In The News

Yes, police really did release image of sheep with faces blurred out…

Police in the West Midlands had plenty of social media users perplexed this week after releasing an image of 3 young victims of a kidnapping scam with their faces blurred to protect their identities.

This sounds normal enough. After all, police are bound by law to protect the identities of victims of crime if they happen to be under-age, and blurring or pixelating their faces is a common way to ensure they cannot be recognised.

Only in this case, those 3 young victims happened to be sheep.

West Midlands police released an image (below) of 3 sheep that had been stolen in a sheep rustling scheme. The two sheep that had their faces visible had them blurred out.

While the crime was real – 3 men were arrested as a result of the theft – the photo is completely genuine, albeit a somewhat tongue-in-cheek joke.

While the official line from the West Midlands police was ”the lambs identity was protected due to their age and vulnerability””, Dominic Cascianani from the BBC claimed –

My mint sources tell me that an officer in the case blurred the image as a joke.
He presumably concluded he had an obligation under the Ewe-ropean Convention on Eweman Rights to hide the poor little lambs’ faces.

Thanks for reading, we hope this article helped, but before you leave us for greener pastures, please help us out.


We're hoping to be totally ad-free by 2025 - after all, no one likes online adverts, and all they do is get in the way and slow everything down. But of course we still have fees and costs to pay, so please, please consider becoming a Facebook supporter! It costs only 0.99p (~$1.30) a month (you can stop at any time) and ensures we can still keep posting Cybersecurity themed content to help keep our communities safe and scam-free. You can subscribe here


Remember, we're active on social media - so follow us on Facebook, Bluesky, Instagram and X


Share
Published by
Craig Haley