You are in Scotland and the person doing this is in Canada. You report at home, and at the same time trigger action where they actually are.
999 (112 also works across the UK/EU). Use 999 if a crime is happening now, there is a threat to life, violence is being used or threatened, or a suspect is nearby. Textphone users dial 18000; an emergency-SMS service (register first by texting "register" to 999) is available for those who cannot make a voice call.
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 Scotland. 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.
Call 101 to report a crime that does not need an emergency response, to speak to your local officer, or for advice on whether online behaviour is a crime. Ask the call handler to RECORD the report and to give you the crime reference / incident number, and write it down. The crime reference number is your official paper-trail anchor for follow-up and insurance.
Use ONLY for non-urgent matters; the form is reviewed and progressed in slow time by the relevant department. Complete all detail fields (dates, times, accounts/URLs, evidence held). This starts an official record. Do not use the online form if you need police urgently; dial 999 or 101. Keep screenshots of submission.
Attend in person to make a statement; request the crime/incident reference number before you leave.
File here in addition to, not instead of, your local police report.
Primary investigator and intake for cybercrime, online harassment, online fraud and online harm in Scotland. IMPORTANT: unlike the rest of the UK, fraud and cybercrime in Scotland are reported directly to Police Scotland on 101, NOT to the England/Wales/NI national fraud portal. Police Scotland records and investigates the report.
Signposting / advice hub only. Does NOT investigate. It directs individuals to the correct body: Police Scotland (101/999) for cybercrime and fraud; NCSC for cyber-security incidents and phishing; ICO for data breaches. Useful for figuring out where to report, not a substitute for a police report.
UK-wide technical body. Intake/triage for cyber-security incidents and scams; does not handle individual harassment. Suspicious emails: forward to report@phishing.gov.uk; suspicious texts: forward to 7726; scam websites and incident reporting via its portal. Refers/handles at a national-infrastructure level; not a personal-harassment investigator.
UK data-protection regulator. Relevant to doxxing where personal data was unlawfully obtained/disclosed (Data Protection Act 2018 s.170). Intakes data-protection complaints and can investigate/enforce, but is a regulator, not a criminal police force; serious criminal doxxing should still go to Police Scotland. Helpline Mon-Fri 9am-5pm.
NOT for Scotland. The national fraud and cyber-crime reporting service for England, Wales and Northern Ireland, run by City of London Police. It replaced Action Fraud: the service went live on 4 December 2025, with old Action Fraud traffic redirecting to it over the following months and full public launch in January 2026. A Scottish victim should NOT use it; report fraud/cybercrime to Police Scotland on 101. Listed here only to correct a common misdirection. Phone number 0300 123 2040 is unchanged from Action Fraud.
This page covers the cross-border part. For the full Scotland guide, the exact offences to name with official statute links, and the escalation ladder, see Reporting online harassment in Scotland →