Step-by-step, source-backed guidance: where to file, the exact offences to name, and how to escalate until your case is assigned.
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.
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 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.
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.
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.
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.
File here in addition to, not instead of, your local police report.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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 ↗You are entitled to be heard. Work up this ladder until your case is assigned.