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Online harassment reporting guide

Reporting online harassment in the United States

Step-by-step, source-backed guidance: where to file, the exact offences to name, and how to escalate until your case is assigned.

URGENTIn immediate danger? Call 911 now.

911 (police, fire, medical). Use 911 for any immediate physical danger: in-person threats, someone at your door, a credible imminent death threat, or "swatting"/active emergency. Text-to-911 is available in many but not all areas; if it fails, call. For NON-emergencies (to start a paper trail), do NOT use 911. Many areas also have 311 for non-emergency municipal services, but that is not a guaranteed police-report line.

Most people here are not in an active emergency. To start an official record, use the non-emergency steps below.

STEP 1

Start the paper trail

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.

Local police department non-emergency line / online police report portal (PRIMARY paper-trail channel)

Call the non-emergency line or use the online portal to file a report documenting each incident (dates, screenshots, URLs, usernames, the offender's identity if known). Ask for the report/case number and a copy of the report. If the conduct crosses state lines (most online cases), say so; the department may coordinate with the FBI. Keep your own evidence log too.

Your city/county police department's published non-emergency phone number and/or online reporting portal. These vary by jurisdiction (no single national number). Search '[your city/county] police non-emergency report' or '[your city] police online report'. Filing produces an official police report with a case/report/incident number, which is the key record for prosecutors, employers, schools, platforms, and protective-order petitions. Get and keep that report number.Official source · usa.gov ↗
USA.gov 'Report a crime' (federal directory pointing you to the right body)

Official U.S. government page that directs victims to local police for most crimes and to the correct federal agency for cyber/identity crimes. It directs victims to search for the local law enforcement agency where the crime occurred and to FBI channels for internet crime and hate crimes. Use it to confirm which channel fits your situation.

usa.gov →Official source · usa.gov ↗
FBI electronic tip form / FBI phone line (for federal crimes, threats, cyberstalking that crosses state lines)

Submit a tip describing interstate threats, cyberstalking, or doxxing. Every tip is reviewed by FBI personnel and routed to the appropriate field office or partner. This is an intake/referral channel, not a guaranteed investigation, and you generally will not get case-by-case feedback.

tips.fbi.gov →Official source · fbi.gov ↗
IdentityTheft.gov (FTC) - federal identity-theft reporting and recovery

For identity theft / impersonation involving misuse of your personal or financial identity: file at IdentityTheft.gov to generate an FTC Identity Theft Report and a personalized recovery plan. Many police departments ask for the FTC report before/with taking a local police report; bring both together. The FTC report is itself treated as an official report for credit bureaus and most companies.

identitytheft.gov →Official source · ftc.gov ↗
STEP 2

File with the national cybercrime body

File here in addition to, not instead of, your local police report.

FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3)

The FBI-run central national intake hub for cyber-enabled crime, including cyberstalking, online threats, extortion/sextortion, and online fraud. IC3 does NOT investigate complaints itself; it analyzes submissions and may refer them to federal, state, local, or international law enforcement for possible investigation. Complainants generally do not receive case-by-case updates. File even if unsure it qualifies, and file in addition to (not instead of) a local police report.

ic3.gov →No public complaint phone line; intake is online only. (General FBI line: 1-800-CALL-FBI / 1-800-225-5324.)
FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation) - field offices and tip line

Lead federal investigative agency for interstate cyberstalking, interstate threats, extortion, and doxxing of federally protected persons. Unlike IC3, FBI field offices can open and conduct investigations. Tips via tips.fbi.gov are reviewed and routed; you can also contact your nearest field office directly.

fbi.gov →1-800-CALL-FBI (1-800-225-5324)
FTC IdentityTheft.gov

Federal one-stop intake and recovery system for identity theft and impersonation that misuses your identity. Generates an official FTC Identity Theft Report and recovery plan. The FTC does not prosecute individual cases but feeds reports into the Consumer Sentinel database used by law enforcement.

identitytheft.gov →1-877-438-4338 (1-877-ID-THEFT)
What to report it as

The offences in United States

Use the right words. Lead with threats, stalking and doxxing, not “someone is being mean.” Tap any offence for the full elements and the official source.

Stalking / Cyberstalking18 U.S.C. § 2261A - StalkingMax penalty: Penalty depends on harm (via § 2261(b)): up to 5 years (base case); up to 10 years if serious bodily injury or use of a dangerous weapon; up to 20 years if permanent disfigurement or life-threatening injury; up to life if the victim dies. Mandatory minimum 1 year if committed while violating a protection order.

What it covers. Federal stalking/cyberstalking: a course of conduct, including via internet, email, or phone across state lines, intended to kill, injure, harass, intimidate, or surveil, that causes (or would reasonably be expected to cause) the victim death/serious-bodily-injury fear or substantial emotional distress.

Section. 18 U.S.C. § 2261A (penalties via § 2261(b)) · Criminal (federal)

Key elements. Either (1) interstate/foreign travel or entering Indian country, OR (2) use of the mail, any interactive computer service, or electronic communication system of interstate commerce; PLUS specific intent to kill, injure, harass, intimidate, or place under surveillance; PLUS a 'course of conduct' that places the victim (or immediate family/spouse/intimate partner, or their pet/service animal) in reasonable fear of death or serious bodily injury, OR causes/would reasonably cause substantial emotional distress.

Official source · uscode.house.gov ↗
Criminal harassment (telephone/electronic)47 U.S.C. § 223 - Obscene or harassing telephone calls in the District of Columbia or in interstate or foreign communicationsMax penalty: Fine and/or imprisonment up to 2 years.

What it covers. Federal anti-harassment statute for telecommunications: covers anonymous communications and repeated calls/messages made via a telecommunications device with intent to abuse, threaten, or harass a specific person, and transmission of obscene material with intent to harass.

Section. 47 U.S.C. § 223 · Criminal (federal)

Key elements. Use of a telephone or telecommunications device in interstate/foreign communication (or in D.C.); intent to abuse, threaten, or harass a specific person; conduct such as anonymous harassing communications, repeated calls/causing a phone to ring to harass, or knowingly permitting a facility under one's control to be used for these purposes. § 223(a)(1)(C) covers anonymous communications made with intent to abuse, threaten, or harass any specific person; § 223(a)(1)(E) covers repeated calls solely to harass.

Official source · law.cornell.edu ↗
Criminal threats / death threats / threatening communications18 U.S.C. § 875 - Interstate communicationsMax penalty: § 875(c): fine and/or up to 5 years. § 875(b) (extortionate threat to kidnap/injure the person): fine and/or up to 20 years.

What it covers. Transmitting in interstate or foreign commerce any communication containing a threat to kidnap or to injure another person. § 875(c) is the core 'interstate threats' / death-threat provision used for online and phone threats.

Section. 18 U.S.C. § 875(c) (threats to injure/kidnap); § 875(b) (extortionate threat to kidnap or injure the person) · Criminal (federal)

Key elements. Transmission in interstate or foreign commerce (internet, phone, mail across state lines); a communication containing a true threat to kidnap or injure the person of another. Under Elonis v. United States (2015) and Counterman v. Colorado (2023), the government must prove a culpable mental state, at minimum recklessness as to the threatening nature of the communication. § 875(b) additionally requires intent to extort.

Official source · law.cornell.edu ↗
Criminal defamation / defamatory libelNo federal criminal defamation statute. Defamation is CIVIL-ONLY in practice nationwide (state tort law).Max penalty: Civil: money damages and injunctions (no jail). Criminal-libel penalties, where a state retains them, are typically misdemeanor-level fines/short jail terms and are seldom enforced.

What it covers. There is NO federal criminal defamation law. Defamation (libel/slander) is handled as a CIVIL lawsuit under state law. A victim sues for damages; police generally will not arrest for defamation alone. Roughly 14 to 24 states (plus the U.S. Virgin Islands) still have criminal-libel statutes on the books, but they are rarely prosecuted and several have been struck or narrowed on First Amendment grounds. Calling it strictly 'civil-only' is a practical generalization, not a categorical bar; prosecutions, though rare, are reportedly increasing with online speech.

Section. N/A federally. (A minority of states retain rarely-enforced, often constitutionally dubious criminal-libel statutes.) · Civil (tort), not a federal crime; criminal libel survives in only a handful of states and is almost never charged

Key elements. Civil defamation elements (state law): a false statement of fact, published to a third party, that harms reputation, made with the requisite fault. Public officials/figures must prove 'actual malice' (knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard) under New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964). Two key federal backdrops: (1) Section 230 (47 U.S.C. § 230) immunizes platforms from liability for users' posts, so you sue the author, not the site; (2) the SPEECH Act bars U.S. enforcement of foreign defamation judgments that don't meet U.S. free-speech standards.

Official source · law.cornell.edu ↗
Extortion / blackmail (including 'pay or I expose/harm you' threats)18 U.S.C. § 875 - Interstate communications (subsections (b) and (d))Max penalty: § 875(b): up to 20 years. § 875(d): up to 2 years. Both also carry fines.

What it covers. Transmitting interstate/foreign communications with intent to extort money or anything of value via threats. § 875(d) is the classic 'blackmail/sextortion' provision (threat to injure reputation or property, or to accuse of a crime); § 875(b) covers extortionate threats to kidnap or injure the person.

Section. 18 U.S.C. § 875(b) and § 875(d) · Criminal (federal)

Key elements. Transmission in interstate or foreign commerce; intent to extort money or a thing of value; AND a threat. § 875(b): threat to kidnap or injure the person; § 875(d): threat to injure property or reputation, harm the reputation of a deceased person, or accuse someone of a crime. (Related federal extortion provisions: 18 U.S.C. § 873 blackmail, § 876 mailed threats, § 1951 Hobbs Act.)

Official source · law.cornell.edu ↗
Identity theft / identity fraud / online impersonation18 U.S.C. § 1028 - Fraud and related activity in connection with identification documents, authentication features, and information; and 18 U.S.C. § 1028A - Aggravated identity theftMax penalty: § 1028: generally up to 15 years for the most serious document offenses (up to 5 years or 1 year for lesser conduct); enhanced to up to 20 years (drug trafficking, crime of violence, or prior conviction) and up to 30 years if to facilitate domestic or international terrorism; plus fines and forfeiture. § 1028A: a mandatory additional 2 years that must run CONSECUTIVELY (5 years if terrorism-related); probation barred.

What it covers. § 1028 criminalizes producing, transferring, possessing, or using another person's means of identification without lawful authority to commit fraud or other unlawful activity. § 1028A adds a mandatory consecutive term when identity theft is committed during certain underlying felonies.

Section. 18 U.S.C. § 1028 and § 1028A · Criminal (federal)

Key elements. § 1028: knowingly and without lawful authority producing/transferring/possessing/using identification documents or another person's 'means of identification' with intent to commit, aid, or further unlawful activity; a federal nexus (interstate commerce, use of mail, federal documents). § 1028A: knowing transfer/possession/use of a means of identification of another person during and in relation to an enumerated felony in subsection (c). (Note: pure online impersonation that isn't fraud is often charged under STATE impersonation statutes, e.g., California Penal Code § 528.5.)

Official source · law.cornell.edu ↗
Doxxing18 U.S.C. § 119 - Protection of individuals performing certain official duties (federal doxxing statute, NARROW - protected persons only). No general federal anti-doxxing crime for private individuals; general doxxing is prosecuted via stalking/harassment/threat statutes and STATE anti-doxxing laws.Max penalty: § 119: fine and/or up to 5 years. State anti-doxxing penalties vary (often misdemeanor; some felony when injury/threat results, and several states' 'doxxing' laws are civil-only).

What it covers. § 119 makes it a federal crime to knowingly publish 'restricted personal information' about a covered person (e.g., federal officials, judges, jurors, witnesses, federal law-enforcement officers, and certain state/local officers assisting federal work) with intent to threaten, intimidate, or incite a crime of violence. It does NOT cover doxxing of ordinary private people.

Section. 18 U.S.C. § 119 · Criminal (federal), but limited to 'covered persons'; general public doxxing relies on § 2261A, § 875, § 223, and state law

Key elements. Knowingly making 'restricted personal information' (SSN, home address, home/mobile phone, personal email, home fax) of a covered person (or their immediate family) publicly available; AND intent to threaten, intimidate, or incite a crime of violence, OR knowledge/intent that the info will be used to threaten, intimidate, or facilitate a crime of violence. For private-individual doxxing, prosecutors instead use cyberstalking (§ 2261A), interstate threats (§ 875), telecom harassment (§ 223), and increasingly state anti-doxxing statutes.

Official source · law.cornell.edu ↗
Doxxing status in United States

PARTIALLY a standalone federal offense, but NARROW. 18 U.S.C. § 119 is a dedicated federal doxxing crime, but it ONLY protects "covered persons" (federal officials, judges, jurors, witnesses, federal law-enforcement officers, and certain state/local officers assisting federal work) and requires intent to threaten/intimidate/incite violence (up to 5 years). There is NO general federal anti-doxxing crime for ordinary private individuals. Doxxing of a private person is therefore prosecuted INDIRECTLY through cyberstalking (18 U.S.C. § 2261A), interstate threats (18 U.S.C. § 875(c)), and telecommunications harassment (47 U.S.C. § 223) where the elements fit, AND through a growing body of STATE anti-doxxing statutes (criminal and/or civil). Coverage varies significantly by state. Several state "doxxing" laws are CIVIL only: California's Doxing Victims Recourse Act (AB 1979, Civil Code 1708.89, effective Jan 1, 2025) and Illinois's Civil Liability for Doxing Act (740 ILCS 195/, effective Jan 1, 2024) both create private civil causes of action, not criminal offenses. Texas, by contrast, has a dedicated CRIMINAL anti-doxxing statute (Tex. Penal Code 42.074). Victims should check both federal options and their specific state's doxxing/harassment/privacy laws.

Recording your calls

Federal: ONE-PARTY consent. State law varies; roughly 38 states plus D.C. are one-party, and about a dozen states require ALL-PARTY (two-party) consent. On a multi-state call the strictest applicable law controls.

Source ↗
State & territory law may add offences
California · 5 offence(s) · Recording: All-party (two-party) consent. Penal Code 632(a) makes it a crime to record a confidential communication without the consent of all parties; it is a wobbler (first offense up to a $2,500 fine and/or up to 1 year county jail or state prison; subsequent offense up to $10,000 per violation). A 'confidential communication' excludes communications where parties may reasonably expect to be overheard or recorded (e.g., public gatherings).
Texas · 5 offence(s) · Recording: One-party consent. Under Tex. Penal Code 16.02 the base interception offense is a second-degree felony, BUT 16.02(c) provides an affirmative defense that the actor is a party to the communication, or that one party gave prior consent, absent an unlawful (criminal or tortious) purpose. A victim may lawfully record a call or in-person conversation they are part of. The official Texas State Law Library confirms Texas is a 'one-party consent' state.
Florida · 8 offence(s) · Recording: All-party (two-party) consent. Under the Florida Security of Communications Act, Fla. Stat. 934.03(2)(d) makes interception lawful only when all parties have given prior consent. Recording a call or conversation in which a party has a reasonable expectation of privacy without all-party consent is a third-degree felony under 934.03(4)(a) (up to 5 years / $5,000); a narrow misdemeanor exception exists under 934.03(4)(b). One-party consent applies only to law-enforcement interceptions.
New York · 10 offence(s) · Recording: One-party consent. Under Penal Law 250.05 (Eavesdropping, a class E felony) it is a crime to wiretap, mechanically overhear, or intercept a conversation without the consent of at least one party. A person who is a party to the conversation (or who has one party's consent) may lawfully record it. For interstate calls where another party is in an all-party-consent state, all-party consent may be advisable.
Illinois · 6 offence(s) · Recording: All-party (two-party) consent. 720 ILCS 5/14-2(a)(1) makes it eavesdropping to record all or part of a private conversation unless done with the consent of all parties. The prohibition turns on the conversation being 'private' (a reasonable expectation of privacy) and the recording being surreptitious. Eavesdropping is a Class 4 felony for a first offense and a Class 3 felony for a second/subsequent offense (720 ILCS 5/14-4).
Georgia · 6 offence(s) · Recording: One-party consent (audio). Under O.C.G.A. 16-11-66(a) it is lawful to record a communication when you are a party to it, or when at least one party has given prior consent; you do not need the other party's consent to record a call or conversation you are part of. IMPORTANT: recording VIDEO/images in a private place separately requires ALL-party consent under O.C.G.A. 16-11-62 (a felony, 1 to 5 years and/or up to $10,000). Consent to record a child under 18's conversation must come from a parent/guardian or a court order.
If the person is in another country

Report at home, and trigger action where they are

If the person is in the United Kingdom

Keep doing everything above in the United States. At the same time, the fastest leverage often sits in the United Kingdom, where the person actually is.

Fastest lever in the United Kingdom

UK-wide: Ofcom’s Online Safety Act 2023 duties over platforms with UK users, plus the platform’s own law-enforcement channel once a UK police reference exists. Nation-level harassment/stalking protective orders are available through the relevant nation’s courts.

How the case reaches them

When the perpetrator is in the UK, a foreign victim triggers action police-to-police through the UK Interpol National Central Bureau (run via the National Crime Agency); the specific UK force that investigates depends on the nation (a Home Office force in England & Wales, Police Scotland, or the PSNI). The victim reports at home and asks their own investigating officer to pursue UK coordination.

For nation-specific offences and the exact police service, see the selected nation below.

The honest truth: you cannot contact Interpol yourself, only police can. Ask your own investigating officer to pursue international coordination, and keep them supplied with your evidence.
If the person is in Canada

Keep doing everything above in the United States. At the same time, the fastest leverage often sits in Canada, where the person actually is.

Fastest lever in Canada

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.

How the case reaches them

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.

The honest truth: you cannot contact Interpol yourself, only police can. Ask your own investigating officer to pursue international coordination, and keep them supplied with your evidence.
If the person is in Australia

Keep doing everything above in the United States. At the same time, the fastest leverage often sits in Australia, where the person actually is.

Fastest lever in Australia

The fastest protection lever against a perpetrator located in Australia is the eSafety Commissioner's civil removal scheme under the Online Safety Act 2021. eSafety can issue REMOVAL NOTICES to platforms and end-users under the Adult Cyber Abuse Scheme (18+), the Image-Based Abuse Scheme, the Cyberbullying Scheme (under-18) and the Online Content Scheme; non-compliant services can face civil penalties of up to 500 penalty units. For most schemes the victim must first report to the platform or service, then lodge at https://www.esafety.gov.au/report. This is a civil takedown route that runs alongside, and does not replace, a criminal police report. Note the deliberately high 'serious harm' threshold for the Adult Cyber Abuse Scheme. In parallel, where the victim fears ongoing harm, an Apprehended Violence Order (AVO) / personal safety intervention order can be sought against a locally-located perpetrator via the local court or police.

How the case reaches them

When the perpetrator is located in Australia and the victim is overseas, the foreign victim's own police refer the matter to Australian law enforcement through police-to-police channels: the foreign country's INTERPOL National Central Bureau contacts the AFP-hosted INTERPOL National Central Bureau (NCB) Canberra (within AFP International Operations, operating 24/7), which channels notices, information-sharing and assistance requests. The matter is then assessed and, for an individual harassment case, typically referred to the relevant Australian state or territory police where the perpetrator is located. For evidence-gathering or prosecution that needs formal cooperation, a Mutual Legal Assistance (MLAT) request is coordinated by the Commonwealth Attorney-General's Department under the Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters Act 1987. A victim cannot trigger these channels directly; they ask the investigating police to route the matter through INTERPOL Canberra or MLAT.

eSafety is a civil regulator and does not prosecute, award damages, or replace police. The criminal route remains state/territory police (or the AFP for serious/transnational matters), reachable from abroad only via the police-to-police INTERPOL Canberra channel described above.

The honest truth: you cannot contact Interpol yourself, only police can. Ask your own investigating officer to pursue international coordination, and keep them supplied with your evidence.
If the person is in New Zealand

Keep doing everything above in the United States. At the same time, the fastest leverage often sits in New Zealand, where the person actually is.

Fastest lever in New Zealand

The fastest practical lever against a perpetrator located in New Zealand is the Harmful Digital Communications Act 2015 civil route: complain to Netsafe (the Approved Agency, https://netsafe.org.nz/report, 0508 638 723), and if it cannot resolve the matter, use Netsafe's written summary to apply to the District Court for an HDCA order (takedown, cease publication, correction, right of reply, or identity disclosure). For serious threats or criminal conduct, NZ Police can act under the Crimes Act / HDCA s 22 directly because the offender is locally located and within jurisdiction. NOTE: where the poster is offshore the HDCA's real limit is service-of-process (no statutory provision for serving an overseas defendant; leave of the District Court under District Court Rules Part 6 is required); that limit does not bite when the perpetrator is in New Zealand.

How the case reaches them

When the perpetrator is in New Zealand and the victim is overseas, the foreign victim should report through their OWN local/national police, who relay the matter police-to-police to INTERPOL Wellington (the NZ National Central Bureau hosted at Police National Headquarters). Neither the public nor a foreign victim can contact INTERPOL or the NCB directly: 'INTERPOL NCBs do not respond to requests from the general public... contact their local or national police, who will in turn contact the NCB.' NZ Police can also be reported to directly via 105 (https://105.police.govt.nz) for the criminal record. For evidence held in or action needed in New Zealand, the foreign authority uses a Mutual Legal Assistance (MLAT) request handled under New Zealand's Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters Act 1992 via the Crown central authority. New Zealand is also a Party to the Budapest Convention on Cybercrime (in force for NZ 1 December 2025), which provides additional cross-border cooperation channels for electronic evidence. An FBI Legal Attache now operates a standalone office in Wellington (opened 31 July 2025) for liaison with US authorities.

Because the perpetrator is locally located, NZ Police and the District Court can act without the cross-border MLAT or INTERPOL delays that slow cases where the offender is abroad. If Netsafe’s role changes, NZ Police on 105 is the fallback intake.

The honest truth: you cannot contact Interpol yourself, only police can. Ask your own investigating officer to pursue international coordination, and keep them supplied with your evidence.
If the person is in South Africa

Keep doing everything above in the United States. At the same time, the fastest leverage often sits in South Africa, where the person actually is.

Fastest lever in South Africa

The fastest live protection/unmasking lever against a locally-located perpetrator is the Protection from Harassment Act. A South African magistrate's court can, under s.4, direct a South African electronic communications service provider to FURNISH the unknown harasser's name, identity number and address - identifying an SA-based harasser without any extradition - and then issue an interim and final protection order (s.10), breach of which is a crime (up to 5 years, s.18(1)(a)). This means a victim does NOT need extradition to get relief: the SA courts act directly against SA-based persons and SA-licensed service providers. IMPORTANT CORRECTION: the Cybercrimes Act s.20 takedown order and s.21 unmasking direction are NOT yet in operation (Part VI of Chapter 2 has not been commenced as of 2026), so there is currently no operative Cybercrimes Act statutory takedown order; content removal goes through the protection-order conditions plus direct reporting to the platform/host. A foreign victim typically needs a local contact (e.g. SA-based counsel, or coordination via SAPS once a docket exists) to drive the magistrate's-court application, since these orders are made by SA courts against SA-licensed providers.

How the case reaches them

When the perpetrator is located in South Africa and the victim is abroad, the inbound police-to-police route runs through INTERPOL NCB Pretoria. A foreign victim reports to their OWN national police, who route a request through their INTERPOL National Central Bureau to NCB Pretoria (which sits inside SAPS Crime Intelligence). NCB Pretoria is the channel for international investigations requiring SAPS cooperation and triggers SAPS action against a South Africa-based suspect. For formal evidence-gathering and execution, requests run as Mutual Legal Assistance under the International Cooperation in Criminal Matters Act 75 of 1996, with the South African Department of Justice & Constitutional Development as the Central Authority; dual criminality is not a strict requirement for incoming requests. NOTE: the Cybercrimes Act's 's.52 designated point of contact' and the Chapter 5 mutual-assistance provisions (ss.46-52) are enacted but NOT yet in force as of 2026, so they cannot currently be relied on - use INTERPOL NCB Pretoria and the 1996 MLA Act.

For US-nexus matters the FBI maintains a Legal Attache (Legat) office at the U.S. Embassy in Pretoria; confirm current contact details with the U.S. Embassy Pretoria.

The honest truth: you cannot contact Interpol yourself, only police can. Ask your own investigating officer to pursue international coordination, and keep them supplied with your evidence.
Dedicated cross-border guides
If the person is in the United Kingdom →If the person is in Canada →If the person is in Australia →If the person is in New Zealand →If the person is in South Africa →
Keep climbing

If you are brushed off, do this next

You are entitled to be heard. Work up this ladder until your case is assigned.

  1. 1Front-line local police: file a report via the non-emergency line or online portal; get the report/case number and a copy. This is the foundational paper trail. Call 911 instead if there is any immediate danger.
  2. 2Follow up with the assigned officer/detective using your case number; provide a clean evidence package (dated screenshots, URLs, usernames, headers, an incident log). Ask which detective or unit owns the case.
  3. 3Local/regional cybercrime or special-victims/threats unit: ask your department to route the case to its cyber, digital-evidence, or stalking/threats unit, especially when the offender is anonymous or out of state.
  4. 4Supervisor escalation: if the report stalls, ask for the officer's supervisor (sergeant/lieutenant) or the watch commander; request a status update and, if needed, a formal review of the case. Reference your case number in writing.
  5. 5File federally in parallel: submit to the FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center (https://www.ic3.gov) and the FBI tip line (https://tips.fbi.gov / 1-800-CALL-FBI), and for identity misuse to IdentityTheft.gov. For interstate threats/cyberstalking, contact your nearest FBI field office directly. Federal channels can act where local police cannot reach an out-of-state or anonymous offender.
  6. 6State authorities: contact your state Attorney General's office (many have cybercrime, consumer-protection, or victim units) and the state police, particularly for cross-county or out-of-state conduct.
  7. 7Prosecutor: bring the case to the local District Attorney / state's attorney (or the U.S. Attorney's Office for federal conduct); a victim or victim-advocate can ask the prosecutor's office to review whether charges or a protective order are warranted.
  8. 8Protective/restraining order: petition the civil or criminal court for a stalking/harassment protection order (process varies by state); violations create a new, more readily enforced offense.
  9. 9Elected representative as a casework pressure-valve: contact your U.S. Senator/Representative or state legislator's CASEWORK office to prompt a status check with an agency. Representatives CANNOT direct, order, or influence the outcome of a criminal investigation; casework only nudges responsiveness and routing. Keep climbing and put your tax dollars to use, but understand the limit.
  10. 10International liaison / oversight: for cross-border offenders, federal agencies engage INTERPOL Washington, FBI Legal Attachés (Legats), and DOJ Office of International Affairs (MLAT). If a body is unresponsive, you can also raise the matter with its internal-affairs/oversight office or an inspector general.
Cross-cutting essentials

The same for everyone: evidence, safety, platforms

Documenting and preserving your evidence

Good documentation is the backbone of every other step. It builds the pattern that proves intent, it gives police and courts something to act on, and it survives even if the perpetrator deletes accounts. The guidance below comes from official safety and policing bodies across several countries. ## Capture context, not just the bad comment Australia's eSafety Commissioner advises capturing "the full conversation (rather than the abusive comment on its own), as well as account details, dates and times," and noting the web page address (URL) and the other person's user profile. Both screenshots and screen recordings are endorsed (screen recording is useful for content that scrolls). The practical takeaway: a good capture shows the username, the URL, and the date and time together, not a bare cropped screenshot. PEN America's Online Harassment Field Manual makes the same point about why this matters over time: documenting harassment creates a record that "alerts you and others to abuse patterns and escalations." Capturing the perpetrator's own words and behavior across time is how you surface intent and escalation. ## Keep the original file, because metadata is provenance Tech Safety Canada advises that you "should always safely store the digital original" rather than forwarding or re-copying it, capture the person's profile URL and a visible date and time, and print or save "directly after you have captured it," because "opposing counsel could claim there was manipulation of evidence... if there was a delay." Saving the original file (rather than forwarding or screenshotting a copy) is the practical mechanism by which authenticating metadata survives. Canadian law-enforcement cyberbullying guidance (RCMP) reinforces recording dates and times, capturing full conversation context with visible timestamps, usernames, and platform, and saving originals. ## Back up in more than one place Accounts and content can be deleted, so keep redundant copies. Tech Safety Canada suggests you "email or text the document to a device that you will continue to have secure access to so you have an extra copy." Canadian guidance recommends backups in multiple locations (for example cloud plus physical plus a printed hard copy kept in chronological order). ## Keep a contemporaneous log UK College of Policing stalking and harassment guidance treats the victim's own diary or log of incidents, and retained correspondence from the suspect, as key evidence; officers are advised to ask victims to keep a diary and explain how to complete it, and some forces issue formal stalking and harassment diary sheets. A dated, ongoing log of incidents is recognized, valuable evidence. ## Email evidence: preserve the headers Emailing a copy of evidence to yourself or a trusted contact can give you an independent third-party (mail-server) timestamp and a redundant copy. But there is an important caveat: forwarding or screenshotting an email strips or overwrites the original metadata. As the Safety Net email-evidence guidance explains, "in a forward, the original email header is replaced with a header that contains the forwarder's information," and "it is also not possible to uncover the header with just a screenshot or photo of the email body." To preserve provenance, keep the original message and its full headers (access the original electronic version via your webmail account, device, or email server). A self-generated email timestamp is corroborating, not conclusive. ## Why a postmark (or self-mailed copy) is weak proof Mailing yourself a copy, or relying on a postmark, proves only that an item existed and was in your possession on a date. It does not prove who wrote it, that any official action was taken, or that the content is unaltered, and it is tamperable. This is the well-documented "poor man's copyright" fallacy: the US Copyright Office states "there is no provision in the copyright law regarding any such type of protection, and it is not a substitute for registration." The same logic applies to reporting: a postmark or self-mailed copy does not prove a crime was reported. The durable proof that a report exists is the official police report or file reference number issued by police, which you should keep for follow-up. (This police-report analogy is a reasoned synthesis of the poor-man's-copyright point plus the role of official report numbers, not a single direct citation.) ## New Zealand caution: preserve before you block, and do not store "objectionable" content New Zealand's Netsafe advises screenshotting harmful content; for emails, saving both the message contents (with the date and time received) and the email headers; and recording the full URL of each page. Critically, it advises: "Contact Netsafe, or the Police first before deleting any content or blocking the abuser's number or profile (as this can be important evidence)." Netsafe also warns: "Do not screenshot or store content you believe is objectionable. It's illegal in NZ to store, send or share objectionable content. Instead contact Netsafe or the Department of Internal Affairs immediately." This jurisdiction-specific caution matters for any cross-border situation, because blanket "screenshot everything" advice can backfire. General legal information, not legal advice.

Official sources
esafety.gov.au ↗onlineharassmentfieldmanual.pen.org ↗techsafety.ca ↗rcmp.ca ↗library.college.police.uk ↗techsafety.org ↗copyright.gov ↗netsafe.org.nz ↗
Swatting: protecting yourself from a fake emergency call to your home

Swatting is when someone makes a false emergency report (such as a hostage situation or active shooter) to send armed police to your address. If you have been doxxed or threatened, this is a real risk, and there are concrete, sourced precautions. ## What the FBI advises The FBI/IC3 swatting public service announcement (29 April 2025) advises victims to "retain all information regarding the incident, such as usernames, email addresses, websites, or names of platforms used for communication, photos, or videos," to immediately report it to local law enforcement and to IC3/FBI, and to "discuss swatting with your family members or colleagues and have a plan in place in the event of law enforcement contact" at the residence. Important: this FBI PSA does not tell victims to pre-emptively register or notify police that they are a swatting target before an incident. Its preventive advice is limited to retaining incident information and having a family or colleague plan. The proactive pre-notification step below is supported by other authoritative sources, but should not be attributed to the FBI. ## The proactive notification precaution The core proactive precaution is to give your local police context in advance, so that a later fake emergency call to your address is met with caution rather than a maximal armed response. The ACLU advises: "If you are concerned about this kind of attack and you trust your local police to be reasonable, consider calling your local police's nonemergency number to alert them to the likelihood of false reports about your address," and it links a verbal script to request that extra precautions be taken by first responders if a report is received about your address. The "if you trust your local police to be reasonable" caveat is worth keeping in mind. Mainstream security guides give the same advice in operational terms: "Contact your local police department. Tell them what you do for a living and that you might be a target for swatting attacks. Tell the police that if they get a call about an active threat at your home address, they should first contact you to confirm that it's true." The goal is to turn an unverified hostage or shooting report into one the dispatcher already knows to treat with suspicion. ## Formal registries exist in some places, but are not universal Some jurisdictions offer a formal opt-in flag. The Seattle Police Department runs an opt-in anti-swatting program (launched 2018): residents who fear being targeted register their address through the Smart911 / Rave Facility system, and "when the 911 call center receives a report of a critical incident, they can dispatch responders and simultaneously check to see if residents at the address registered a concern for swatting on Rave Facility," passing that context to responding officers. Most jurisdictions, however, have no formal swatting registry. Where none exists, the realistic fallback is the ACLU's advice: call the local police non-emergency line and give them context. Do not assume a national or standard registry exists. General legal information, not legal advice.

Official sources
ic3.gov ↗aclu.org ↗security.org ↗king5.com ↗
When one person targets many: treat it as one linked case

If a single perpetrator is harassing several people, the strongest approach is to treat it as one connected pattern rather than a scatter of unrelated, isolated complaints. A documented multi-victim pattern is powerful evidence of intent and fixation, and the law recognizes it. ## Coordinated harassment of multiple people can be one legal pattern UK Crown Prosecution Service guidance establishes that coordinated harassment of multiple victims can legally constitute a single "course of conduct." The CPS states: "Harassment may be committed against two or more persons," and "this covers collective harassment, whether directed towards members of the same family, neighbourhood, protected characteristics, trade or profession, organisation, or institution." Prosecutors are told that gathering evidence "should focus on the wider pattern of behaviour and on the cumulative impact on a victim." A campaign connected by a common motive or behavior links together as one pattern. That is precisely why a documented multi-victim pattern is strong evidence of intent and fixation. ## Why a cross-victim pattern matters Criminal harassment and stalking charges typically require demonstrating a sustained course of conduct, and often a specific intent, rather than a single offensive comment. A single instance of bad language or an opinion is generally not enough on its own. A pattern across multiple complainants helps establish the sustained conduct and the intent that a single instance cannot. (The broad legal logic here is authoritative via the CPS course-of-conduct framework; specific intake-categorization wording from non-official sources should be treated as illustrative.) ## Cross-referencing official report numbers When victims of the same perpetrator coordinate, the durable link between their cases is the official police report or file reference number, not the mere fact that they know each other. When you file a report, police give you a file or report number that you should keep for follow-up, and reports help police "identify patterns... repeat suspects." Co-victims cross-referencing each other's official reference numbers lets the forces link, retrieve, and corroborate related reports, and lets a Legat or NCB match parallel cases across borders. This cross-referencing of reference numbers is presented as best-practice reasoning grounded in two verified pillars (official report numbers exist and are kept for follow-up, and the CPS treats a one-offender, multiple-victim campaign as a single course of conduct). It is a sound operational extrapolation, not a directly quoted official instruction. General legal information, not legal advice.

Official sources
cps.gov.uk ↗rcmp.ca ↗
Reporting to the platform: what actually forces removal

When someone is harassing you, impersonating you, or spreading content about you on a social platform, it helps to understand what genuinely makes a platform take content down, and what is a waste of time. ## The three levers that actually force removal In practice there are only three things that force a platform to remove content or an account: 1. A court order or injunction. A judge orders the content removed. This requires a lawsuit and a court.

  1. A law-enforcement request submitted through the platform's official legal portal. A sworn officer working your case submits a request through the platform's dedicated law-enforcement webform. This is why a police report and reference number matter: it is an officer with an open case, using the official portal, who can move this lever, not you directly.
  2. The platform's own Community Guidelines enforcement after a report. The platform reviews the reported content against its rules and removes it if it violates them. Of these three, Community Guidelines enforcement is the only free, immediate lever a victim can pull directly. The first two require either a lawsuit and a court, or a sworn officer with an open case. You cannot invoke the court-order or law-enforcement levers yourself. ## Informal emails are ignored Do not waste time emailing a platform's general or legal@-style inbox, or messaging from a personal email address, to demand a takedown. Platforms route real legal and law-enforcement requests only through their official portals. TikTok's own Law Enforcement Guidelines state plainly that it "will not respond to requests for user data sent by non-law enforcement officials or when they are sent through informal channels (such as personal email addresses)." Emergency law-enforcement requests must come from a sworn law-enforcement official and from an official law-enforcement email domain. The same pattern holds across platforms: Meta requires a government-issued email at facebook.com/records; X requires a government agency to use legalrequests.x.com; Twitch requires legal process served through the Amazon Law Enforcement Request Tracker and "does not accept requests... or service of process, via e-mail or fax." The informal-email path simply is not the path that gets actioned. The officer working your case is the one who uses the portal. ## Report each item, per video and per comment On TikTok you can report any post (video), comment, account, or direct message for violating Community Guidelines, from the app or a web browser. Reporting is confidential: TikTok states it "will not disclose your identity to the person whose content or account you're reporting." To report a video: In the app, open the post, tap the Share button (or press and hold the post), tap Report, select a reason (and a subtopic if prompted), then tap Submit. On the web, hover over the More options (...) button on the video, click Report, select a reason and subtopic, then click Submit. To report a comment: TikTok has a separate, dedicated comment-report flow (press and hold the comment, then tap Report). Report harassing comments individually, per comment, rather than only reporting the video. ## Impersonation has its own separate report flow If someone is pretending to be you, that is not the same as reporting a single offensive video, and it uses a different path. TikTok provides a separate impersonation report flow: go to the impersonating profile, tap the three dots (top right), tap Report, then Report account, then select the impersonation reason ("Pretending to be someone"). There is also a web impersonation form that can require a real ID and lets you list multiple fake accounts in one report. TikTok's policy bans impersonation: it "does not allow accounts that impersonate individuals or organizations in a misleading or malicious way," while permitting clearly labeled fan or parody accounts that do not confuse users. Other platforms have their own impersonation report forms too (for example, X's impersonation reporting is filed by the impersonated person or an authorized representative). ## Do not use mass-reporting tools or organize a brigade It is tempting to rally friends or use a third-party "mass report" tool or bot to pile reports onto an impersonator. It does not work, and it can backfire. TikTok's own position is explicit: "Mass reporting content or accounts does not lead to an automatic removal or to a greater likelihood of removal" by its Safety team. Removal turns on whether the content actually violates the Community Guidelines, reviewed by human moderators, not on how many reports it receives. Mass-reporting tools violate platform policy and are the wrong move. Use the legitimate per-item report, the separate impersonation report, or the law-enforcement and court routes instead. General legal information, not legal advice.
Official sources
tiktok.com ↗tiktok.com ↗tiktok.com ↗support.tiktok.com ↗support.tiktok.com ↗support.tiktok.com ↗tiktok.com ↗newsroom.tiktok.com ↗meta.com ↗help.x.com ↗help.x.com ↗safety.twitch.tv ↗help.snapchat.com ↗
When the harasser is in another country: how cross-border police work moves

If the person harassing you lives in a different country, the case has to move between police forces. Understanding how that works tells you what to ask for and why your role is to keep your officer supplied with what they need. ## You cannot self-start INTERPOL or an MLAT, only police can INTERPOL is the world's largest police organization, with 196 member countries. But it works through each country's National Central Bureau (NCB), and the public cannot report to it directly. INTERPOL's own NCB page states: "INTERPOL NCBs do not respond to requests from the general public. Anyone wishing to report a crime or provide information on an international investigation should contact their local or national police, who will in turn contact the NCB." The US side says the same: private citizens report crimes through their local police or law-enforcement agency, which may then contact INTERPOL Washington if international assistance is required. The same is true of formal evidence requests between countries. A Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty (MLAT) request can only be made by government authorities (prosecutors, investigating judges, criminal investigators) and must be transmitted through a country's legally designated Central Authority. "All requests made pursuant to MLATs must be submitted through the Central Authority," and MLATs "are not available for use by private parties." A victim cannot file an MLAT request, only the investigating officer or prosecutor can. So your leverage is the explicit ask. You cannot trigger INTERPOL or an MLAT yourself; you trigger them by getting your investigating officer to make the request. ## The FBI's overseas offices (Legats) coordinate, they do not police The FBI runs legal attache (Legat) offices in "dozens of locations" around the globe, "providing coverage for more than 180 countries, territories, and islands," with about 250 special agents and support personnel stationed abroad. Legats sit in US embassies and cover the countries most relevant here, including London (covering the UK, Ireland, and the Channel Islands), Ottawa (Canada), Mexico City, Canberra (Australia), and Wellington (New Zealand). The FBI opened a standalone Legat office in Wellington on 31 July 2025; it had been a suboffice of the Canberra Legat since 2017. Crucially, Legats have no law-enforcement powers overseas. "Since FBI agents do not have traditional law enforcement powers overseas, they must rely on strong, mutually beneficial relationships with their foreign counterparts." The FBI "conducts investigations abroad only when invited by the host country. In most cases, our international partners gather evidence and make arrests on behalf of, or in close cooperation with, the Bureau." Legat duties include coordinating requests for assistance and coordinating victim assistance. They are a coordination channel, not a force that swoops in. ## The US entry points: a local field office and IC3 For a US-connected victim, the practical entry points are your local FBI field office and the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) at ic3.gov. IC3 itself does not investigate; "trained analysts at the IC3 review and research the complaints, disseminating information to law enforcement and partner agencies, as appropriate," and "investigation and prosecution are at the discretion of the receiving agencies." IC3 explicitly accepts cross-border reports, including from "citizens of another country or who may be reporting a subject in another country." For an ongoing crime or a threat to life, contact your local field office or call 911. ## Formal evidence channels differ by country Bilateral MLATs with the United States are in force for the UK (entry into force 2 December 1996), Canada (24 January 1990), Mexico (3 May 1991), and Australia (30 September 1999), but not for New Zealand. US to New Zealand formal assistance runs instead through multilateral conventions and non-treaty letters rogatory and comity. For multilateral cooperation, the Council of Europe Budapest Convention on Cybercrime provides a standing framework for cross-border preservation and exchange of electronic evidence, including a 24/7 contact-point network. Among the countries here, the US, UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand are parties. New Zealand became the 81st party (acceded 28 August 2025; in force for New Zealand 1 December 2025), so the multilateral channel is available US to New Zealand even though no bilateral US to New Zealand MLAT exists. Mexico is not a party to the Budapest Convention; for a Mexico-based perpetrator the correct formal evidence channel is the US to Mexico bilateral MLAT, not the Budapest Convention. ## The realistic playbook Putting the verified mechanics together: - Report at home and in the perpetrator's country. Each country's police are the ones who can open the NCB or MLAT channel on their end, and IC3 explicitly accepts reports about a subject in another country.

  • Keep and cross-reference every reference and complaint number. Cross-referencing lets each force link to the parallel case so a Legat or NCB can match them.
  • Explicitly ask each investigating officer to pursue international coordination, through the NCB/INTERPOL channel, an MLAT via the Central Authority, and/or the in-country FBI Legat. You cannot self-initiate these; only the officers can. This consolidated playbook is a reasoned synthesis; each underlying mechanism is individually verified from FBI, DOJ, INTERPOL, and IC3 sources, though no single official page states the four-part script verbatim. General legal information, not legal advice.
Official sources
interpol.int ↗interpol.int ↗justice.gov ↗justice.gov ↗fbi.gov ↗fbi.gov ↗fbi.gov ↗ic3.gov ↗justice.gov ↗coe.int ↗