Submit your breaking news stories and original articles to us by contacting us
An apparently delusional man in his 30’s dragged police into a 55-minute real-life car chase, believing he could successfully outrun them, as he had done several times playing Grand Theft Auto. What’s really bad is during the police’s pursuit, parole evader Tyrone McMillan had his girlfriend’s 11-year old daughter and 10-year old niece in the backseat–they were able to jump off the car while it was moving. Police eventually caught McMillan, who told them he thought he could pull off the stunt just like he did with the game.
Tyrone McMillan was taken into custody last year after leading police on a car chase when officers attempted to pull him over for a parole violation. After slamming into two cars, McMillan told police that he thought he could outrun them because he played games from Rockstar’s controversial Grand Theft Auto franchise.
I’d still maintain that incidents like these are the exception rather than the norm. But games and even movies, do indeed entail a little suspension of disbelief, and I guess with some people, this extends into real life. Games of late have become too realistic that some people just couldn’t distinguish between what is real and not.
Category: Uncategorized
10 Responses for "“GTA made me do it!”"
April 15th, 2006 at 3:32 pm
1tricky distinction - video game / life. what a chimp.
April 15th, 2006 at 5:58 pm
2Sounds like an excuse to me.
April 15th, 2006 at 6:01 pm
3GTA did not make him do it…it just made him think he could get away with it
April 16th, 2006 at 12:55 am
4people of late have become too stupid as they can’t make the distinction between games and reality
April 16th, 2006 at 9:55 am
5Yeah, the game wasn’t the reason he did it. It was the reason he thought he could get away with it. Which is the very hilarious part of this story, the idiot didn’t blame the game for making him do it, he blamed it for making him think he could do it.
So now perhaps as long as you were inspired to do your crime because it looked so easy in game (or perhaps on tv), you would then act out the crime and perhaps get away with it? Much doubt.
April 17th, 2006 at 11:58 am
6I’d like to shoot the idiots who think this stuff affects me
:P
April 17th, 2006 at 5:51 pm
7Love the Calvin and Hobbes reference. :)
Even at that, if the person doesn’t know the difference between real life and a video game, the person belongs in jail.
Saying that “Games of late have become too realistic that some people just couldn’t distinguish between what is real and not” is one of the lamest things I’ve heard in a while. Whatever happened to taking responsibility for your own actions?
This guy is an idiot.
April 18th, 2006 at 10:26 am
8Actually, I think the games *are* getting pretty close to being too realistic to distinguish from reality. It’s not a stupid concept. On a growing mind of a child playing 3 hours of videogames and thinking about that game in sleep (yes, we all did that at one point), it could have a subliminal impact–and the impact is getting more severe as games get more realistic. Doom 3 on a 60″ plasma is more realistic than the original wolfenstein on a 14″ CGA monitor. In the (near) future, we may have games with perfectly realistic holograms to kill (star trek style). We all know that slapping an age restriction or parental control don’t work… I don’t know the solution so it’s getting a bit scary imagining kids playing something like that.
April 20th, 2006 at 3:00 pm
9too bad tyrone sucked at GTA. you need to drive your car to a car-paint to lose the cops , or if your wanted level is low enough, hide somewhere out of sight. cops spawn all around you continually so running is not a good option.
April 29th, 2006 at 1:49 am
10Sounds like a publicity stunt from rival companies. believe it or not these companies would do anything to dirt each others names………. I wonder who paid the bail :)