Sometimes the only way to get justice is to get creative. One Redditor shared how months of police calls over a dangerously parked van led nowhere until he flipped the script. Instead of waiting for the authorities to act, he made the van’s owner call them on himself.
And the secret weapon? A jar of jam. What unfolded was a sticky, petty revenge that finally got the police to pay attention and gave the entire internet a laugh.
A man smeared jam on a badly parked van’s handle, prompting the owner to call police, who told him to move it






The OP’s problem is clear: a van parked illegally in every conceivable way, blocking driveways, footpaths, sight lines, even emergency access. After multiple ignored calls to the police, OP tried a sweeter tactic, literally. A smear of jam on the driver’s handle turned an apathetic situation into one where the van owner himself summoned the police. Ironically, it wasn’t safety violations or public obstruction that got attention, but sticky fingers.
From OP’s perspective, this was creative problem-solving. The law wasn’t working, so he engineered a scenario where the offender became his own snitch. From the driver’s perspective, the police call was about vandalism, not realizing that his bigger violation, the chronic illegal parking, would be the real issue the officers addressed.
Satirically, this highlights the bizarre priorities of enforcement. Dangerous parking? Shrug. Jam on a handle? Immediate response. It echoes a wider frustration: many citizens feel everyday nuisances (noise, parking, littering) fall into a “too small to bother” category for authorities, even when they cause real risks. Yet symbolic or cosmetic acts of defiance (graffiti, sticky residue) often bring faster action.
A 2019 UK government report on antisocial behavior noted that nearly 50% of respondents felt police did not treat persistent low-level infractions as a priority. This disconnect fosters cynicism, encouraging people to improvise justice as OP did with a jar of jam.
Environmental psychologist Dr. Ian Taylor once remarked in The Guardian: “When authorities are seen to ignore small-scale but visible problems, residents feel powerless, and that’s when DIY enforcement takes root.” OP’s action fits this perfectly, jam was less about vandalism and more about reclaiming control in a powerless situation.
The neutral advice? OP should keep documenting the obstruction with photos, dates, and times, and escalate through local council or parking enforcement officers, who often have more bandwidth for these infractions than police. For the future, involving residents in collective complaints can also add weight.
Here’s what people had to say to OP:
Many commenters laughed at the “sweet” justice




Some suggested messier retaliation like dog turd or worse


These Redditors upped the ante with tire valves and glued locks









One jar of jam accomplished what weeks of police calls couldn’t: it got the van moved and highlighted how sometimes the simplest petty acts can be the most effective. Redditors cheered the creativity while trading their own revenge hacks, showing that even small gestures can restore a sense of justice.
Would you have gone as far as jam, or do you think it crossed the line into vandalism? And if the police ignored you, what creative trick would you try? Share your takes below.










