When will people like Mary Bale learn that it’s not to safe to assume you’re not being watched?

Unusually it was a privately owned surveillance system that caught Mary dumping a cat into a wheelie bin but now her moment of madness is visible throughout the internet and she’s under police protection.

Whilst her actions can’t be condoned, I’m not so sure that it’s quite right for the cat owner to effectively create an instant mob by way of Facebook either. As he says in the interview in the Mail, he feels that it should be handled by the proper authorities although given the reactions of some people to her actions I’d say that he wishes that he’d left it to them in the first place.

It’s right that appropriate action should be taken against her, of course, but is it right that an instant mob was created by publishing the video on the net?

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2 Responses to “When will people like Mary Bale learn that it’s not to safe to assume you’re not being watched?”

  • BFBJUYJ says:

    good question

  • BlacKCard says:

    They just wanted to figure it who the person was and it was a good thing they posted it up because it makes us more aware of the things that can happen to our pets if they’re not watched.

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