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She Tried To Catch The Mystery Trespasser, Then Accidentally Exposed His Private Struggle To The Whole Neighborhood

by Katy Nguyen
October 29, 2025
in Social Issues

Neighborhood peace can be fragile; one unexpected incident, and suddenly everyone’s talking. What starts as a simple property issue can quickly spiral into a situation that tests both empathy and judgment.

That’s what happened when one homeowner discovered a stranger repeatedly urinating near their shed.

Hoping to identify the culprit, they set up cameras, but the footage they captured, and what they did next, ended up exposing far more than anyone expected.

Now, the community is split between outrage, sympathy, and questions about how far accountability should go.

She Tried To Catch The Mystery Trespasser, Then Accidentally Exposed His Private Struggle To The Whole Neighborhood
Not the actual photo

'AITA for publicly exposing this guy who urinates on my property, also exposing the fact that he's transgender(?)?'

I just moved into the neighborhood last year into a large-ish property, maybe a little less than an acre.

There's a grove of trees nearby and a shed that the previous owners had, which we now have and use.

In the autumn, I started noticing a urine smell near the shed when I went there.

I thought that someone's dog might've started getting loose and peeing there, so I set up some hidden security cameras nearby (1 party consent state) to catch the culprit.

Well, it just so happens that the next day that I caught the person in the act, it was the college kid from down the street whose family just moved...

He ran off before I could catch him, but I had the security footage.

I was furious and immediately clipped the part of the footage where he comes into view without actually examining what was happening.

I wasn't really thinking straight, so I uploaded the short clip to Gmail and sent the video to our neighborhood HOA admins...

Except I accidentally typed in the wrong mailing list and instead sent it to the community with the complaint.

Now everyone has seen the video, and they can see him crouching (there are no genitals, I reviewed the footage later) to pee, and then see me chasing him off...

His parents are furious with me and demanded a public apology and monetary compensation for "exposing his delicate situation to the world".

He responded with an essay about the marginalization of trans people in the thread in the meantime.

So now I feel like I could've possibly ruined his life in the short term.

Other people in the community definitely seem to give the family a wide berth in the afternoon when I'm walking my dog.

On the other hand, I haven't seen him on my property since.

This story leaps past a simple case of property nuisance into a tangled web of surveillance, public shaming, gender suspicion and community fallout.

On one side, the poster discovered someone trespassing and urinating on their property and felt compelled to catch and expose the behaviour, a reasonable impulse to protect one’s space.

On the other side, the decision to broadcast the footage and hint at the person being transgender escalated the matter into public humiliation, complicating rightful grievance with moral hazard.

Legally, you’re generally allowed to record video on your own property if there’s no expectation of privacy for the subject. For example, expert commentary from Nolo explains that video recording can be acceptable when aimed at one’s own property from that property.

Still, the publication of footage and implication of identity (transgender status) carries social risks, there’s no uniform law for broadcasting a neighbour’s mis-conduct but ethical questions loom large.

Etiquette scholar Daniel Post Senning, co-leader of the Emily Post Institute, reminds us that the heart of good manners is making others feel comfortable and at ease, not merely exposing wrongdoing.

His perspective applies here: while the property really is yours and you were entitled to act, the style of exposure strained the principle of respect and turned neighbour conflict into spectacle.

A constructive path would involve backing up the factual wrongdoing (unauthorised urination on private property) and addressing it through appropriate channels

Sending a respectful notice to the neighbour, involving the local homeowners’ association or law-enforcement if needed, and keeping identification of any suspected gender status out of the public discourse.

The footage could be privately shared with the relevant authority instead of posting broadly.

Moving forward, the focus might shift to prevention (locks, cameras with signage, secure boundaries) rather than public shaming, and to rebuilding neighbor relations rather than relying on community outrage.

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

These commenters firmly sided with OP, emphasizing that the kid’s gender identity had nothing to do with the issue.

[Reddit User] − NTA. Don’t trespass on private property and use it as your bathroom!

The kid is not an animal marking its territory; it’s a person who can go to their own house and use the bathroom.

[Reddit User] − You don’t want people seeing how you pee, so don’t pee in public on someone else’s property.

It sucks, but this person creates their own mess. You just wanted to know who was peeing on your property. NTA.

rez2metrogirl − NTA. Trans or not, public urination is a crime in most towns and cities.

Send it to the police and file charges. Post a public apology to the community, explaining it was intended for the HOA.

Don’t directly interact with the kid or the parents. Just don’t. It’ll probably only get uglier if you do.

naranghim − NTA. You accidentally sent the video to the community, but this kid was trespassing on your property.

He's the one who outed himself as trans, not you. Your state probably has a "public urination" law that also includes peeing on private property.

I'd look that up and send it to his parents, informing them that you are planning on turning the video over to the police since neither they nor their child...

SassyBSN − I mean, even if he wasn't trans, why on earth would he be peeing in someone's yard? That's really odd behavior for anyone.

You didn't set out to out him as trans; all you wanted to do was stop someone from peeing on your property.

Kind of a minor AH for the email mistake, but overall NTA on this.

GrayManGroup − NTA. His being transgender doesn't excuse or have anything to them pissing on your property.

If a person doesn't want to be "outed" as transgender then exposing themself in public should be at the top of "s__t not to do" list.

This group focused on the privacy and logic angle, noting that anyone exposing themselves in public forfeits the right to total privacy.

StreamOfTyrosine − NTA. Email mistakes happen. The email mistake is definitely your fault, but it doesn't make you TA.

You wouldn't be in the position to send the email without him coming on your private property to p__s.

If what genitals you carry is a particularly secretive subject, then it's probably best not to pee outside in public or on private property, especially in a one-party consent state.

I doubt his secret would've remained secret if only been sent to the HOA. People in general are AHs, and one of them could easily out him.

His family would probably come after you for the same that.

ETA: him crouching to pee, no genitals shown, doesn't put him as anything other than someone who squats to pee.

I'm AFAB enby and often use a SheWee (and so do plenty of cis-women). Plenty of cis-men squat or sit to pee. For all you knew, he was going to...

PrivetKalashnikov − NTA, you didn't do it intentionally. Also, if you're worried about the public seeing your d__k you shouldn't pull it out on someone else's property.

Edit: I'm sure the person being trans will cause them considerably less grief than being the person peeing on other people's property.

bacon--wizard − NTA. Your private property is not someone else's personal bathroom.

Many people have all sorts of video monitoring systems on their property, so there's no expectation of privacy for them here either.

These Redditors criticized OP’s handling of the video, saying the accidental community-wide email was careless and invasive, regardless of intent.

Ipskies − EDIT 2: Wow some people are really riled up about my very-radical "it's not cool to publicly send people's p__s tapes" opinion. Lots of arguments down below, beware.

EDIT: NTA. You should truly work on your email skills, though. Sending it to the neighborhood was kind of a d__k move.

Original comment: INFO: Where does the trans-ness come into play?

Why does this person feel like being denied the ability to p__s in bushes is transphobia?

You certainly don't seem like an a__hole, but this story feels like it's missing a lot.

Billy_SHPOS − "I wasn't really thinking straight, so I uploaded the short clip to Gmail and sent the video to our neighborhood HOA admins...Except I accidentally typed in the wrong...

ESH, while what this person was doing is f__king gross, so is emailing a candid video of someone urinating to ANYONE.

If you had said, "Hey, caught this dude pissing on my property, I have evidence if you need" that would be one thing, but you "not thinking straight" effed that...

His parents should be furious. it's ridiculous that they want anything from you (like I said, they're kid's an a__hole too), but fact is you emailed a video of someone...

That's f__ked up.

Rivka333 − ESH. Obviously, he shouldn't have been doing that, but that wasn't the right way to deal with it, even without the email address mix-up.

You didn't even check til afterwards to make sure genitals weren't showing.

Anyway, even though the email list was by accident, it is still something horrific that you did and that you need to apologize for.

This smaller cluster leaned toward empathy and resolution.

[Reddit User] − INFO: Did you find out why he was pissing on your property? It seems like a genuine mistake.

You didn’t mean to out him and made a clerical error on who you were sending the video to. I’m gonna go with NTA.

ghostcraft33 − NTA. This one I really had to take a moment to think about.

It's obvious here that the mother and the child are TA, but I've come to the conclusion that I cannot call you also TA since you accidentally sent the video...

Had you done it on purpose, I would've said ESH.

I feel that the mom more outed her child than your video did; HOWEVER, we don't have the context of the video to see exactly how obvious it was.

I think you should apologize for sending it to the wrong chat, but make it EXTREMELY CLEAR that although you are sorry for that part, you still expect the mother...

No matter what gender or age, you shouldn't be pissing in somewhere that isn't a bathroom (or a bush/forest, etc, for emergencies, which this clearly wasn't).

Peeing somewhere consistently when you don't necessarily need to is just... Gross.

I understand this kid may be going through a lot and may be having some issues that may have produced this behavior, but that doesn't mean people should let it...

If it really is his issues producing this behavior, the parent should get the kid a therapist.

goodrevtim − Easy reply: ​ "This isn't about you being trans, it's about you pissing in my yard like a dog."

A moment of justified anger turned into an accidental public scandal, and now the OP’s neighborhood feels like a tense courtroom. What started as a boundary issue spiraled into a moral mess about privacy, accountability, and respect.

Should the OP owe a public apology for a genuine mistake, or does the neighbor bear full responsibility for trespassing in the first place? Let’s hear your take, who really crossed the line here?

Katy Nguyen

Katy Nguyen

Hey there! I’m Katy Nguyễn, a writer at Dailyhighlight.com. I’m a woman in my 30s with a passion for storytelling and a degree in Journalism. My goal is to craft engaging, heartfelt articles that resonate with our readers, whether I’m diving into the latest lifestyle trends, exploring travel adventures, or sharing tips on personal growth. I’ve written about everything from cozy coffee shop vibes to navigating career changes with confidence. When I’m not typing away, you’ll likely find me sipping a matcha latte, strolling through local markets, or curled up with a good book under fairy lights. I love sunrises, yoga, and chasing moments of inspiration.

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