And so, by calling the police, he sidestepped all that and got her help in what turned out to be a real situation and the guy is now on trial. Bravo Baron. |
Yeah this is sketchy AF. |
+1. He seems to be a smart and bright kid. |
The first time I ever made a 911 call from my home, years ago, they had only recently developed the ability to identify phone number and callers. There was a brawl by the entry of my apt building. When I called the dispatcher immediately responded with my name. That threw me for a loop and for awhile I kept asking why she knew who I was. I'm sure this sort of thing happens routinely on 911 calls where the caller is thrown off by something the dispatcher asks. |
Red flags are the very nature of 911 calls. |
I’ve never heard or read anything that indicates how smart Barron is. How did you reach this conclusion? |
Spy thriller stuff! |
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Throughout the day, she had missed calls from him,” Rumiantsev told the court, according to the Daily Beast. “The U.S. is in a different time zone, so he was calling her in the morning, and then he apparently slept, and then he was calling in the evening.”
“He was quite persistent,” Rumiantsev told jurors. “It was hard for me not to be jealous.” But Rumiantsev also questioned whether his ex-girlfriend’s feelings for the 6-foot-9-inch New York University student were sincere. “She was frankly leading him on,” he told the jurors, the Daily Beast reported. While Rumiantsev said he was “jealous,” he also felt that her actions towards Barron were “wrong” and that she wasn’t being “fair either to him or to me.” |
+1. If this were my anonymous kid, I would be appreciative that he helped the woman but wonder wtf he had gotten himself into online |
| It sounds like she was a honeypot. What are the chances a woman on the phone with Barron Trump from across the Atlantic just happened to get assaulted? |
Without a doubt. |
They had to do a lot of work on this story to make him look good. So many gullible people out there. |
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He's fine. I read the news report and heard the 911 call (or whatever it was) and he seemed like he was just trying to do the right thing.
Lots of people get frustrated at emergency call operators for asking so many questions; the don't realize that help has already been dispatched and he operator is asking followup questions. I suppose if the operator said help was on the way, people would hang up? Regardless - he himself isn't a public figure, and he made this call as a private citizen, concerned about another person. I don't think it should be in the news at all. |
+1 Aren't people allowed to make anonymous calls? Or call on behalf of a stranger? Why on earth would they need to know how he knew her, or if he even knew her at all? |
DP. The PP is correct. Sadly, this is how young people meet one another these days. Get with the program. |