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Police Shame Pranksters On YouTube

Barence writes "British police are shaming hoax 999 callers and time-wasters on YouTube in an effort to cut down on non-emergency calls. Video clips uploaded include a lady phoning police to ask what year the internet started, the dramatic tale of a man whose wife would only provide salmon sandwiches for lunch, and another worried soul who had lost her glasses and could not see properly to peel potatoes. Anyone else think the chance of YouTube fame is more likely to encourage copycats than educate people about the wrongs of hoax calling?"

37 of 390 comments (clear)

  1. Jolly Good! by HaloZero · · Score: 5, Funny

    Let's start a channel to isolate these hooligans. Keep them all in one place, for our own efficient comic consump-.... I mean, to prevent their debauchery from spreading throughout all of YouTube! (Yeah. Right?)

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    Informatus Technologicus
  2. Bloody Brilliant Idea by PakProtector · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Is it just me, or is England already well down the spiral towards "What the Fuck are you Thinking, Nation?"

    --

    Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
    man: no entry for woman in the manual.
    "Qua!?"

    1. Re:Bloody Brilliant Idea by PakProtector · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm not talking about the Youth -- that's an entirely separate discussion.

      I'm talking about the namby-pamby morons in charge of the nation; people who are worried that the police dogs are going to scare the criminals they're being used against, or say that an adult can't take pictures of vandals because they're minors.

      --

      Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
      man: no entry for woman in the manual.
      "Qua!?"

    2. Re:Bloody Brilliant Idea by CowboyNealOption · · Score: 4, Funny

      I wouldn't exactly call the Youth of America contenders for the Olympics in the categories of Intelligence and Common Sense.

      I can't wait to see these events on tv. I wonder if anyone will spontaneously catch fire after they lose an event?

    3. Re:Bloody Brilliant Idea by icebrain · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, to be fair (and assuming I remember the details correctly), the coffee in that cse was a lot hotter than it was supposed to be. So it's not quite as moronic as it sounds at first.

      But seriously, the perp suing the homeowner because he hurt himself breaking in? Throwing a homeowner in jail for shooting perps that broke into his house, while said perps with long rap sheets get off? Guy fights back against someone who attacks him with a knife, and goes to jail for it? WTF, England?

      This is meant on an entirely serious note... should we bring back public floggings for some offenses? I think that would be a lot more effective than the figurative slap on the wrist that is so often employed.

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      The meek may inherit the earth, but the strong shall take the stars.
    4. Re:Bloody Brilliant Idea by xaxa · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Sorry, I thought we were talking about Britain - you know, the country that helped the US to invade and occupy Afghanistan and Iraq.

      At all times, Britain seems to me to have had less support from its people for either the Afghanistan or Iraq wars than America had from its people.

      The country with a long and ongoing history of international aggression. Falklands War ring a bell?

      (Argentina started that one, I don't think you can blame Britain for defending a territory held for 160 years.)

    5. Re:Bloody Brilliant Idea by Alsee · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Is it just me, or is England already well down the spiral towards "What the Fuck are you Thinking, Nation?"

      England? Just you.
      Homo Sapiens, the "What the Fuck are you Thinking, Species".

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      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    6. Re:Bloody Brilliant Idea by spun · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Wow, McDonalds did a great job at PR in that case! You never hear about the consultant that told them to lower the coffee temperature, or how they had reduced the amount of material in the cups to the point where they would fall apart if you had the lid off and put any pressure on them. Just to save a few hundredths of a penny per cup.

      This case has become the example everyone uses to prove the legal system is screwed. McDonalds corporate overlords must be laughing all the way to the bank, they've managed to turn a PR nightmare into a goldmine of free publicity.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    7. Re:Bloody Brilliant Idea by meringuoid · · Score: 4, Informative
      Throwing a homeowner in jail for shooting perps that broke into his house, while said perps with long rap sheets get off?

      If you're referring to Tony Martin: his house was burgled, he confronted the burglars, and they fled. He then fired upon them as they were running away. He was not at this point acting in defence of himself or his property; this aim had already been achieved, with the burglars now leaving the premises. He opened fire anyway.

      Brendan Fearon, who had been wounded, was sentenced to three years imprisonment for burglary. Fred Barras was too dead to stand trial. Tony Martin was sentenced to life imprisonment for murder, later commuted to five years for manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility because of his paranoid personality disorder.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    8. Re:Bloody Brilliant Idea by causality · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But seriously, the perp suing the homeowner because he hurt himself breaking in? Throwing a homeowner in jail for shooting perps that broke into his house, while said perps with long rap sheets get off? Guy fights back against someone who attacks him with a knife, and goes to jail for it? WTF, England?

      At least in the USA, what began by being taught in public schools is now becoming further institutionalized as entire generations grow up under absurd standards like these. For example, in the public schools, someone can physically attack you without provocation and if you defend yourself, you are punished and your punishment is equal to theirs for attacking you. This is true no matter how well-established it is that the other person started the fight. The rank-and-file teachers and administrators who go along with this are what you might call "true believers" who think that all use of force is wrong, including those cases where you are attacked and have no choice but to defend yourself. This serves to deny personal responsibility in the case of the attacker (the idea that if you attack someone unprovoked, what happens next is on your head) and fosters that damned victim mentality that is so prevalent these days in the case of the defender. Of course this is insanity, which is why they start such policies at a young age. Not because children don't know injustice when they see it, but because they are less able to resist it and instead they become callous to it.

      I can think of two major reasons for this mentality and for why it would spread from government schools to society at large. First of all, the state wants to have a monopoly on the use of force no matter how justified that use of force is. Someone who is armed and willing and legally able to defend his own home and his own family might not feel as dependent on government as a helpless victim who cowers in a corner hoping that the cops show up soon. "Government to the rescue" is big, big business these days and helpless, timid people are so much easier to govern.

      The other major reason is that there is a sort of war being waged against the concept of individuality and it's not because we have transcended ego boundaries but because our leaders have a statist, collectivist agenda. That's why the news media loves to bring up race and social status and religion and sexual orientation even when they are otherwise irrelevant to the story, because these are group identities. They are trying to teach you, by constantly reinforced example, to think in terms of groups, not individuals. This is why political candidates worry about "the black vote" and "the hispanic vote" and "the elderly vote" instead of telling us why they believe they have superior ideas that would apply equally to everyone (something you'd rationally expect from government). It's hard to think of something more individualistic than defending yourself, your home, and your family instead of waiting for "the professionals" to come along and do it for you.

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    9. Re:Bloody Brilliant Idea by Tim+C · · Score: 3, Informative

      Thanks - you made the same point I was going to, but supplied more information than I would have done.

      Bottom line is that self-defence is ok, but Tony Martin was not acting in self-defence.

    10. Re:Bloody Brilliant Idea by somersault · · Score: 4, Insightful

      He was not at this point acting in defence of himself or his property

      If it was true that he had been burgled several times (the police didn't seem to think so of course), then why should he have to scare them away each time? Better to give them a bit more reason not to come back again, though I don't think they were quite worthy of actual death. Just because you have scared someone away once doesn't mean they won't be back with their mates later.

      In America this wouldn't have been given a second look by the press, but over here in the UK it's a massive deal.

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      which is totally what she said
  3. Ooh, Sounds fun! by B4light · · Score: 4, Funny

    I want to go make a prank emergency call too! :D

  4. Itsatrick by krkhan · · Score: 4, Funny

    Anyone else think the chance of YouTube fame is more likely to encourage copycats than educate people about the wrongs of hoax calling?"

    Anyone else think that British Police *is* the one going after Youtube fame because they weren't getting enough channel views?

  5. Not a bad idea by neokushan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's not a bad idea, but as the summary theorised, it's just going to create a bunch of copycats.
    What they should do is list how much each person has been charged for these hoax calls to hammer home that it just wont be tolerated.
    It makes me sick when people waste the Emergency service's time like this and I genuinely believe they should all be harshly punished for it - people's lives are at stake, there's no excuse.

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    +1 IDisagreeSoHeMustBeATrollOrAnAstroturferOrAShill
    1. Re:Not a bad idea by EdZ · · Score: 4, Informative

      The call is free of charge. The fine for abusing the service isn't.

    2. Re:Not a bad idea by xaxa · · Score: 5, Informative

      A non-emergency number (101) was launched a couple of years ago in some areas to try and reduce the number of calls to 999, it's meant to be used for: reporting vandalism and graffiti; noise nuisance; threatening and abusive behaviour; abandoned vehicles; dumping and fly tipping; drunk and rowdy groups; drug related anti-social behaviour; and broken street lighting.

      There's also NHS Direct (0845 46 47), for medical non-emergencies.

      Perhaps Google could launch a service to cover everything else, with some voice recognition, a Google search and an audio web browser.

    3. Re:Not a bad idea by Alsee · · Score: 3, Interesting

      fly tipping

      I (and probably most non-Brits) was rather puzzled by that phrase. All I could think of was cow tipping. LOL. So I looked it up:

      Fly-tipping or dumping is a British term for illegally dumping waste somewhere other than an authorised landfill.

      And I came across this hysterical news item of a man threatened with prosecution under the Fly Tipping law:
      threatened with prison or a £50,000 fine if he takes windblown sand back to the beach.
      Oh christ, some government official being just a wee bit anal-retentive with the law there.

      And I love this part: Offenders can also have their vehicle - in this case a wheelbarrow - confiscated.

      I can just see some five-year-old having their tricycle confiscated for playing with a plastic pail of sand and pouring it on the beach. Damn Fly Tippers.

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      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  6. My YouTube is slow by wisty · · Score: 5, Funny

    My ISP is slow, and I can't download those videos fast enough. Is there anyone I can call for help?

  7. Brilliant... by whisper_jeff · · Score: 4, Insightful

    These 14 year old twits are looking for attention so the cops are giving them international exposure... That couldn't possibly backfire and have the exact opposite outcome... Seriously, if the cops can't understand the very simple and basic motivation of pranksters, what does that say for their ability to understand criminals?...

    1. Re:Brilliant... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Did you listen to the clips? The two linked ones were both elderly ladies, not '14 year old twits,' They didn't sound like crank calls, just people genuinely not understanding what 999 is for (or even what the police are for, in one case).

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  8. How about a dead mouse on a porch? by grasshoppa · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Except it wasn't a prank. The lady actually believed she could call the cops to get a dead mouse off her porch.

    A friend of mine was the dispatcher who took the call, and he kept the recording.

    --
    Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
    1. Re:How about a dead mouse on a porch? by operagost · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'd humbly suggest that removing the phone from the house of an elderly, helpless, senile person is probably not a complete solution.

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      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
  9. Re:Salmon sandwiches, eh? by xaxa · · Score: 4, Funny

    The salmon sandwiches are left over from last night! Oh no!
    http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=pCuWcM0kq2U

  10. Re:TRUFAX. by LighterShadeOfBlack · · Score: 4, Informative

    Anyone else think the chance of YouTube fame is more likely to encourage copycats than educate people about the wrongs of hoax calling?

    Yes, because there was certainly no such thing as prank phone calls before Youtube came along.

    Yes, because that's what the GP said. He said "Youtube will create the concept of prank calling". It's not like he made a valid point about it encouraging idiots to get some 'fame' for themselves, or possibly memeifying the worst calls and making them into regular prank call trolls. Way to miss the point.

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    Spelling mistakes, grammatical errors, and stupid comments are intentional.
  11. Hoaxes Versus Timewasters by mdwh2 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Anyone else think the chance of YouTube fame is more likely to encourage copycats than educate people about the wrongs of hoax calling?

    For people who intentionally timewaste, maybe, but if there are really people who think it's normal to use 999 for some trivial matter, then raising awareness like this may be useful (though perhaps there is the danger that although it might reduce ignorance, it might increase people who intentionally pretend to be ignorant for a joke).

    I haven't looked at these videos, but they have done this sort of thing before on their own sites - one thing that struck me was just how long the operators remain on the call, in some cases getting into a long drawn out discussion about it. If timewasting is such a problem, why not hang up straight away, or press a button to play a recorded message?

    I'm also curious how likely this is to be a problem - the usual problem with hoax calls is that a police/ambulance is sent out unnecessarily, but that doesn't apply here. If the volume of calls is so large that it's common for people to wait in a queue to be answered, wouldn't it be worthwhile to, you know, hire some more operators?

    The cost of these timewasters should be the cost of the person's time who was employed to answer the call. If the cost is someone's life, then something's wrong with the system.

  12. What comes around goes around... by geekmux · · Score: 3, Interesting
    (5 years later)"Well, we would like to hire you in our call center, but it seems our background check shows you being a Dumb Ass(TM) a few years ago."

    TM Copyright Red Forman Inc.

  13. Hoaxes, or mental illness? by gravyface · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I haven't RTFM, but having worked with paranoid schizophrenics and Alzheimer's sufferers in the past, I would bet that some of these "pranksters" may actually be mentally ill; I hope our public servants are at least screening these individuals before humiliating them on YouTube.

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    body massage!
    1. Re:Hoaxes, or mental illness? by bamwham · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Many "frequent fliers" with ambulance services are just lonely and depressed elderly people who need someone to talk to. I would guess many 911(or 999 as the case may be) time wasters (as opposed to pranksters) have the same issues. It would be nice if society could find a way to reknit the social fabric that used to help these people.

  14. Re:TRUFAX. by Dancindan84 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    People have no respect for anyone any more, themselves included. If they want them to stop they should hit them where it hurts, in their wallet. Even a small $50 fine for a non-emergency 999/911 call would be enough to deter pranksters.

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    "Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much." - Oscar Wilde
  15. last couple of frames should be the charges by RichMan · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The last bit of each segments should list the charges/fines against the person who called.

    Examples:
    Called 911 for a tuna sandwich, $400 fine.

    Called 911 for the capital of Spain, 2 weeks community service.

    Sure the internet notoriety might get some to call but it could be balanced by showing the penalty applied.

  16. *Some* British Police by Tim+C · · Score: 3, Informative

    From TFA, this appears to be being done only by Avon and Somerset Police. Something most people aren't aware of is that the 43 ("geographical") police forces of England and Wales (there are a number of "non-geographical" ones too, such as British Transport Police) are essentially separate companies. Or at least they were 2 years ago when I was working on a project to assist in inter-force information sharing.

    The point being that you'll very often find a given force doing something that none of the rest are, as apparently is the case here. So yes, "British police" are doing this, but only in two counties.

  17. Re:Privacy? by Dhalka226 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I for sure know then when I see somebody in an emergency, I will think twice before I call and most likely decide my privacy is more worth then the life of some kid.

    You, sir, are an idiot. I know Slashdotters love worthless hyperbole, but if you would seriously even THINK about letting somebody DIE because you--what, don't want people to hear your voice?--then you're simply a worthless human being. Period.

    Privacy my ass.

  18. This is a mental health issue by cenonce · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is a mental health issue, and a stupid way of dealing with it. I work in a Public Defender's Office, and while I am sure some of these people are jerks, my experience has been that people who call emergency services with these kinds of requests often have mental health issues. That is why a lot of jurisdictions have mental health diversionary programs for people who commit minor offenses. Embarassing the mentally ill on the internet will only embolden them at best, but certainly not help them deal with their issues in any way. In that regard, this solution seems rather callous.

  19. Re:TRUFAX. by clang_jangle · · Score: 5, Funny

    simply use a public phone that doesn't have a camera pointed at it.

    What, in England?!

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    Caveat Utilitor
  20. Re:Nothing works by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The most effective way to stop crime? Tech that stops the crime before it can happen. You can't stop people from wanting to be criminals and you can't stop them once they are but if they can't actually commit the crime you stopped them nonetheless.

    All this does is breed smarter criminals. Unless we start being able to read minds, this is outside the realm of possibility. And like the overuse of antibiotics, it doesn't 'kill' the 'bacteria' --- it just makes it come back stronger and /more likely/ to thrive.

    The problem is that culturally, we practically deify criminal behavior. "Oh no," we say. "That bad bad man killed 30 people!". Then we spend years watching documentaries and specials and movies about how he got away with it for so long.

    Our popular methods of artistic expression (writing, movies, games) exhibit the same not-so-grudging respect and admiration for those who commit criminal acts. This is not new - it extends back through recorded history. However the obvious answer of censorship is pointless as a solution-- arts are a reflection of humanity, not a prime motivating factor.

    This "shame" tactic is just more of the same, and it is clearly not the answer.

    Ultimately the question is this: how do you convince humans to stop being humans? If we can ever figure that out, we'll be living in a crime-free utopia.

  21. Re:No, I do not agree with you! by janrinok · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The perps had burgled him previously

    There is no evidence that I have seen to prove that he was burgled by the SAME individuals. He had been burgled, that is true, but during the trial he was asked what measures he had taken to prevent further break-ins. He had taken none. So living in an isolated place, known to have some money, taking no protective measures around his property. Crime is never justified but it is not surprising in this case that he was burgled more than once.

    ....and restore your God given rights.

    Which God would that be? If it's the Christian God that you are referring to, which of the Ten Commandments mentions that you can shoot people. I do recall 'Thou shalt not kill', but I cannot remember one suggesting that you can shoot burglars. Perhaps I wasn't paying enough attention last time I went to Church.

    Your 'rights' regarding firearms are nothing more than a throwback to the Wild West and the events that followed during the formative years of your nation. However, I stopped thinking that I was a cowboy when I grew up. You are entitled, both individually and as a Nation, to continue to carry weapons but please don't think less of others because they choose not to.

    Martin did not make a stand for justice. After the event he hid the weapon at his mother's house (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tony_Martin_(farmer)). He can hardly claim that he did not know that he was committing a crime if he went so far as to try to hide the weapon. His defence successfully used the excuse that 'Martin suffered paranoid personality disorder'. So, nobody was claiming that he was making a stand but simply that he had killed without justification (under our law - not yours) and therefore should be punished accordingly. The defence, as is their job, managed to get the sentence reduced.

    From the wiki-link: The jury at the trial were told that they had the option of returning a verdict of manslaughter, rather than murder, if they thought that Martin "did not intend to kill or cause serious bodily harm". However, they found Martin guilty of murder by a 10 to 2 majority. He was sentenced to life in prison, the mandatory sentence for murder under English law.

    I do not agree with your point of view. Ten members of the 12 man jury disagree with you also. The other 2 are welcome to emigrate to the USA, if they haven't already done so. :-)

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