Man is beaten up and falsely accused of kidnapping after trying to help toddler find her parents Vol

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A man helped a lost toddler find her parents, police say. He was smeared online as a predator and fled town.

By Amber Ferguson
June 27, 2017 at 7:06 AM


A man in Lakeland, Fla., was misidentified as a kidnapper on social media after he tried to help a lost toddler find her parents. He has since left town in fear of his safety. (WFTS)
A man trying to help a lost toddler find her parents was misidentified as a kidnapper on social media over the weekend, according to police in Lakeland, Fla., prompting him to leave town in fear for his safety and the safety of his family.

The man was also punched by the child’s father who told local media that he “thought he was trying to take my daughter” and “wanted to kill him.”

The whole episode prompted the Lakeland Police Department to warn citizens to “be careful about what you post on social media so as not to victimize an innocent person … Before posting information on matters such as this, we encourage people to identify the source and the validity of such claims before sharing them.”

Lakeland police, in a Facebook post, said the falsely accused man was visiting friends at a softball game when he noticed at a 2-year-old had gotten separated from her parents. She was “wandering by herself,” police said, and the man “believed that she was lost.


“The citizen attempted to ask the girl where her parents were and walked with her in hopes she could point them out,” the statement said, a fact verified by at least one independent witness.

At that point, “bystanders” told the parents that the man was “attempting to kidnap the child,” said police.

As the two were nearing the playground, three men approached them from behind, Patch reported. One man grabbed the girl and the other man, who is the child’s father, punched the man five or six times.

“I thought he was trying to take my daughter,” the girl’s father told News Channel 8.

“I saw this man with my daughter in his hands walking toward the parking lot. What would you do?” the father asked. “I wanted to kill him.”

The father told The Washington Post that it all happened very quickly, “within 45 seconds.”

The investigating officer noted the victim’s face had several cuts and was swollen.

Police concluded that the man was only trying to help. “We had an independent eyewitness that saw him walking around, asking, ‘Is this your parents? Is that your father?’” Sgt. Gary Gross with the Lakeland Police Department told Fox 13 News.

According to police the young girl tried to pull away but the man was concerned for her safety and picked her up and continued walking toward the playground, “hoping that he would be able to locate the child’s father.”

The father and his friends were not satisfied with the man’s explanation or that of the police. “So, I guess in Lakeland, you can kidnap a child and get away with it,” the father said to police, local media reported. The police report, local media said, described the father as “increasingly agitated.”


According to WFLA, other media outlets and police, family members and friends went on social media and shared the man’s photo, his Facebook page and his place of business, “calling him a child predator,” WFLA said.

Police, however, called him a “good Samaritan” in their statement. “It is understandable how parents can possibly be upset in a situation involving a lost child,” the statement said. “However, this incident truly involved a good Samaritan trying to assist a lost child finding” her parents.

“Accounts of this incident have circulated on social media with false information and speculation. Posting false information on Facebook could cause a defamation of character claim and those posting false information could be held [liable].”

One Facebook user responded: “I was one of those who shared post thinking it was helpful, now I feel awful that it clearly was not! Definitely teaches me to double check sources before spreading!”

“Now this man’s face is all over the internet,” said another commenter on the police department’s Facebook page. ” … The assumptions that were made can ruin this guys life. Unbelievable.”

The good Samaritan told several local outlets that he has now left town with his family for their safety. He says he will not press charges against the father.

The father made no apologies for his actions but told The Post, “All that matters is that my daughter is home safely.”

The police statement did not provide names and no one was charged. To protect the child and the falsely accused man, The Post is not using names in this story either.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/amph...s-smeared-online-as-a-predator-and-fled-town/


Cliffs:
-Toddler is lost
-man walks her around other parents asking them if it's their child
-real father and 3 friends show up and beat guy up
-eyewitnesses confirm victim was trying to help
-father doesn't believe it and says guy was trying to kidnap
-good samaritan has to leave town with his family cause of harassment
 
After watching the report I understand [emoji]128175[/emoji]% where the father was coming from. That's just an *** whoopin that dude had coming for picking the kid up and walking toward the parking lot instead of where everyone obviously was... the baseball field. How are you gonna take a kid away from where people are if you're looking for her parents? Sounds suspicious.
 
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After watching the report I understand [emoji]128175[/emoji]% where the father was coming from. That's just an *** whoopin that dude had coming for picking the kid up and walking toward the parking lot instead of where everyone obviously was... the baseball field. How are you gonna take a kid away from where people are if you're looking for her parents? Sounds suspicious.

Only the father said he was headed to the parking lot though, everything else said he was headed to the playground, including where he caught the *** whooping. Sounds like the father is overcompensating over his guilt for losing track of the child in the first place.
 
After watching the report I understand [emoji]128175[/emoji]% where the father was coming from. That's just an *** whoopin that dude had coming for picking the kid up and walking toward the parking lot instead of where everyone obviously was... the baseball field. How are you gonna take a kid away from where people are if you're looking for her parents? Sounds suspicious.
The bystander was asking peoplenof she belonged to them. Then the little girl pointed to the playground and that's where he was heading. The parking lot is adjacent to the playground.

The really messed up thing is if you go on Facebook now, the friends and family are still blaming the guy and calling him a kidnapper. Even after the cops said that wasn't the case. Heck he was there with an off duty deputy.

so not only did the father assault the man, he and his family/friends continue to defame his character on Facebook even after the police released a statement corroborating the Samaritan.

They still haven't said " we lost track of our 2 year old we were wrong. Sorry"

They need to be sued
 
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In that article it says the girl tried to pull away and ol boy picked her up.

U cant just go picking up random 2 year olds


Im not saying hes a pedo or watever but there could of been a better way to handle that.

It definetely could have "looked" bad no matter his intentions

The FB stuff is super floridy tho.
 
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