You are in Northern Ireland and the person doing this is in Canada. You report at home, and at the same time trigger action where they actually are.
999 (also 112 works across the UK/EU and routes to the same emergency operator). Use when a crime is in progress, there is an immediate threat to life or safety, or a suspect is nearby.
Most people here are not in an active emergency. To start an official record, use the non-emergency steps below.
Keep doing everything below in Northern Ireland. At the same time, the fastest leverage often sits in Canada, where the person actually is.
The fastest practical relief against content or conduct from a Canada-based perpetrator runs through (a) the Canadian police service of jurisdiction, which can investigate and charge under the Criminal Code (criminal harassment s.264, uttering threats s.264.1, extortion s.346, identity theft/fraud s.402.2/403, and for intimate-image exposure s.162.1), and (b) platform-level takedown plus provincial civil remedies. Canada has no single national takedown regulator equivalent to Australia’s eSafety or the UK’s Ofcom. For intimate images there is a Criminal Code removal/forfeiture pathway tied to s.162.1, and victims can seek provincial civil and protective remedies (peace bonds, restraining orders, provincial intimate-image laws) while a criminal investigation proceeds.
When the perpetrator is located in Canada and the victim is abroad, the foreign victim does not contact Canadian police directly. The victim reports to their OWN national police, who route a police-to-police request to Canada through INTERPOL. Canada's international channel is the INTERPOL National Central Bureau (NCB) Ottawa, run by the RCMP at National Headquarters and operating 24/7; it receives, evaluates and processes assistance requests to and from the 195 INTERPOL member countries and administers the Foreign Criminal Investigators in Canada Protocol. For obtaining EVIDENCE in Canada or extradition FROM Canada, the foreign state's central authority works through a Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty (MLAT), coordinated on the Canadian side by the federal Department of Justice International Assistance Group. For US requests, the counterpart is INTERPOL Washington (USNCB) plus FBI Legal Attache channels; NCB Ottawa and INTERPOL Washington have a standing memorandum of cooperation. The local Canadian police service of jurisdiction is the one that actually investigates a perpetrator on Canadian soil.
A victim cannot invoke INTERPOL or MLAT channels personally; the investigating police service and the Crown initiate INTERPOL notices and MLAT requests. The realistic victim action is to file with their own national police and provide the Canadian police service or the foreign police with the file/occurrence numbers and preserved evidence.
File a non-emergency report, and do the single most important thing: get your report / reference / occurrence number. That number is the key that unlocks platforms, prosecutors, employers and protective orders.
The primary way to START AN OFFICIAL PAPER TRAIL for non-emergency online harassment, stalking, threats, etc. Available 24/7. Select the incident type (e.g. report a crime, hate crime, anti-social behaviour), enter details and evidence, and you receive a confirmation/record with an incident number. PSNI has taken tens of thousands of reports through this channel since September 2023 (roughly 36,874 online reports between 1 Sep 2023 and 17 Jan 2025). Pair it with the 'My PSNI' portal victim-update facility to track the investigation. Keep the reference number for follow-up and escalation.
Call 101 to report a non-emergency crime or incident and create an official occurrence/record with a reference number. Use when you want to speak to an operator, the matter is not an emergency, and you want it logged. For hate crime, callers are directed to '101 option 2'. Always use 999 instead if there is an immediate threat.
If the harassment is motivated by hostility to a protected characteristic, you can use the True Vision online reporting form, which is sent immediately to PSNI and generates a police record. Run by the National Police Chiefs' Council. Useful as an alternative intake that still lands with PSNI.
File here in addition to, not instead of, your local police report.
INTAKE / TRIAGE, NOT a police force. National reporting centre for fraud and cyber crime for England, Wales AND Northern Ireland (Scotland uses Police Scotland 101 instead). Reports are assessed by the National Fraud Intelligence Bureau (run by the City of London Police) and, where there are viable leads, disseminated to the relevant local force (PSNI in NI) for investigation. It does not investigate cases itself. Use it specifically for fraud, identity fraud, scams, hacking/computer misuse, and extortion involving money. A live cyber attack in progress should be reported by phone immediately. Report Fraud went live on 4 December 2025 (replacing Action Fraud), with Action Fraud traffic redirecting over the following months and full public launch in January 2026; the phone number is unchanged from Action Fraud.
Investigates the most serious, organised and cross-border cyber crime across the whole UK including Northern Ireland; it is the UK's lead agency against serious and organised crime, including cybercrime that crosses regional or international borders. The public does not normally report individual harassment cases directly to the NCA (those go to PSNI / Report Fraud); the NCA takes the high-harm, organised, or cross-border cases. It also hosts the UK's international liaison capability.
PSNI's specialist unit. Its public-facing 'Cyber Protect/Prevent' function focuses on prevention, awareness and supporting SMEs, charities and individuals; investigation of cyber-enabled crimes (online harassment, stalking, threats) is carried out through PSNI's normal crime-investigation route after you report via 101 / 999 / the online portal. Treat it as the in-force specialist resource behind a PSNI report, not a separate public intake.
This page covers the cross-border part. For the full Northern Ireland guide, the exact offences to name with official statute links, and the escalation ladder, see Reporting online harassment in Northern Ireland →