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Cop Tried To Shame Him For Not Calling 911, So He Started Calling Every Time A Kid Screamed

by Layla Bui
October 28, 2025
in Social Issues

A neighborhood full of kids screaming like extras in a horror film had already tested his patience but a self-righteous cop’s lecture finally broke it. After being scolded for not calling the police about every noise, he decided to do exactly that.

Every shriek, shout, and playground tantrum earned a fresh 911 call, all dutifully logged under the missing-child case. And when that got too much for dispatch, he began calling the officer directly. Day or night, she got the screams she asked for.

A man, shamed by a cop for ignoring kids’ screams in his noisy neighborhood, complies by reporting every scream, overwhelming her with calls

Cop Tried To Shame Him For Not Calling 911, So He Started Calling Every Time A Kid Screamed
not the actual photo

'Cop tries to shame me, I complied with the shame?'

Note: The story is sad and I have sympathy for the victims but I don't feel like a bad guy. Two layers of compliance.

Years ago I lived in a very Hispanic neighborhood (vaguely relevant information) with a lot of young children.

They were very loud and screamed constantly during all hours of the day and night.

Not just giggle playing screams but blood curdling horror screams. All. The. Time.

One day I get a knock at my door and see two blue shirt police officers; white guy and Hispanic woman.

They ask me if I've seen anything strange, creepers, uncomfortable situations, etc.

Things have been pretty normal and say as much.

They proceed to tell me that a little girl is missing and if I had heard a scream or struggle.

I let them know that the children scream everyday and constantly, so I wouldn't have paid attention to any particular scream.

That's when the Hispanic officer lost it.

She got IN my face about r__ist white males ignoring the p__ght of Hispanics,

not caring about the neighborhood and community and for not calling the police when I heard a child scream.

So I agreed to dial 911 at every child scream from that point on.

Within three days I had to called 911 at least 15 times.

Each time I explained it was relevant to case #XXXX with officer (Hispanic lady) that I should report a child screaming in the neighborhood.

Eventually I got a call from a superior officer about abusing 911.

I agreed and was told to contact the Hispanic officer directly with any other information regarding the investigation.

Malicious compliance level II. Now I was authorized to call the Hispanic officer directly, day or night, when I had information regarding the investigation.

And I did. Every scream, she got a phone call. 2 in the morning and kids are screaming?

Guess who else gets to wake up?! Morning officer Hispanic lady!

She tries to get me in trouble for harassing her, but I had a nice trail of documentation with 911

and her own supervisor to always keep her informed of screaming children.

To help everyone feel a little better, the little girl was kidnapped by her uncle and found safely in another state.

Some edits to help. I didn't read 800+ comments, but I'll try to give some more information overall.

-MC level I ended after the first weekend and MC level II ended by the second week.

-More than once (witness car accidents, questions about domestic violence) I've been given direct contact information by officers.

Though in this case, I was given the business contact by the other officer.

-The white male partner during the initial encounter did nothing. I could only tell he was alive because he blinked. He was a non issue.

-I probably was too casual about dismissing children screaming, but it was the officer

who decided I was ignoring 911-worthy phone call situations. Quit your bitching.

-Duh, it's malicious compliance so someone will call it fake.

I'm not telling a boring everyday story but a once in a lifetime one off. That's the interesting part.

Edit #2 and hopefully last addition.

This was as much a CYA(cover your ass) as it was Malicious Compliance.

I wanted to make sure everyone knew I wasn't indifferent to my neighbors or trouble in the neighborhood.

There is a thin line between cooperating with authority and being manoeuvred into performing tasks that belong to someone else’s responsibility.

In this case, the OP lives in a lively Hispanic-rich neighbourhood where children regularly scream for large portions of the day.

When officers knocked and asked if he had heard anything unusual, one of them shifted the conversation from “missing child” to “why haven’t you reported these children’s screams?” She pressed the OP for racial assumptions, accusing him of being a “‘racist white male ignoring the plight of the Hispanic community’.”

The OP complied: he agreed to call 911 for every scream and ended up doing so 15 times in three days.

Afterwards he was flagged for “abusing 911” and was redirected to call the same Hispanic officer directly, day or night, for any future scream-reports.

He proceeded to call her at 2 a.m. for screaming children, documenting each call as instructed. In effect, he was used as a proxy complaint service for hours of child noise and given direct contact with the officer.

From the OP’s perspective, the policeman’s face-to-face confrontation felt like a form of shaming and coercion; he had done nothing wrong but was made to feel guilty and responsible for something outside his control.

He interpreted compliance as protecting his own record (so he wouldn’t be later accused of ignoring a missing child) while navigating a boundary-shift: he went from “normal citizen” to “night-time reporting agent.”

For the officer, the urgency of finding a missing child may have justified broadening community responsibility, but turning casual screams into formal 911 calls shifts workload, dilutes actual emergency resources, and undermines trust.

Broader research shows that when citizens are pressured into taking on official-level burdens, especially in neighbourhood policing settings, it can undermine public cooperation.

According to the American Psychological Association, communities that feel “responsibilised” without structural support experience increased stress and fewer positive engagement outcomes.

In neighbourhood policing literature, the concept of “voluntary surveillance” describes how residents become unpaid extensions of law enforcement, often to their own detriment.

What should the OP consider doing now?

  1. Revisit his documentation of 911 calls and note the original instruction. He should contact the police department’s non-emergency or community liaison line to clarify his expectations and ask whether continuing to call for every scream is required or recommended.
  2. Set clear boundaries: document when calls are his choice versus when they’re being demanded.
  3. Shift the ­resolution upstream: speak with building management or local authority about the persistent screaming children, rather than becoming the reporting conduit.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

These Redditors shared similar frustrations about nonstop child screaming in neighborhoods

aloneindankness − Honestly, I feel this so hard. The kids in my area SCREAM all the time. It wakes me up constantly.

And the mother's only communicate by screaming. One woman started screaming at her kids at seven am.

Not yelling, SCREAMING. So loud and incoherent that I woke up mid panic. When I asked her to stop yelling, she went off on me.

It's f__king ridiculous, honestly. Like other people live here! And when I ask her to be quieter, she gets mad at me,

because I am scaring her kids. Not her, though. She would never scare them. /s

Mylovekills − That screaming drives me crazy! There's one family on my street that lets their kids scream like someone's getting murdered.

It's not extremely often, but every time I hear it, first I have to stop

whatever I'm doing and really listen for context, then every time after I question if this is "the one time..."

The parents have been spoken to, very respectfully, and they won't make it stop.

walkthroughthefire − Reminds me of a family member who accused me of being r__ist

because I said I can't stand the little shits who live in my townhouse complex

and I wish we lived on the other side of the parking lot because the kids there are so much more well-behaved.

There is one family with kids on the other side who happen to be white and three on our side--one white family, one black,

and one mixed white/Middle Eastern-so I guess she thought I was just hating on these kids because 2/3 of them are non-white and Muslim.

Then she spent a day at my house and got to listen to them scream bloody m__der all day

and watch them leave their toys and dirty laundry on my lawn, and punch each other in the face

while their parents argued about whose fault it was that one of the kids came home with a bloody nose.

Meanwhile, the girls on the other side of the parking lot were selling lemonade with their dad. She took it back after that.

 

[Reddit User] − this is why parents need to teach their kids not to scream.

Boy who cried wolf is a very real phenomenon that happens all the time which could be avoided

if kids didn't f**kin scream bloody m__der everytime they are out playing. source: damn neighborhood kids always being loud as f__k

OldTimer85_2 − Way back when my sisters and I were kids my younger sister LOVED to do that if my older sister or I teased her and make her mad.

She would stand still raise her face to the ceiling and let out a blood curdling scream like she was auditioning for a slasher film.

This did not amuse our parents who always told us to leave her alone.

One day, I was standing in the street in front of my house with another neighbor girl and I guess her mother when we heard "The Scream".

The lady pales and looks horrified she's all "Omg! What's going on in there!?"

I just laugh and said "Oh my sister always screams like that when she gets mad at us"

Not many days later we get a visit from the cops. All three of us were spoken to separately and then the police went on their merry way.

The Scream was never heard again.

Commenters praised OP’s boldness for outsmarting the officer with creative, lawful compliance

refurb − Brass balls you have! Malicious compliance with cops = 10/10 difficulty level

GuyForgotHisPassword − Hilarious and entirely appropriate, you were just doing what the officer wanted you to.

F__k her for instantly making things about race when it had nothing to do with it in the first place.

Sad thing is she probably uses this "harassment" story to further her rants about white people, furthering racism instead of helping the cause.

Superspudmonkey − So did the parents of the screaming children get spoken to for all the screaming noises?

While reporting the screaming you also should have officially complained about the noise if the screaming was investigated and it was not an emergency?

This group empathized with both sides, sharing real experiences and asking for more details

crimsonkodiak − LOL. A couple weeks back I was woken up by my buzzer going off a little after midnight. I stumbled out of bed.

I didn't really want to buzz in whoever was hitting the buzzer at midnight, as I wasn't expecting anyone.

I walked out onto the balcony and see the security door propped open.

There are a couple women sitting outside on the building next door who tell me that a couple police officers just went into the building.

I walked out into the hallway to meet them, where they are standing, talking to my neighbor.

They tell us that they got a call because someone heard a woman scream and then a pounding sound and they wanted to check it out.

Neither my neighbor nor I have any women in our places, so we're confused.

It's at this point that neighbor's 15 year old son comes and gingerly confesses that he saw a spider, screamed and threw a shoe at it.

Tymanthius − I understand teh cop was stressed, but I'm glad she got that, rather than an official reprimand. How long did that go on?

Sometimes, the best revenge is professionalism taken too far. What started as a cop’s moral lecture ended in lesson reversal, proving that blind accusations can backfire spectacularly. The man didn’t fight back with anger, he fought back with precision, turning every scream into accountability.

Would you have done the same, or tried to talk it out instead? Is compliance still moral when it’s used as satire? The comment section’s open, what’s your verdict on this midnight justice?

Layla Bui

Layla Bui

Hi, I’m Layla Bui. I’m a lifestyle and culture writer for Daily Highlight. Living in Los Angeles gives me endless energy and stories to share. I believe words have the power to question the world around us. Through my writing, I explore themes of wellness, belonging, and social pressure, the quiet struggles that shape so many of our lives.

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