Albuquerque Journal

Spate of clown reports no laughing matter to police in U.S.

Most ‘sightings’ are pranks or bogus

- BY JOE MANDAK

PITTSBURGH — Police are encouragin­g caution amid a rash of public complaints and social media reports in a number of states of people dressed like clowns and acting suspicious­ly, even if they think many are knucklehea­d pranksters or simply bogus.

Real clowns are just plain miffed.

Authoritie­s in Greenville, S.C., were among the first to report a clown-related incident in recent weeks. Late last month, some children reported clowns trying to lure them into the woods with money. Sheriff’s deputies found no evidence, however, not even a prankster in a clown suit.

But for whatever reason, since then, people in Alabama, Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina and now, Pennsylvan­ia, have reported scary or suspicious encounters with people dressed like clowns.

“When people report these things it should be ‘someone dressed like a clown,’ because a real clown would never dress or do anything to scare anyone,” said Tricia Manuel, 55, who runs Mooseburge­r Clown Arts Camp in Buffalo, Minn. The camp, named for her alter ego, Pricilla Mooseburge­r, trains about 100 clowns each year.

She said she has been following the reports closely, because they are hurting business.

“In South Carolina, two of the clowns were afraid to go out and perform, and they’re two of my customers,” said Manuel, whose two children are also clowns. “If they don’t perform, they don’t need supplies.”

Some of the reported sightings have been hoaxes, like the four young children who told police they made up stories about spotting clowns in unusual places in and around Annapolis, Md., or the 24-yearold man whom police in Winston-Salem, N.C., charged with falsely reporting that a clown knocked on his window.

Other related cases weren’t so harmless and have resulted in criminal charges.

The sheriff in Escambia County, Ala., last week arrested a 22-year-old woman and two juveniles after Flomaton High School was locked down and searched when students were threatened on “Flomo Klown” and “Shoota Cllown” social media accounts. And in Athens, Ga., an 11-yearold girl was arrested for taking a knife to school because she was frightened by social media reports and other rumors that clowns were preparing to attack children.

The Pennsylvan­ia reports and law-enforcemen­t response have, so far, been more low key. Police want to encourage people to report suspicious behavior without aggravatin­g matters.

Albert Walker, the police chief in northeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia’s Hanover Township, has stepped up patrols along the Sans Souci Parkway after Facebook posts about a clown in nearby woods.

But the chief chose his words carefully in describing his department’s connection to any other clown sightings.

“Peripheral­ly, we’re connected to it, but not directly,” Walker said. “It was a social media post that identified the possibilit­y of an alleged sighting of an individual dressed as a clown along one of our main highways.”

Pottsville Police Chief Richard Wojciechow­sky said there appeared to be more to a clown-related incident reported Monday evening in his borough, about 90 miles northwest of Philadelph­ia — but still no cause for alarm.

“Two knucklehea­ds with clown-like clothes on” hopped out of a pickup truck and yelled at a group of young children and teenagers, the chief said.

“It wasn’t a physical threat or a violent act. At best, (it’s) a misguided juvenile prank,” the chief said. “Some of the older kids weren’t even frightened.”

The Pennsylvan­ia State Police are investigat­ing recent unspecifie­d clown sightings in the towns of Huntingdon and Ebensburg, where a woman said a clown peeped through her window. Trooper Adam Reed said citizens should “not confront the individual but rather gather informatio­n and report it to your local police.”

Manuel said the public’s perception of clowns has been going downhill since Stephen King’s 1986 novel about a child-killing clown, “It,” became a TV miniseries four years later. But the latest incidents take the cake.

“We are used to ‘Killer Klowns from Outer Space’ and Krusty the Clown, but this has taken it to another level,” Manuel said. “It’s another thing to have people act out these sick fantasies. This is like, ‘Are you kidding me?’ ”

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