View Full Version: Missing Child Email HOAX

fromwhisperstor >>Important Messages >>Missing Child Email HOAX


<< Prev | Next >>

Themis Eternal- 10-17-2005
Missing Child Email HOAX
There has been an email being sent around for years now about a missing girl with red hair. Shown here: Well it is making the rounds again and before anyone asks why we don't have this girl posted here the reason is that it is a hoax. The following information is about the famous Penny Brown hoax. Summary of eRumor/eHoax: An appeal from a mother to help locate her missing 9 year old daughter, Penny Brown. The Truth: This has been circulating long enough and without any evidence whatsoever that it is true that we are classifying it as fiction. In a classic act of Internet integrity, someone has added that she is the subject of an "Amber Alert", which is not true. There is no amber alert, of course, because the story is not real. Several things... There is no evidence with any missing persons organization or law enforcement agency about a girl of this age and identity. The email address given for response is no longer operating. Some versions say they are from a woman from the University of Calgary, Monzine Jang. She is real but has nothing to do with the story and is getting weary of all the phone calls. She doesn't know how her name got involved. She has been concerned enough about it, however, that she's checked with missing persons organizations and law enforcement agencies in her area of Canada, but with no success at finding anything. Other versions say the email is from Carol R. Carreón of the Graduate School of Library and Information Science at the University of Texas at Austin. She says she regards the email as a hoax and that it was merely forwarded to the school. Another version says she is the daughter of the manager of a Long's Drugstore in Southern California. Still another version says she is the daughter of a store manager from Longs, South Carolina. The appeal in this eRumor is similar wording to other missing child hoaxes. If this person was really interested in getting help, she would give more information such as the location where the girl was last seen and any law enforcement agency that would want to receive any tips. A real example of the story as it has been circulated: Subject: MISSING CHILD PICTURE or AMBER ALERT - Nine Year Old... I am asking you all, begging you to please, forward this email onto anyone and everyone you know, PLEASE. My 9 year old girl, Penny Brown, is missing. She has been missing for now two weeks. It is still not too late. Please help us. If anyone anywhere knows anything, sees anything, please contact me at zicozicozico@hotmail.com I am including a picture of her. All prayers are appreciated!! It only takes 2 seconds to forward this on, if it was your child, you would want all the help you could get. Please. thank you for your kindness, hopefully you can help us. Please, if you receive a Penny Brown email use "Reply All" (this will notify everyone on the TO list in the email) and ask them to STOP sending the email. AND, ask them to please notify the original sender of the email. We all have enough to do looking for children that are really missing. Thank you, Bryant Harper Courtesy of Code Amber If you check any Hoax site you will find this email and the different variations of it.

Gaia- 06-27-2006

Missing Child Emails Grab the Heart 2006-06-27 Polly Klaas® Foundation provides a profile of Internet-hoax-missing-child-emails, and ways to verify validity. Petaluma, CA (PRWEB) June 27, 2006 -- In your email box is a title that grabs your heart: "9-year-old Penny Brown is missing." There is a photo of a sweetheart of a girl, and a gripping appeal for help, pleading with you to pass this email and photo on to everyone in your address book. Before you hit send to forward the email to your contact list, take a minute to find out whether the missing child information is valid. There are many Internet hoaxes, especially missing child emails. The Penny Brown hoax has been circulating the Internet since September, 2001. The Polly Klaas® Foundation, www.pollyklaas.org , which helps find missing children, is often contacted about these missing child emails. They have developed the following profile of a missing-child-email-hoax: • Circulating for a lengthy amount of time. • No direct contact information, particularly law enforcement contact information. • No common missing child descriptive information: - Where did the child go missing from? - When did the child go missing? - Physical description of the child? • No clear way to verify information with law enforcement or a reputable child find agency. • Asks recipient to forward the information "to everyone you know." To verify whether a particular missing child email is a hoax, the Polly Klaas® Foundation offers these resources: • There are several websites that can help verify if a missing child email is a hoax. Two of the more prominent are: - http://hoaxbusters.ciac.org/ - http://www.snopes.com • Contact the law enforcement agency in the city from which the child allegedly went missing. • Contact the Polly Klaas® Foundation and ask if the child is registered as a missing person, www.PollyKlaas.org or 800-587-4357. It is not known how many Internet-hoax-missing-child-emails are circulating. However, as Hoaxbusters points out, the hoax messages often multiply at an alarming rate. For instance, if a caring person passes the hoax on to 10 people, who then pass it on to ten more people, then 100 more messages have been generated in very little time. If this keeps up for 4 or more rounds of forwarding, then up to a million messages will have been sent. The Polly Klaas® Foundation suggests caring people take care not to forward missing child emails if there are any doubts regarding the validity of the missing child report. About the Polly Klaas® Foundation Founded in 1993 following the abduction and murder of 12-year-old Polly Klaas, the Polly Klaas® Foundation is a national nonprofit that helps find missing children, prevents them from going missing in the first place and promotes laws like Amber Alert that help keep children safe. The Foundation has eVolunteers who distribute posters of missing children in their communities http://www.pollyklaas.org/evolunteer/, and provides abduction prevention information to parents with its highly respected Child Safety Kit http://ga0.org/campaign/PKF_website_child_safety_kit, and its forthcoming Internet Safety Kit http://ga0.org/campaign/internet_safety_kit. *Marc Klaas is not associated with the Polly Klaas® Foundation.* ### Trackback URI: http://www.prweb.com/dingpr.php/U3VtbS1NYWduLU1hZ24tQ291cC1JbnNlLVplcm8= http://www.prweb.com/releases/2006/6/prweb403324.htm

Forumer™ is Voted #1 Free Forum Hosting provider
Build your own community today with the largest message board hosting company.