February 11, 2009 5:56 PM
- Text
Fake Police Prank Hits Internet
generic youtube internet video boradcast broadband viral global world network media (CBS/iStockphoto)
(AP)
Three men posing as plainclothes police officers stopped a teenage boy on his way home and peppered him with questions about a fictitious robbery while recording their prank in a video that ended up on the Internet, prosecutors said.
The video of the men making the shirtless 16-year-old boy put his hands in the air and explain where he was going appeared on YouTube, a popular site where amateurs can post and view homemade movies, prosecutors said.
The boy was walking home in Queens one night last July when a burgundy car pulled alongside him and three men, including Gazi Abura, got out and told him they were police officers, Queens County District Attorney Richard Brown said.
The men made the boy stand next to their car and told him there had been a robbery in the area and he matched the description of the suspect, Brown said.
The video shows the teen complying with all the men's requests and offering them his high school identification card.
"Are you lying to me?" a man's voice asks on the video.
"I'm not lying," the frightened boy says. "I swear to everything."
Several weeks later, the boy, apparently unaware he had been videotaped, heard from friends that the fake police stop was posted on YouTube.
An investigation led to Abura, 21, who was being held Tuesday pending arraignment on various charges, including impersonating a police officer and unlawful imprisonment, said Brown, who called the prank dangerous.
"His alleged actions not only damage the reputation of our police officers, who already perform a difficult job, but potentially could have resulted in injury to the victim or even himself," Brown said in a statement.
Abura could face up to a year in jail and a $1,000 fine if convicted.
His lawyer, Damien Brown, downplayed the incident and the teen's decision to contact real police after the video was posted.
"After learning that it was all a joke perhaps he got embarrassed," the lawyer said.
No other arrests had been made in the case, but prosecutors said the investigation was ongoing.
The video of the men making the shirtless 16-year-old boy put his hands in the air and explain where he was going appeared on YouTube, a popular site where amateurs can post and view homemade movies, prosecutors said.
The boy was walking home in Queens one night last July when a burgundy car pulled alongside him and three men, including Gazi Abura, got out and told him they were police officers, Queens County District Attorney Richard Brown said.
The men made the boy stand next to their car and told him there had been a robbery in the area and he matched the description of the suspect, Brown said.
The video shows the teen complying with all the men's requests and offering them his high school identification card.
"Are you lying to me?" a man's voice asks on the video.
"I'm not lying," the frightened boy says. "I swear to everything."
Several weeks later, the boy, apparently unaware he had been videotaped, heard from friends that the fake police stop was posted on YouTube.
An investigation led to Abura, 21, who was being held Tuesday pending arraignment on various charges, including impersonating a police officer and unlawful imprisonment, said Brown, who called the prank dangerous.
"His alleged actions not only damage the reputation of our police officers, who already perform a difficult job, but potentially could have resulted in injury to the victim or even himself," Brown said in a statement.
Abura could face up to a year in jail and a $1,000 fine if convicted.
His lawyer, Damien Brown, downplayed the incident and the teen's decision to contact real police after the video was posted.
"After learning that it was all a joke perhaps he got embarrassed," the lawyer said.
No other arrests had been made in the case, but prosecutors said the investigation was ongoing.
Latest Now in National
- RI player wins $336 million Powerball jackpot
- How the revolution became digitized
- Celebs mourn Whitney Houston at Clive Davis event
- The nation's weather
- Whitney Houston fans pay emotional tribute
- Hudson to honor Houston at Grammys
- Man to face Alabama trial in wife's diving death
- Whitney Houston's final performance
- Remembering Whitney Houston 1963-2012
- Screenplay for Murder
- Extra: Jimmy Siokos on Mark Twitchell
- Extra: Chris Heward's bizarre experience
- Extra: Drive with a killer
- Whitney Houston dies at 48
- Evening News Online, 02.11.12
- Video: Whitney Houston's ups and downs
- Chicago to design vehicle sticker itself
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook Most Discussed Stories
on CBS News
- Iran summons Azeri envoy over Mossad allegations
- US seeks to mine social media to predict future
- Congo president adviser among 2 dead in jet crash
- Official says a private jet crash in Congo kills 2, including a close presidential adviser
on Facebook Most Discussed Stories
on CBS News






