the parents irresponsible drunks or druggies who were too zonked out to notice him getting strapped? Did they let him stay up late and play too much vidya, then overreact with harsh punishments when they fail to parent, causing the kid to snap?

There seems to be more to this story.
 
What?

"Why yes, I need to sneak into my son's room via a hidden door in his closet from time to time. W-wait, what do you mean he has violent fantasies about killing me? I don't understand."

This is common in really old houses. I’m not sure the reason, maybe it’s for easy access as a nursery?

Idk but I’ve lived in a few of these.
 
Hmm...

Parents went to bed after midnight, and they let their kid stay up that late.





Gun safe is in the bedroom. This kid is able to go in there, rummage through a drawer looking for his vidya, finds the key, unlocks the gun cabinet, gets out the gun, loads it, and shoots his father, walks out. The parents never wake up for any of this, the mother doesn't wake up till the shot, and doesn't see the kid leave.

Was the kid a sperg ninja? Or were the parents irresponsible drunks or druggies who were too zonked out to notice him getting strapped? Did they let him stay up late and play too much vidya, then overreact with harsh punishments when they fail to parent, causing the kid to snap?

There seems to be more to this story.
Nah overweight parents tend to have underlying health problems that zonk them out.

The little psycho has no impulse control. I bet the switch wasn't in the safe like he'd hoped so he shot his dad as payback. Spoiled little Ipad demon.
 
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