Some little teenage sh*ts are roaming the streets tonight, ringing doorbells and when you open your door they start shouting intimidating verbal abuse at you as well as throw multiple snowballs at you! (okay so the last bit is a little amusing - I got covered in snow smack in the face).
But seriously, there is a gang of them, and it was a little intimidating. More concerned for folk living on their own as well as elderly neighbours. Use your peep holes if you have them and warn less able neighbours to not open doors in the evening unless they are expecting someone.
And if you suspect its your kids - well! teach them some manners.
Don’t know whether there is any connection with what I experienced on Perry Vale Thursday week ago around 7pm.I was about to get out of a mini cab when a male schoolboy or young teenager opened the door on my side peered in at me at close range, stood uncomfortably close to me, and made faces and gestures that frightened me. He was with at least two other males, possibly his age, and possibly more companions.
When the cab driver remonstrated with him, he indicated, by pointing emphatically at me, that it was not the cab driver that he had an issue with, but me.
One of several witnesses said they were only “kids playing games”. However, being partially immobile and in my mid seventies, I was very shaken. The incident also left me feeling very vulnerable and nervous of being in that vicinity again.
If they were in a group, is it safe to assume his mother \ parents have got him to identify his ‘friends’ so they can all be spoken to. As you know more than me, the fear of crime, as @topofthehill notes, is very real and completely unacceptable.
Is there anything else we as a community or individuals can do to combat what I guess is perceived low level anti social behaviour, but which has significant impacts on people’s day to day lives?