Prank calling has been around for years and years. Since the dawn of the telephone, callers have been entertaining themselves by disguising their voices and engaging in jokes with whoever picks up the phone. Sometimes though, prank calls can cross ethical and legal lines – resulting in criminal offenses such as harassment, threats, or fraud. When does a prank call become illegal? As a criminal defense attorney, I’m often asked to examine the legality of prank calls. Here’s an overview of laws and examples of potentially criminal prank calls:
Most calls that are jokes, to friends, or businesses are legal, but slightly immature to say the least! But, prank calls can break laws depending on the situation at hand:
The key to figuring out whether the prank call is illegal, is whether the call resulted in someone being in fear, in panic, incited violence, caused actual damages, or was made for fraudulent purposes. There’s a big difference between harmless and illegal conduct. But if you act maliciously, threaten someone, or make dangerous calls – then it can result in felony charges.
In many state laws, if you repeatedly call someone in a harassing manner – then it’s a misdemeanor or felony crime. What constitutes harassment? Here are some factors prosecutors consider:
While an isolated immature prank call may not get noticed, a pattern of unwanted prank calls, especially threatening calls, can warrant criminal charges with penalties of up to 2 years in some states.
One of the most dangerous illegal pranks is “swatting” – making fake calls to emergency services reporting violent crimes in progress to elicit an armed law enforcement response at a targeted home. This reckless hoax endangers everyone by wasting critical resources and creating police encounters that can turn fatal in seconds.
Many kid think it’s funny to call the police and lie about potential hostage situations, bomb threats, kidnappings, and more, but it’s a federal crime under 18 USC § 1038. Adults over 18 can get five or more years in prison for calling in a swatting attack on someone else. If death results from police actions, felony murder charges could happen.
While impersonating others as a prank may seem harmless, pretending to be someone you’re not for money or valuables crosses into fraud. Scams like calling elderly folks impersonating the IRS to obtain sensitive data can mean serious identity theft and fraud charges.
Schemes using prepaid phones and spoofing technology to fake caller IDs should be avoided. Under federal wire fraud laws, phone impersonation tricks to steal money, accounts, or information can lead to decades behind bars, plus massive civil liability. Don’t let pranks destroy trust and harm innocent victims.
First Amendment free speech rights don’t cover threats of violence made as pranks to instill fear. Under most state laws, threats to:
They can be charged as misdemeanors or felonies with fines and multi-year prison terms if credible threats are made, even as a hoax. Don’t falsely claim to be stalking someone or threaten violent attacks or bomb plots, even if meant as a joke. Terroristic threatening laws are applied broadly by prosecutors.
Parents of a kid engaging in prank calls can face civil liability and fines if their children repeatedly make illegal prank calls. Under parental responsibility laws, parents must exert supervision and control over their kids. Penalties can result from actions such as:
While one or two childish pranks may not warrant charges, a pattern of harassing, threatening, vulgar or fraudulent calls should lead parents to intervene and impose discipline to avoid facing charges themselves.
Students have to be careful with prank calls to teachers, administrators or classmates. These types of prank calls have additional consequences apply in school settings. Prank calling a teacher or classmate can violate school codes of conduct prohibiting:
Beyond criminal penalties, students who engage in prank calls can also face suspension, expulsion, and permanent disciplinary records.
While most realize that swatting attacks or impersonation frauds is illegal, even someone making more minor prank calls can find themselves charged and arrested if they keep doing it – despite warnings. Here are some tips for staying on the right side of the law:
With basic respect for others and common sense, phone pranking can stay light-hearted and fun for all involved. But crossing lines into harassment, threats, panic, or fraud should be avoided to sidestep criminal liability. The criminal justice system takes a severe view of any prank activity touching on violence, vulnerabilities, or predation. A defense attorney like myself can advise where legal boundaries lie. When in doubt, always err on the side of caution by keeping jokes harmless and consensual.
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