Hello, I'm trying to gather more information.

I quickly scanned over the event log in this person's stats and I did not see any taunt-solder-kills around the time of this report.

The demo shows a soldier trying to do the exploit, but I did not see the suspect's name identified in the demo. I also did not see any players on red team die from the attempted exploit.

So, I am hesitant to issue a ban at this point.
 
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Hello, I'm trying to gather more information.

I quickly scanned over the event log in this person's stats and I did not see any taunt-solder-kills around the time of this report.

The demo shows a soldier trying to do the exploit, but I did not see the suspect's name identified in the demo. I also did not see any players on red team die from the attempted exploit.

So, I am hesitant to issue a ban at this point.
Do they actually have to do it for it to count?
 
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Do they actually have to do it for it to count?

I think it would depend on the exploit and context.

In this example, I was not able to identify "Dan McNeely" as the soldier when watching the demo. I might have missed it. Can you show us how he is identified in the demo?

The other thought is his event logs. I was not able to find anyone dying from a taunt soldier kill.

So at this point, the chat logs are all I have to go by and I would not feel comfortable banning someone solely off of the given context.
 
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