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Family Threatens to Call Police After Teen Slaps 8-Year-Old Nephew For Stealing Hundreds Of Dollars Of Pokemon Cards

by CTV7
November 7, 2025
in Social Issues

When an 18-year-old Pokémon fan returned home from work one afternoon, he looked forward to a quiet evening spent perfecting his tournament deck.

Instead, he encountered a situation that would bring chaos to his home. His prized collection, which included hundreds of cards worth actual money, had vanished.

Who was responsible for this? His eight-year-old nephew had not only taken the cards but also traded them at school.

Family Threatens to Call Police After Teen Slaps 8-Year-Old Nephew For Stealing Hundreds Of Dollars Of Pokemon Cards
Not the actual photo

In that moment, anger overshadowed reason. What ensued wasn’t simply a family quarrel

'AITA for smacking the s__t out of my 8-year-old nephew for stealing hundreds of dollars of my Pokemon cards and taking some of them to school and trading with them?'

Little bit of backstory: I really enjoy Pokémon and play competitively in tournaments and open a s__t ton of packs. Doing this means I have a very large collection of...

I still love at my parents house (I’m 18), and I keep them all on a shelf in my room. My nephew is 8, almost 9 and he and my...

Anyway, a few days ago I got home from work and was wanting to edit one of the decks I had built for the tournament later in the day.

I go to pick up a few deck boxes and a binder and found that one of my binders, and 3 of 9 deck boxes were missing. I immediately freak...

My nephew has a lot of behavioral issues and gets in a lot of trouble both at home and school. He also isn’t ever really disciplined because it would make...

So I go into his room to look for them. Lo and behold, there they are, scattered all over the floor, most of them taken out of sleeves, some bent,...

At this point I was beyond furious and all I could mutter was “ Oh my God” over and over. After I pick everything up that I could find, I...

He kept saying he didn’t do it and he didn’t steal them, that they were in his room when he woke up and he thought they were his (keep in...

Then he starts screaming bloody m__der and my nstep dad comes down and demands to know what’s going on. I couldn’t even get a word out before the child went...

My nstep dad coddles him and then gets in my face and threatens to beat me to death if I ever lay another finger on him.

After they question him for about an hour, he finally admits that he took them to school and was trading and giving them away with his classmates. His punishment: a...

He also said he hates me and wished I would just move out and die. My parents then berated me for a while and essentially told me that I’m a...

(mostly my nstep dad saying this, my mom understood what I did and didn’t make it a big deal). All in all I recovered most of the cards losing about...

So am I the a__hole in this situation? Was I overreacting by disciplining him because my parents don’t? I get that it’s not my place to do that, but I...

He goes back to school today and I have already contacted his teacher and explained the situation; thankfully, she’s going to confiscate every Pokémon card she finds and let me...

TLDR: nephew went in my room and stole approximately 250 valuable cards while I was working; I get home and find out and I smack the s__t out of him....

Edit: holy s__t my inbox. and to clear up a few things:. nStepdad means narcissistic stepdad which is a term from /r/raisedbynarcissists

I made this post looking for objective opinions, I personally think he deserved it but what I did was wrong and therefore I’m an a__hole.. We made it to front...

Edit 2: I had the intention of replying to most of the comments but that’s no longer reasonable.

The young man had spent years building his collection, sorting, sleeving, and competing with rare Pokémon cards.

But one afternoon, he noticed something off. A binder was gone, and three deck boxes too.

He tore through the room, only to find the missing cards strewn across his nephew’s floor. Sleeves bent, edges creased, a binder emptied.

His nephew (eight years old and living in the house because his own mother had abandoned him) denied everything. The boy claimed the cards “were there when he woke up.”

It wasn’t the first lie the family had heard from him. But he rarely faced discipline because, according to the adults, it only “made things worse.”

When the child kept lying, he slapped him. The boy screamed, and within seconds, the household erupted.

His stepfather stormed in, furious. Before the young man could explain, the child cried that his uncle was “trying to kill him.”

The stepfather threatened to “beat him to death” if he ever touched the boy again. Though the truth came out, the boy just got one night without TV.

Meanwhile, the OP was left accused of abuse, facing threats of being reported to the police, and with a heavy sense of injustice. In his words, “I get that it wasn’t my place, but it felt deserved.”

The OP faced abuse accusations and felt the slap was justified.

This situation involves theft by a troubled child, family tension, and a physical reaction.

According to Psychology Today, the 8-year-old’s repeated stealing likely stems from attention-seeking, poor impulse control, unstable home life, and not understanding ownership boundaries.

Besides, physical punishment is linked to worse outcomes.

The American Psychological Association highlights that corporal punishment is associated with increased aggression and other negative effects.

The AAP and the WHO similarly warn that hitting increases aggression, does not teach responsibility, and is tied to poorer developmental outcomes.

That said, the frustration here is real and understandable.

Valuable hobby collections carry both sentimental and financial stakes; losing $180 in damaged cards (and twenty physical cards) stings.

So experts suggest a twofold approach for situations like this:

  • immediate, non-violent containment (temporary removal of privileges, restitution, supervised return of items)
  • longer-term interventions (consistent boundaries, therapy, and school coordination)

The Gottman Institute endorses “emotion coaching,” naming feelings, setting limits, and teaching problem-solving rather than simply punishing as a way to replace blowups.

Practical steps for the OP:

  • document losses, involve the teacher (already done),
  • require the child to help repair harm where possible (e.g., returning cards, apologies, replacing or saving toward restitution)
  • push for family therapy or a discipline plan from parents.

Also, the OP should consider moving out if the home environment normalizes threats from the stepdad.

Anger is valid, but physical retaliation usually makes the problem worse and puts the adult at legal risk.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

This group of Redditors pointed out that hitting an 8-year-old crossed a line, and violence breeds more harm.

 

[Reddit User] − Yes you are. You smacked the s__t out of him over Pokemon cards. You're an adult. He's 8. Do you not see the gravity of the situation?

Slim__Goodie − YTA. Your entire family sounds hella dysfunctional, and it seems your nephew has already picked up some bad habits from his “druggie” mom,

but screaming at and hitting him isn’t going to end those tendencies, and an adult smacking the s__t out of a child is never not going to be trashy as...

SnausageFest − God, everyone sucks here.

iambob6 − I know I'm in the obvious minority but NTA. f__k that kid. I had a relative like that who'd do the exact same thing. he'd steal all my...

Parents eventually realized and tried getting more strict with him and that didn't work. I eventually had to hit him when I saw him try to steal my other more...

He stopped after that

Meanwhile, these users sided with the OP, saying repeated theft from family sometimes provokes hard responses.

wander-to-wonder − There sounds to be multiple assholes in this story, you included. At the end of the day he is 8 and you are 18. His behavior needs to...

It doesn't matter what his background is. He needs to be taught right from wrong, how to behave, and learn that their are consequences for his actions.

With that said, hitting a child, especially one that comes from a bad background, isn't going to teach him any of these things.

This kid needs stability and consistent disciplining for him to eventually start behaving in a better way. Simply hitting or screaming at him accomplishes nothing.

[Reddit User] − Wtf @ all the people saying you’re the a__hole. Definitely NTA. An 8 y/o child should definitely know better.

He stole and essentially destroyed hundreds of dollars worth of valuable items and then lied about it. I think your stepdad wanting to call the police for a__ault is complete...

You smacked him on the leg, you didn’t beat the s__t out of him- he’ll get over it. Kids need to be disciplined for doing dumb s__t.

It sounds like a really frustrating situation and I’m sorry your parents don’t discipline him like they should.

pigvmt − NTA. . looks like people in the comments dont live in reality wtf

Others called the household dysfunctional and urged consistent, professional help rather than ad-hoc discipline.

theninetaileddemon − NTA, those are important you, and I would have done the same thing if I were you.

When you value something like that, whatever it may be, you tend to get emotionally attached. So it’s understandable that you would act out.

When I was younger my brother would steal anything he wanted from any member of the family, and what would I do when he stole from me?

I’d kick his ass and take the stuff back. This is normal for quite a few families. Hitting kids for no reason is not okay, but obviously you had a...

You still live at home so your basically siblings and whether other people like it or not siblings hit each other.

Everyone else is just talking from a legal stand point on this which isn’t wrong of them, but I doubt you slapping his leg really hurt him.

germaniumest − My parents then berated me for a while and essentially told me that I’m a child abuser and if I did that again they would have to call...

and have me charged with a__ault (mostly my nstep dad saying this, my mom understood what I did and didn’t make it a big deal).

That's rich coming from someone threatening to beat his step son to death. I think your whole family are a-holes.

You have a really fucked up living situation and it might be best for you to get out as soon as you can.

I don't want to say you're an a__hole because obviously things are not easy for you and for all I know, these cards were all you had going for you,...

He's obviously not quite right and needs therapy and a healthy home environment, hitting him won't help.

judgementjude − YTA massively. They are bad parents, but that does not make what you did right.

Violence doesn't teach, and it sounds like this was more about you getting rid of your anger and frustration on an 8 year old than really trying to make him...

what he did was wrong and how there are consequences. You didn't change anything.

You didn't make him a better person. You didn't teach him anything useful. You missed your opportunity to actually make a difference and instead just hurt him and made him...

Not to mention this is a kid who has been abandoned by your sister who abused drugs, who the hell knows what he's been through

but odds are he hasn't had the opportunity to trust and respect and understand people. You just gave him another reason to need therapy.

Depending on country, odds are you broke the law as well as beating someone elses child is usually pretty illegal and for good reason. I live in the UK and...

Everyone in this story is struggling in their own unique way. The child is acting out due to instability. The uncle is trying to protect his collection. The parents are too tired or too scared to face confrontation in this situation.

Was the slap unforgivable, or was it just a young man cracking under emotional pressure? It’s hard to say. What’s clear is that the real problem runs deeper than missing Pokémon cards. This family is unable to agree on what accountability looks like.

Maybe the lesson here isn’t about who’s right or wrong. While collectibles might have significant emotional value, adult aggression frequently causes harm that extends beyond the initial theft. Would you take the lengthy route of therapy and structure, negotiate, or escalate the situation? Let us know what you think below.

CTV7

CTV7

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