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  • 31
    Jul
    2012
    10:19am, EDT

    UK teen arrested after Olympic diver Tom Daley receives Twitter death threat

    Toby Melville / Reuters

    Britain's Tom Daley prepares to take part in the Olympic men's synchronised 10-meter platform final on Tuesday.

    By Ian Johnston, NBC News

    LONDON -- A British teenager was arrested Tuesday on suspicion of making "malicious" remarks, after a death threat to U.K. Olympic medal hopeful Tom Daley appeared on Twitter. 

    The profanity-strewn tweets -- on an account NBC News has chosen not to identify -- also included the claim that the athlete had let down his dead father after Daley came fourth in the men's synchronized 10-meter dive.

    Daley rose to fame in the U.K. when he competed at the 2008 Beijing Games at the age of 14.


    Shortly after Monday's final, a message appeared on the Twitter account saying, “@TomDaley1994 you let your dad down i hope you know that.” 

    The account was available to only confirmed followers Tuesday, but retweets of some of the messages showed the abuse continued with one talking about drowning Daley in a swimming pool.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The messages are part of an increasing trend in which celebrities and others are abused by so-called "trolls," who send abusive messages behind the seeming anonymity of social media sites.

    Daley retweeted the message about his father and said “After giving it my all...you get idiot's sending me this.”

    He then retweeted a number of messages from people calling for the Twitter account involved to be banned.

    More London 2012 coverage from NBCNews.com

    Daley still has a chance of a medal in the individual diving event.

    Daley’s father Rob, 40, died from brain cancer in May 2011.

    'Dad was so supportive'
    Before the Olympics, Daley spoke to BBC News about how his father "gave me all the inspiration that I've needed.”

    “Winning a medal would make all the struggles that I've had worthwhile. It's been my dream since a very young age to compete at an Olympics,” Daley said.

    Matt Cardy / Getty Images, file

    Tom Daley (second from right) follows the coffin carrying his father as it leaves St. Mary's Church Plympton, England, on June 8, 2011.

    “I'm doing it for myself and my dad. It was both our dreams from a very young age. I always wanted to do it and Dad was so supportive of everything. It would make it extra special to do it for him,” he added.

    Don't tweet if you want TV, London Olympic fans told

    London has become a giant melting pot of cultures and nationalities, but it's not immediately apparent to tourists. The double-dip recession has hit diverse neighborhoods especially hard. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    As news of the offensive tweet began to spread, a message directed at Daley appeared on the Twitter account saying “I'm sorry mate i just wanted you to win cause its the olympics I'm just annoyed we didn't win I'm sorry tom accept my apology.”

    Follow Ian Johnston

    “Please i don't want to be hated I'm just sorry you didn't win i was rooting for you pal to do britain all proud just so upset,” it added.

    Slideshow: When the Olympics is your neighbor

    /

    A diverse community in East London will welcome the world to Britain for the 2012 Olympic Games. Meet residents and hear how they feel about having a huge, world stage in their backyard.

    Launch slideshow

    The brief description of the Twitter account holder, who has nearly 50,000 followers, apparently quotes another tweeter as saying he was “gorgeous and the sweetest boy ever."

    Dorset Police said in a message on its Twitter account that a “17-year-old man arrested this morning at a guest house in the Weymouth area” in relation to “tweets to @TomDaley1994,” adding that the investigation was ongoing.

    A spokeswoman for Dorset Police told NBCNews.com that the teen was held on suspicion of making "malicious communications."

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Military drafted in to fill empty seats at London Olympics
    • Romney would 'respect' Israel strike on Iran, aide says
    • Rome's leaning Colosseum has experts worried
    • 2 US climbers found dead on Peruvian peak
    • Elephants slaughtered, orphan found in latest Africa poaching

    News on NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    44 comments

    "sadly he did and his country too"....are you f*cken serious?!! Let me guess MJ...you're one of those soccer parents who gets into fights with other parents on the sidelines? STFU.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: olympics, arrested, uk, death-threat, diver, featured, twitter, tom-daley
  • 23
    Jul
    2012
    1:02pm, EDT

    FBI called in as Australian 'hitman scam' issues death threats in texts

    By NBC News staff

    Police in Australia are seeking help from the FBI and Britain’s Scotland Yard after tens of thousands of Australians received death threats by text message, warning them that they will be killed unless they pay thousands of dollars, according to reports Monday.

    It has commonly been referred to as "the hitman scam," according to The Sydney Morning Herald newspaper.


    The Australian newspaper reported that the text message included the following line: "Sum1 paid me to kill you. get spared, 48hrs to pay [AU] $5000. If you inform the police or anybody, death is promised...E-mail me now: killerking247yahoo.com."

    The Morning Herald quoted New South Wales Chief Superintendent Peter Cotter saying that state police would look abroad for help.

    "We have direct connections with many international law enforcement agencies," Cotter told the newspaper.

    "There'll be people we'll be speaking to, such as the FBI and London Metropolitan Police and so forth," he told the paper.

    Full international coverage from NBCNews.com

    'A very ugly attempt by fraudsters'
    Queensland Police Detective Superintendent Brian Hay called on recipients to delete the messages and disregard the threat, which he said had no credibility.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "Across Australia at this point in time we've been flooded and inundated by disturbing emails and text messages claiming that you're about to be killed if you don't part with the sum of (Australian) $5,000 … to be transferred into the hands of criminals. Please understand that this is a scam -- a very ugly attempt by fraudsters overseas to get your money. There is no immediate threat to you or your family," Hay said in a video message to the public posted on the website for The Age newspaper.

    The Australian Broadcasting Corporation quoted a man identified only as “Shane” as saying he did not take the threat seriously.

    "I've probably got about $30 million worth of lottery text messages in my phone at the moment. So, usually when I get a message from an unknown number I don't take it too seriously," he was quoted as saying.

    People in at least five Australian states -- New South Wales, Western Australia, Victoria, Queensland, South Australia and Tasmania -- have reported receiving the texts on their cellphones, The Australian newspaper said.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Reports: Workers told to underplay Fukushima radiation
    • US F-16 fighter jet crashes off coast of Japan
    • Gunman in Afghan police uniform kills 3, wounds several
    • Explosion, fire shuts down Turkey-Iraq oil pipeline; PKK blamed
    • Assad reportedly directs troops from tribal heartland as rebels flood capital
    • UN extends Syria observer mission as fighting continues
    • Video: Lost in translation: Do the English speak English?

    Follow World News on NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    4 comments

    critical times hard to deal with, will be here.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: fbi, australia, scam, death-threat, scotland-yard, cellphone, featured

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