Killer Clowns Terrorise France

From the ABC:

Clown terror spreads in France, another teenager arrested

Updated 15 minutes agoTue 28 Oct 2014, 10:15am

A 14-year-old dressed as a clown has been arrested near Paris for attempting to attack a woman, in the latest incident of fake, evil clowns terrorising passers-by in France.

Complaints have poured in recently over “armed clowns” wreaking havoc in various parts of the country.

Police have detained several people dressed as the pranksters – some carrying pistols, knives and baseball bats.

The bizarre phenomenon has even prompted anti-clown vigilantism, forcing police to try to quell the hysteria by saying there have only been a few sightings of the terrifying clowns.

On Monday, a woman who had just got out of her car in Chelles, an eastern suburb 18 kilometres from central Paris, called the police, saying two clowns – one of whom was armed with a fake axe – had attacked her, a source said.

They escaped when a passer-by armed with a baseball bat tried to stop them.

One of the pranksters was later detained when police spotted him, white make-up still covering his face.

In a separate incident just half-an-hour afterwards, a dozen people wearing the smiling, white masks associated with the Anonymous hacktivist collective attacked three youths and stole their mobile phones at a station in Melun, a south-eastern suburb of Paris.

The “evil clown” trend previously seen in the United States and Britain only began in the north of France in early October.

In the town of Bethune, a 19-year-old received a six-month suspended jail term last week for threatening passers-by while dressed as a clown.

The “clowns” have been “mostly spotted outside schools, but also on public roads, in bushes, and in a square.

Their targets are often young children or teenagers, but also adults,” a police source in northern France said. It then spread to the south of France.

‘Clown hunters’ also on police radar

French police released information warning against armed anti-clown vigilantes taking to the streets.

“The National Police have received many reports of clowns frightening passers-by, but many are fanciful and the proportion of children,” the police service said on its Facebook page.  

“Symptomatic of the impact of the internet, this phenomenon can generate harmful individual derivatives and disturbances to public order.

“On social networks, groups calling for collective mobilisations against clowns have appeared.

“Any person, aggressive clowns or hunters of clowns, discovered in possession of a weapon on the highway will be arrested.” 

Police on Saturday night arrested 14 teenagers dressed as clowns and carrying weapons in the Mediterranean port town of Agde.

In the nearby city of Montpellier, a man disguised as a clown was arrested after beating a pedestrian with an iron bar.

Theories abound as to the origin of the not-so-funny trend of violence in a country where Halloween has yet to take hold.

The suggestions include a challenge launched on social networks, a popular video on YouTube showing a terrifying clown pranking people or even a recent episode of the popular TV series American Horror Story featuring Twisty the killer clown.

AFP

‘Clown epidemic’ in Norfolk prompts police warning

Am I missing something here? A clown “epidemic”? Alarming people?

What sort of society produces people who are alarmed by the simple appearance of people dressed in unusual clothes? Is Britsh society simply too pampered, too protected? I’m sure people in Syria would welcome an epidemic of clowns to be afraid of rather than something trivial such as bombs and chemical weapons.

‘Clown epidemic’ in Norfolk prompts police warning

by Gia Armstrong
 

People dressed in full clown outfits with red suit and red hair chasing ‘alarmed’ members of public

One-Minute Read LAST UPDATED AT 11:49 ON Fri 29 Nov 2013

POLICE in Norfolk have warned members of the public to ignore anyone dressed as a clown in the street following a number of “alarming sightings”.

One person contacted the police after spotting a clown in Gaywood, near King’s Lynn, on Tuesday evening. The suspect was described as wearing a “full clown outfit” with a red suit and red hair.

Two clowns wearing “Halloween-type” clown masks were spotted the following night near a skate park in the town. In both cases, the callers said they were alarmed and were chased a short way up the road, reports the Eastern Daily Press.

“Nobody has been assaulted and it appears that the people involved are waiting for a passerby to be startled by their appearance and run away, and then the clown runs after them for a short distance,” said Superintendent Carl Edwards.

He stressed that “it isn’t against the law to dress up as a clown” and said it is “important to gain a perspective on these incidents” but added that the police appreciated it can “worry people, especially the young or elderly”.

The superintendent said officers would be patrolling areas where the reports had been made and would offer “strong words of advice” to anyone dressed as a clown.

“The most effective way to behave if you are to see someone dressed up is to give no reaction – because that’s what they are after,” he added.

The Guardian says Norfolk’s “clown epidemic” follows recent reports of the circus characters scaring people in Northampton. Footage of the Northampton clown, who waved at passersby, appeared online and was circulated around the world before he was unmasked last month as a 22-year-old student. Since then, copycat clowns have appeared in towns around the country. ·