A fake emergency call to police resulted in officers responding Friday night to the home of Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows just a day after she removed former President Donald Trump from the state’s presidential primary ballot under the Constitution’s insurrection clause.

She becomes the latest elected politician to become a target of swatting, which involves making a prank phone call to emergency services with the intent that a large first responder presence, including SWAT teams, will show up at a residence.

Bellows was not home when the swatting call was made, and responding officers found nothing suspicious.

  • LazaroFilm
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    8611 months ago

    Question: what isn’t swatting a punishable act for the person who called?

    • Ghostalmedia
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      5411 months ago

      Sure, but these folks are masking themselves with spoofed numbers, VPNs, etc.

      • LazaroFilm
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        5511 months ago

        Then so for an identification or lower the response force. It feels like they just get a random phone call, no proof of anything and they just barge in within 10min. But when my neighbor plays loud music all night no one cares.

        • @[email protected]
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          6011 months ago

          When you call the police on your loud neighbor do you say, “their music is too loud” or do you say, “a bunch of suspicious looking people have been going in and out carrying bags of fertilizer and electronic components.”

        • @afraid_of_zombies
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          411 months ago

          Not sure where she lives other than Maine, might be a small wealthy town with a bored police department.

        • @shalafi
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          211 months ago

          You really want to try and work out such a system? Tell me how your algorithm is going to work and I’ll start throwing exceptions.

          Lives are on the line! You better have quite the bulletproof plan.

        • @chitak166
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          011 months ago

          Why would a swat team be sent for your neighbor’s loud music?

          Why does your comment have almost 50 upvotes?

          • LazaroFilm
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            111 months ago

            I have no idea why so many people upvote this stupid comment.

            • @chitak166
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              -111 months ago

              Yeah, that’s what I’m asking.

    • BlanketsWithSmallpox
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      11 months ago

      All you need is a VPN and a VOIP number. It’s not hard to do and you can order them easily online. Let alone text to voice readers.

      There’s a reason why swatting and bomb threats have been popular for a decade now.

      Privacy is a two way street. When it comes to serious threats, the same things that protect you, protect people who would abuse those tools.

      • LazaroFilm
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        411 months ago

        That’s my point. It should not be that easy.

        • BlanketsWithSmallpox
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          11 months ago

          Well unless you want FBI back doors built into every VPN in every sovereign nation, then it’s unfortunately a byproduct of our need for privacy due to corporate and governmental overreach.

          The FBI and other three letter agencies already pay huge bucks for hats when they can. Common encryption aren’t going to be broken for at least a couple decades. We almost always encrypt better than decrypt though by the very nature of the process though.

          Quantum computing is moving faster than most people realize but it will never beat out better encryption.

          • @Cuttlefish1111
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            611 months ago

            Or maybe calls from voip are identified before sending out a swat team

            • @MeatsOfRage
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              811 months ago

              Problem is there’s a ton of legitimate VoIP. My brother had a VoIP home phone for years because it costs next to nothing. Police can’t just not go to a call because it’s a VoIP call.

              • @Cuttlefish1111
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                -111 months ago

                I’m saying show a little more caution. (I know lol)

    • @FireTower
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      1111 months ago

      It is. The problems arise when it’s an anonymous phone call. The police are still going to show up to a potential hostage situation if the caller spoofs a number.

    • gregorum
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      211 months ago

      Arguably, the cops knew the address they were going to was a Secretary of State, but they went there anyway.

    • @shalafi
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      011 months ago

      Didn’t read the article, huh? FAFO with 911, you’ll see if it’s punishable or not.