A 19-year-old TikTok user in Blackpool has been arrested after making a fake emergency call to get more views on social media. Kian King is now facing charges after his hoax led to a massive 90-minute search by emergency services for a person who didn’t exist.
According to Dexerto, the incident happened around 2:30 AM on January 13. King told authorities that someone had gone into the sea near the RNLI lifeboat station. His false report caused Lancashire Police, the fire department, ambulances, HM Coast Guard, helicopters, and lifeboat volunteers to rush to the scene.
Emergency teams spent 90 minutes searching the water based on his fake report. During that time, these important services were stuck dealing with a false alarm instead of responding to real emergencies that could have cost lives.
This hoax put real lives at risk and wasted important resources
When the search found nothing, police quickly figured out the call was fake. The 19-year-old was arrested and charged with wasting police time. A police spokesman confirmed what happened and explained the serious response it caused.
The spokesman said, “We have charged a man in connection with a hoax call which led to an emergency response in Blackpool, involving police, HM Coastguard, the fire service and ambulance service.” They explained the hoax was “thought to have been linked to an attempt to boost engagement on a social media account.”
The situation got even worse during the search. HM Coast Guard Fleetwood said that while their air crew was searching the water, someone pointed a laser pen at their equipment. This made their job harder and more dangerous during what they thought was a real rescue. TikTok users creating wild content for views has become a growing problem on the platform.
The Coast Guard warned about how serious this was. They said, “Laser pens cause a significant risk to our air crew and seriously hamper their efforts to locate people in difficulty and save lives.” They added that it is “incredibly irresponsible to target aircraft with such devices.”
This isn’t the first time someone has gotten in trouble for using emergency services for online content. In 2023, IShowSpeed accidentally called emergency services and got a warning from police along with a threat of felony charges.
King’s case appears to be intentional and shows the serious legal problems that come from treating emergency services as a joke for social media views. While some people make unusual promises on TikTok to gain attention, faking emergencies crosses a dangerous line. The Coast Guard still encourages people to call them if they “have concerns or suspect an emergency on the coast.”
Published: Jan 15, 2026 07:20 pm