A combination of illegal stalking, criminal harassment, and defamation (slander). The behavior—following you,, causing public scenes, and harassing you at places you eat—is a serious violation of your personal safety and rights.
Dublin Core
Title
A combination of illegal stalking, criminal harassment, and defamation (slander). The behavior—following you,, causing public scenes, and harassing you at places you eat—is a serious violation of your personal safety and rights.
Description
For a Friend
A combination of illegal stalking, criminal harassment, and defamation (slander). The behavior—following you,, causing public scenes, and harassing you at places you eat—is a serious violation of your personal safety and rights.
If you are in immediate danger, call 911 immediately.
Here are the legal and practical steps to stop this behavior, based on standard legal practices for stalking and harassment.
1. Document Everything Immediately
You must create a detailed, chronological log of every incident to establish a pattern of behavior for law enforcement or a court.
Log Details: Date, time, location, exactly what was said or done, and the names of any witnesses.
Evidence Collection: Take photographs or video of the individuals following you if it is safe to do so. Save recordings, emails, or screenshots of social media posts.
Witness Information: Get contact information for restaurant staff, managers, or bystanders who witnessed the harassment.
2. Legal Actions to Take
File a Police Report: Report the stalking and harassment to local law enforcement. Even if they cannot make an immediate arrest, a police report creates an official, timestamped record.
Obtain a Restraining Order/Protection Order: You can request a "no-contact" or "stay-away" order from a court. This order legally requires the offenders to stay a certain distance away from you, your home, and your workplace.
Cease and Desist Letter: Have an attorney send a formal letter demanding the individuals stop the defamatory and harassing behavior. While not always effective, it serves as a legal warning and evidence that you tried to stop the behavior.
"John Doe" Lawsuit: If the people are acting anonymously or in a group, an attorney can file a "John Doe" lawsuit to uncover their identities through subpoenas to social media platforms or Internet Service Providers.
3. Immediate Safety and Practical Steps
Do Not Engage: Do not respond to the harassers, as this often encourages them.
Inform Management: If you are being targeted at specific restaurants, inform management, show them the documentation if necessary, and ask them to trespass the individuals from the property.
Vary Your Routine: Change your daily routes, eating times, and routines to make it harder for them to follow you.
Secure Digital Privacy: Tighten privacy settings on social media and consider temporarily deactivating accounts to prevent them from tracking your location.
4. Legal Definitions of the Behavior
Stalking: Defined as a "course of conduct" that includes following, monitoring, or surveilling a person, causing reasonable fear for safety or significant emotional distress.
Defamation (Slander/Libel): The act of damaging your reputation by making false, spoken (slander) or written (libel) statements to others.
Doxing: Publishing personal information with the intent to cause harassment or fear.
A combination of illegal stalking, criminal harassment, and defamation (slander). The behavior—following you,, causing public scenes, and harassing you at places you eat—is a serious violation of your personal safety and rights.
If you are in immediate danger, call 911 immediately.
Here are the legal and practical steps to stop this behavior, based on standard legal practices for stalking and harassment.
1. Document Everything Immediately
You must create a detailed, chronological log of every incident to establish a pattern of behavior for law enforcement or a court.
Log Details: Date, time, location, exactly what was said or done, and the names of any witnesses.
Evidence Collection: Take photographs or video of the individuals following you if it is safe to do so. Save recordings, emails, or screenshots of social media posts.
Witness Information: Get contact information for restaurant staff, managers, or bystanders who witnessed the harassment.
2. Legal Actions to Take
File a Police Report: Report the stalking and harassment to local law enforcement. Even if they cannot make an immediate arrest, a police report creates an official, timestamped record.
Obtain a Restraining Order/Protection Order: You can request a "no-contact" or "stay-away" order from a court. This order legally requires the offenders to stay a certain distance away from you, your home, and your workplace.
Cease and Desist Letter: Have an attorney send a formal letter demanding the individuals stop the defamatory and harassing behavior. While not always effective, it serves as a legal warning and evidence that you tried to stop the behavior.
"John Doe" Lawsuit: If the people are acting anonymously or in a group, an attorney can file a "John Doe" lawsuit to uncover their identities through subpoenas to social media platforms or Internet Service Providers.
3. Immediate Safety and Practical Steps
Do Not Engage: Do not respond to the harassers, as this often encourages them.
Inform Management: If you are being targeted at specific restaurants, inform management, show them the documentation if necessary, and ask them to trespass the individuals from the property.
Vary Your Routine: Change your daily routes, eating times, and routines to make it harder for them to follow you.
Secure Digital Privacy: Tighten privacy settings on social media and consider temporarily deactivating accounts to prevent them from tracking your location.
4. Legal Definitions of the Behavior
Stalking: Defined as a "course of conduct" that includes following, monitoring, or surveilling a person, causing reasonable fear for safety or significant emotional distress.
Defamation (Slander/Libel): The act of damaging your reputation by making false, spoken (slander) or written (libel) statements to others.
Doxing: Publishing personal information with the intent to cause harassment or fear.
Collection
Citation
“A combination of illegal stalking, criminal harassment, and defamation (slander). The behavior—following you,, causing public scenes, and harassing you at places you eat—is a serious violation of your personal safety and rights.,” Lawrence Catania's Omeka, accessed March 7, 2026, https://omeka.lawrencecatania.com/items/show/4351.