‘Ding Dong Ditch’ TikTok prank ends with 1 teen dead and intended target behind bars after gunning down fleeing kids: Cops

Tyler Butler

Inset: Tyler Chase Butler (Spotsylvania County Sheriff’s Office). Background: Street where Butler allegedly shot at teens playing a doorbell prank at his Fredericksburg, Virginia, home (WRC/YouTube).

Teens playing ding dong ditch in a stunt for clicks on TikTok faced a hail of bullets after the home’s resident opened up fire, killing one and injuring another, cops in Virginia say.

Now the resident, 27-year-old Tyler Chase Butler, stands accused of second-degree murder, malicious wounding and two counts of use of a firearm in the commission of a felony.

More from Law&Crime: ‘Completely random’: 22-year-old visiting friends is murdered in home invasion by stranger ‘wreaking havoc’ in college town, police say

According to the Spotsylvania County Sheriff’s Office, deputies received a call around 3 a.m. Saturday about a home burglary in progress where the resident fired shots. When they arrived, cops found two teens suffering from gunshot wounds. One, later identified as 18-year-old Michael Bosworth, Jr., was rushed to the hospital where he died.

The other teen suffered minor injuries and also was taken to the hospital. A warrant request filed in Spotsylvania Circuit Court and obtained by Law&Crime says detectives spoke with the teen who said he was out with Bosworth and another buddy pulling a well-known prank in which people ring a home’s doorbell before running away.

“The juvenile advised it’s something that people are doing to put on TikTok,” a detective wrote.

Per the warrant, the teens were not familiar with the neighborhood and had done the prank on a couple of other doors before they came to the fateful address on McKenzie Lane in Fredericksburg, some 60 miles southwest of Washington, D.C. The teen told cops they were running from the home when they were shot at, the warrant said.

Love true crime? Sign up for our newsletter, The Law&Crime Docket, to get the latest real-life crime stories delivered right to your inbox.

Detectives also spoke with the uninjured teen who gave the same account and voluntarily provided them with his cellphone that showed videos of them hitting other homes.

In the warrant, detectives are asking a judge to search the phone for “any videos, photographs or text communication reference to processing, making or having ‘Ding Dong Ditch’ videos.”