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Can People Still Report You If You Turn To Anonymous

Can I anonymously report a Hoarder?

Yes you can. You can call your city's health department, adult protective services (if they're older than 65), and housing inspectors who can declare the house uninhabitable if they see it fit.

This is a huge deal and it is often cuased by underlying mental health issues. They can only do bare minimum until the inspectors kick them out and people have lost houses they've purchased because the structure became unsafe due to hoarding.

I had a friend who's dad was a hoarder and this was years and years before this topic became popular and shows started popping up on tv about the subject. The city inspectors were always at their front door telling him to do this and that. His hoarding became 100x worse after his son was murdered. So like I said it's an underlying mental health issue that causes people to collect cars, glass window panes, metal rods, plank wood flooring, and etc. Those are the things he collected in mass quantity and he's never had a job. He stores it all in their backyard now, but he's always getting anonymously reported. He was even sued because he was storing his junk at a friends house (hoarding it there) and he wouldn't remove the junk off the man's property. Craziness and this disease caused so much tension (probably still is) in my friend's household.

There might be an option if your workplace offers it (you did not mention that this is even a possibility), yet if you expect to remain anonymous for everyone within your company, I have some bad news for you:any documents/evidence you present will be logged with your name attached to ityour name will be known to the internal teams (those persons in question might be friends with them)you might be asked to attend meetings with those persons present - will you be able to do it?if this is as bad as you have mentioned, and we could be looking at administrative action, and potentially legal action - will you have enough stamina in you to see this process to the very end?When you see HR department, question is - who is compensating them? And the answer is - the company. The company employs them, the company pays them. HR then serves as a link between employees and the company, yet HR does not work for you or on your behalf.If the point is serious enough to constitute a hostile workplace, retain an attorney and make some money. Staying in this environment will not be good for you anyway.It is highly unlikely that these persons are bad enough to poison the whole place, yet they are still there - you need to ask why they are still there. The only uncomfortable answer is that they are either friends with the management or the management protects them - so if management is facing a choice of either you or them, you might not win.

You can report violations of U.S. federal law or submit information in a criminal or terrorism investigation as follows:Use our online Tips and Public Leads form;Contact your local FBI field office or closest international office;To report suspicious activity involving chemical, biological, or radiological materials, call (toll-free): 855-TELL-FBI or 855-835-5324.Report an online scam or e-mail hoax by filing a complaint online with our Internet Crime Complaint Center or by using our online Tips and Public Leads form;To provide information on select major cases, call our Major Case Contact Center at 1-800-CALL-FBI (225-5324)[1]You can use the tip form anonymously; you don’t have to fill in any identifying information, and you can access the site using Tor or other anonymous proxies. Make sure you also use Private Browsing or Incognito Mode when you fill in the form. As I mentioned, you don’t have to provide any contact details if you don’t want to.Of course, you can provide anonymous information using your telephone, assuming you’re calling from a burner phone or from a pay phone (if you can find one).Footnotes[1] Contact Us

While wearing rubber gloves and your hazmat suit, write the report on paper you’ve never touched with bare skin. Then tie your report to a brick and throw it through a police station window, or the side window of a patrol car, then run away very fast (in both cases, run very fast, and wear a mask and a hoodie).If you’d like a less exciting ways to get them your report:Send them a letter with no return address.Buy a burner phone[1] and call the report in.Call the “We Tip”[2] line if the locals have one.Go to a public library:[3]Send them an e-mail from a fictitious account.Send them a fax from a library public PC.Hire an attorney[4] to represent you and make your report. If the special prosecutor and FBI aren’t interested in someone else your attorney represents, you are probably safe.Call your local newspaper and see if they want to buy the story instead, and they can tell the police. You might even get to be a “Deep Throat”[5]Remember, if your safety or life will be in danger, don’t trust the police 100% to keep your identity secret. Police departments are staffed by humans and mistakes happen. You have to decide how much risk you are willing to take.Always remember Justices Rule Police Do Not Have a Constitutional Duty to Protect Someone. Here is that case that decided that: TOWN OF CASTLE ROCK, COLORADO v. GONZALES, INDIVIDUALLY AND A NEXT BEST FRIEND OF HER DECEASED MINOR CHILDREN, GONZALES ET AL. [6] Please note “HER DECEASED MINOR CHILDREN.”Have fun storming the castle.Ciao.Footnotes[1] Why you might want to own a 'burner phone'[2] WeTip Anonymous Crime Reporting Hotline - Information - Enforcement[3] Library Privacy Guidelines for Public Access Computers and Networks[4] The Crime-Fraud Exception to the Attorney-Client Privilege[5] Deep Throat (Watergate) - Wikipedia[6] https://www.law.cornell.edu/supc...

Is there an anonymous line to report a car for repossession?

That is terrible. You must name the Police, and if you're inclined to press expenses on him, accomplish that. If you desire to make use of one more method, file him as a "Missing Person". In the intervening time, get the ones playing cards and financial institution account so as. Also, I'd difference the locks on my door, and seem right into a Lawyer. I am sorry to mention this, however, this could flip me away within the Faith of my marriage. I am so sorry to listen to approximately this. Those bank cards have got to be removed, or said as stolen. Get a hint at the Credit Card Usage earlier than getting rid of this, too. Since this Bank Account is joint, you could have each correct to look in which any tests are being written, additionally. I'd begin a brand new Bank Account with most effective your title on it, too. Good success & Take Care!

Can you anonymously report an individual for tax fraud?

Yes, please do! In MA there is a number 1800-I-PAY-TAX for reporting people on things like sales tax, employee withholding tax, excise tax etc. Maybe your state has something similar. The IRS also welcomes anonymous reports of tax cheats, as well they should, and have a special criminal section of IRS-CI Special Agents that works with the US Attorney's Office to get indictments.

You do NOT need to give them any SSN of the suspect, especially if that is the basis of the fraud that they don't even have one, which is a separate criminal offense (in addition to not filing returns or not paying taxes or not keeping the required records for audit, etc). Administrative fines are up to $100,000 per year in which the person failed to file a necessary return or pay taxes. Not sure of the specific criminal penalties on top of that, but people definitely go to prison for non-payment of taxes (e.g., Al Capone was sentenced to 11 years for tax evasion in 1932).

You can download and file IRS Form 3949-A, or phone Toll-Free, 1-800-829-1040, or your local IRS office, to discuss the problem with an IRS employee. The more people like you doing the right thing, the less people like those will get away with their federal crimes. Thank you!

Depends on the jurisdiction and the whims of the District Attorney’s office.The best option is for you to call the police and report a suspicious baggie, looks like drugs, give an exact location. You may stick around and give a statement (though if you’re in a “stop and ID” state the cop can request ID and it is unlawful to refuse), or you can, after having made the report anonymously, walk away. Having made no contact with the drugs at any time, even if you end up on video, it would be extremely difficult for U.S. police to implicate you in any crime.Another option would be a “drop box”. There are various programs in major cities that allow the surrender of items which may be dangerous and/or illegal to possess, with no questions asked. These could be at police stations, but also hospitals, fire stations etc. This option gets it “off the street” faster, but also has you in the possession of this item for a nonzero time between picking it up and finding a place to get rid of it.The very last option to consider is bringing it to the front desk of the police department yourself. Understand that you are in possession of these probably drugs; if they turn out to be drugs, you are technically guilty of simple possession, and I would not put it past some departments to arrest and charge you as a stat-booster; another drug bust in the books. Knowing what some totally law-abiding people have gone through trying to “do the right thing” regarding contraband or dangerous items, I would be more likely to leave the baggie alone on the street than to touch it in any way. It is unfortunate, but that’s simply the country we live in; convictions are more important than actual justice.

Can I Turn Someone In For Probation Violations, Anonymously?

You can report it to the person's probation officer. Whether or not it does any good to do so anonymously will depend upon the nature of the violation, whether or not the violation can be proven without your testimony, what he's on probation for, the laws/procedures of the jurisdiction and individual Probation department, how credible your information is, the individual officer's discretion, and many other factors.

Will my report to Facebook re: a sex offender stay anonymous?

It was brought to my attention earlier this year that the father of my daughter's pre-school classmate was a registered sex offender. I verified the information with the Sheriff's office, and found out that he had two recent (within the last 10 years) convictions of "rape under 13 years old" and "rape", as well as other charges (either dismissed or pleaded down) of "importuning", and "matter harmful to juvenile".

I called the sheriff's office, and was told that he had no restrictions on where he could be, because he was released from parole.

I found him on Facebook (he's the brother of my high school classmate, it turns out), and submitted a report to Facebook. I believe that he has no business being on Facebook due to what he was both convicted of, and what he was accused of doing.

I submitted the report probably 2 weeks ago; I just tried to find him, and he's gone. I assume this means that Facebook took action and deleted his profile. I can't find a phone number to call to confirm with Facebook that the report will remain anonymous, and that he won't know it was me who reported him.

I do not want him to approach me at our daughters' pre-school confronting me, which is my fear if Facebook has advised him of who reported him.

Does anyone know if my name will be provided to him?

Thank you!

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