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Kind of depends on if you know who did it and what relationship, if any, you have with their families. Knowing them opens up more options, but requires a keener judgment.
― Aimless, Friday, 8 May 2015 16:37 (eight years ago) link
just moved in. street borders rough areas. dont know family, after brief interaction with culprits I can safely say that its an avenue worth pursuing only so I can say "I tried that"
I have had shit like this before, the council always advise you to keep a log book of any incidents and capture video/photographic evidence if possible. Yeah like you are going to be filming kids outside your house, building up a dossier on them, for sure that will end well!
I was once working on the Windhill estate in Bradford and rewired this unkempt bearded postman's flat. He had a front door next to the Off License, with a caged CCTV camera and a sign requesting people not to lurk in front of his door or play ball games. So naturally all the kids constantly kicked the ball against his door, spray-painted "Pedo Wanker" on it, had put his window through x amount of times, put dogshit through his letterbox etc and he was calling the police every week and becoming a sport for these kids. A strident approach is not always the best option when are dealing with estate kids!
I have exacted petty revenge on adult age people before. A neighbour who kept dumping cans, bifta ends and various litter over my wall got a bag of rubbish dumped on their doorstep. This other perp got some inch and a half 8's screwed into their tyres for thinking his dog chewing my dog's ear was hilarious. But hell no, there isn't any action you can take against kids that doesn't fan the fire or end in casualty or in a police cell. It is a shitty situation Dmac, but I think as hard as it is, calmness is the key to getting through this.
― xelab, Friday, 8 May 2015 19:34 (eight years ago) link
two months pass...