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Armed offenders squad sent in to end internet date from hell

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Mon, 16 Feb 2009 12:00a.m.

Police are warning of the dangers of internet relationships after a German woman who struck up an online relationship with a New Zealand man was rescued by armed police in Dunedin on Saturday.

The 30-year-old woman arrived in Dunedin to find the man she had met online was "not who he had portrayed himself to be", Detective Senior Sergeant Steve McGregor told the Otago Daily Times.

Mr McGregor said friends of the woman had become concerned for her safety when she failed to meet up with them as arranged after going to meet the man.

Police visited a house in Roslyn, Dunedin, but when they did not find the woman there, and given the concerns the friends had raised with them, they sent in the armed offenders squad (AOS).

Witnesses said they heard what sounded like gunshots coming from the Garfield Avenue address as dozens of armed police swarmed the house about 6.30pm on Saturday, but police said no shots were fired in what they described as a "dangerous situation".

Some of the woman's belongings were found at the property, but she was not there.

Shortly before midnight on Saturday, she returned with the man.

"She was unharmed and grateful for police intervention," Mr McGregor said.

The woman told detectives yesterday she had become increasingly alarmed since meeting the man at Dunedin Airport on February 8 because it was obvious the man had lied to her about his personal circumstances , Mr McGregor said.

He warned of the dangers of meeting people through the internet, and said caution was essential when making arrangements to meet such people.

This was particularly important when a meeting was arranged in a strange or foreign place and particularly in a foreign country where a person might not have family or friendly support.

"This isolation has the potential to place them in a dangerous situation they may not have anticipated or been prepared for," Mr McGregor said.

Police were not planning to lay charges against the man.

NZPA

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Comments

29 Dec 2010 04:48p.m.

spangleking wrote:

they nabbed Maja Gille's Teddy Bar [the familiar she uses to appeal to the pathos of airflight attendnants on long haul flights to get into first class cabins for the cost of an economy ticket..] Cops dont want to know.. she made complete fools out of them. It was all a scam...

21 Feb 2009 10:02p.m.

spangleking wrote:

q1- a deviant policeman at the dunedin central police station.
q2 -they arrived home to get changed for more fun, dancing and music
q-3, no he hadnt she loved him and he her, but her career came first. She was sick of her appartment in Hinrichsen strasse. She had stalked hin carefully and meticulously on the net since october 2008. She used female gendered sterotypes and his website blog status involving another deviant female he met at university on a project. she knew the dumb cops would support her [ blonde on the railway tracks] based on his tracvk record and waht he told here in hundreds of email threads. she enlisted an accomplice on the plane over here to act as stooge a few cell phone calls and now she is set up for life with interviews and the dunedin police actually facilitating, aiding and abetting her crimes and her first class holiday at the expence of the rate/tax payers.

she had a fantastic time and if you search her name voila...

16 Feb 2009 05:25p.m.

Daniel wrote:

What made it the date from hell? How did they rescue her? If they're not placing charges does it not seem like that he hadn't actually done anything to place the woman in distress? It sounds more like the woman had a good time if he didn't distress her that she skipped a meeting with friends and stayed til midnight. Saying "not who he had portrayed himself to be" seems to be "not a millionaire that looks like Paris". And the grateful for police intervention sounds like, "Thanks for caring but I'm fine and I'm going to go back about my ways, see you later." Of course there's dangers with meeting people over the internet but usually they're NEVER what they say they are and this is a terrible example for the police to use. More detail would be fantastic but I think more detail would suddenly contradict the entire story so it's more convenient to leave it out.

16 Feb 2009 01:30p.m.

michael wrote:

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