http://www.canada.com/vancouverisland/nanaimo/story.html?id=4f7749de-8e18-487b-948e-8b30bf42b78a
Furthermore, it's also a rip-off of the Evan Trembley hoax.
http://www.breakthechain.org/exclusives/evantrembley.html which was started as a 
sick joke on Myspace by the real and not missing Evan Trembley himself.
It borrows content from the Ashley Flores hoax
http://www.breakthechain.org/exclusives/ashleyflores.html
which was started by one of the real and not missing Ashley's friends on Myspace 
as a sick joke, and borrows heavily from the Penny Brown hoax
http://www.breakthechain.org/exclusives/pennybrown.html
which is a mutation of the Kelsey Brook Jones chain, which was true for the two 
hours that kelsey was thought missing. Kelsey was found playing, and unharmed 
two hours after her mother's initial panic.
http://www.breakthechain.org/exclusives/kelsey.html
http://www.breakthechain.org/missing.html
People who start hoaxes like that should be penalized, because they are getting 
very sick kicks at others' expense!
It's manipulative, attention-seeking behavior on a level that is so low and 
disgusting because people are getting jerked around just so a few childish teens 
can get their haw-haws.
Ignorance or lack of forethought as no excuse.
Playing pranks on your friends in a social network like Myspace is bad enough, 
but when it's in the form of a chain letter, it's not going to stay just among 
the friends of the hoaxter. This is because your circle of friends also has 
their own circles of friends, which in turn, have their own circle of friends, 
so, you start a hoax about yourself as missing or dying or whatever, and your 
friends might think it's funny, but somebody else who is listed as one of their 
friends but not listed as your friend, looks at this friend's profile and 
bulletins, and this stranger looking at your friend's profile, sees your 
missing/dying hoax and assumes it's for real, and compulsively passes it along 
to their friends, who pass it on to theirs.
So, yet more reasons chain letters really stink, and why starting a hoax might 
get you the controll over the masses and the attention you desire, but it could 
also land you and those associated with you in a pile of inconvenience if not 
trouble.
I'm very sorry for anyone these hoaxes have hurt, from those who were taken in 
by them, (hopefully they'll know better than pass on chain email from now on) to 
those who are friends of or related to the hoaxter and suffering fallout because 
of the hoax.
But as for the hoaxters themselves, I wish they would get a lot more than just a 
slap on the wrist for their self-serving, inconsiderate and just plain sick 
actions.
Evan Trembley was exceedingly stupid to start a hoax about himself, as was the 
friend of Ashley Flores. The guy who mooched off the Trembley hoax and made it 
about himself as a missing kid in Nanaimo is just as guilty. Shame on them!
Full article about the Nanaimo prank:
http://www.canada.com/vancouverisland/nanaimo/story.html?id=4f7749de-8e18-487b-948e-8b30bf42b78a
Missing Nanaimo Teen Email is a Big Hoax
Nanaimo Daily News Missing teen e-mail is a big hoax
Plea urging people to look out for Nanaimo boy is a prank that first began in 
Texas
Derek Spalding , Daily News
Published: Thursday, October 11, 2007
Nanaimo RCMP say its unfortunate that someone is circulating a fake missing 
person notice through e-mail accounts.
Thousands of Harbour City residents have recently received a message in their 
inbox about a missing teenager from Nanaimo, but the chain mail is nothing but a 
hoax. The message asks recipients to please "pass this to everyone in your 
address book" in hopes that someone will have seen 15-year-old Evan Trembley. 
After a simple Internet search, however, the real story behind the prank is 
revealed.
Evan Trembley of Wichita, Falls, Tex, created a fake Amber Alert with himself as 
the missing person. He then sent it out to his friends on MySpace.com. Then a 
few people who didn't know it was a joke, sent the e-mail out to everyone on 
their list. Police exposed Trembley who said he thought his "friends would 
recognize it, get a laugh out of it" and delete it, he told reporters in 
Wichita.
****But then people who weren't his friends took it seriously and continued to 
e-mail all their friends. Trembley and his mother Tammy said they do not expect 
any criminal charges.
It appears someone in Nanaimo decided to localize Trembley's prank and 
distributed it throughout the city. Using the same photo and similar 
information, Trembley now appears to be a missing Nanaimo boy. This week, the 
e-mail reached Robin Dutton, owner of Arrowsmith Bikes, who then forwarded it to 
more than 300 people on his mailing list.
"I just thought, if somebody's missing, it doesn't take a whole lot for me to 
send it out to everyone in my address book," he said before expressing his 
disappointment in the hoax. "I just think it's really unfortunate. I'd like to 
think that people have a bit more to do rather than waste people's time."
DSpalding@nanaimodailynews.com
250-729-4231
 
 
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