The simple stranger danger tip that saved 11-year-old from horrific ordeal

Attempted kidnapping of 10-year-old caught on camera

A Sheriff has praised parents who use a unique and innovative hack to keep their children safe around strangers.

A worst nightmare for parents across the US is their child being approached and potentially abducted or harmed by dangerous strangers.

A recent incident near a park just outside Phoenix, Arizona, serves as a disturbing reminder of this danger.

An 11-year-old girl was hanging out with a friend near the park when they encountered an unfamiliar man in a white SUV. 

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This stranger claimed that the girl’s brother had been involved in a serious accident and that her parents had instructed him to pick her up. 

However, the quick-witted young girl used a potentially life-saving strategy that would prove whether the man was telling the truth or not.

She asked him a crucial question: “Do you know the ‘code word’?”

Pinal County Sheriff Mark Lamb told USA Today: ”Kudos to the parents of this child for having a code word and talking … to their children about stranger danger.

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“We hope by putting this out, it will encourage parents to have that conversation and create a plan with their children, so they know what to do if they are in that situation.”

This use of a “safe word” or “password” system is a practice also endorsed by The Morcombe Foundation, an organisation established by the family of Daniel Morcombe, who disappeared from the Sunshine Coast at the age of 13. 

The foundation advocates for several preventive measures, including maintaining a list of five trusted adults, establishing a family password, refraining from sharing personal information, staying vigilant, and avoiding solitary excursions. 

These strategies collectively empower children and their families to navigate the world with greater safety and awareness.

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