UK Pick-up truck with 'vile' artwork of a kidnapped woman tied up on the back is investigated by police as a potential hate crime

Norwich pick-up truck with artwork of a kidnapped woman tied up in back is investigated by police​

By Jacob Thorburn For Mailonline 13:42 EDT 04 Jun 2021 , updated 05:54 EDT 05 Jun 2021
7hrs ago

A police investigation has been launched after a pick-up truck was spotted with a 'vile' image of a kidnapped woman on its tail gate.

Motorists did a double take and were horrified to see the artwork portraying an apparently abducted blonde woman lying down while tied up in the rear of the vehicle.

The vehicle was reported to police after being spotted at traffic lights on the junction of the A47 and A146 roads at Trowse, near Norwich, Norfolk.

Norfolk Police say the incident is being investigated as a potential hate .

A spokesperson for the force said: 'A woman reported seeing a blue pick-up truck with vinyl printed on the back of the truck showing a woman being tied up, blindfolded, bound as if being kidnapped. Enquiries are ongoing.'

The 'vile' vinyl of a woman appearing to be kidnapped was spotted on the junction of the A47 and A146 roads at Trowse, near Norwich

The 'vile' vinyl of a woman appearing to be kidnapped was spotted on the junction of the A47 and A146 roads at Trowse, near Norwich
The picture of the truck created outrage when it was shared by graphic designer Sophia Forte on the Facebook group 'Reclaim These Streets Norwich'.

She said on a message with the picture: 'This was spotted in Norwich. Not okay to normalise violence against women, then people wonder why we have so many issues with it.'

Miss Forte added: 'I'm a graphic designer and from a designer's perspective my job is to educate and inspire and it is sickening visually to think that someone has designed this and in my opinion, it is normalising violence, abuse, threat and control over women.

'It makes me sad that someone that is a designer has abused their power to create something like this. We need to calm people and stand up, not alarm.'

Norfolk Police say they are investigating a potential hate crime, as pictures of the truck emerged online and prompted a huge backlash

Norfolk Police say they are investigating a potential hate crime, as pictures of the truck emerged online and prompted a huge backlash
Other Facebook users left messages condemning the image as 'horrifying' and 'vile'.

One said: 'I have never before seen anything like this on a vehicle. Am shocked.

'It is beyond disgraceful. I really hope someone reported the driver and that there is something that can be done about it.'

Another added: 'What the f*** is wrong with people? How can that ever be funny?'

Community campaigner Jasmine Reeves described the pick up truck as 'disturbing'.

She said: 'This is not okay. I do not want to see it and attempt to explain it to my five and ten-year-old boys. It's no wonder that women do not feel safe in this world.'

Personal trainer James Hellewell of Leeds, West Yorkshire, faced fury in 2014 when he had a similar sticker of a tied up woman on the back of his truck.

He insisted he had only put it on as a joke and he removed it after being warned by police that he could be charged with a public order offence if he continued to display it.

A sign company which put a similar vinyl wrap on the back of an employee's truck in Waco, Texas, in 2013 removed it after a backlash.

The company ended up apologising and making a donation of $2,500 to the Advocacy Center for Crime Victims and Children in Waco.
 
That reminds me of the Halloween decorations where they hang bloody pants legs and shoes off the back of a truck to stimulate a person trapped inside with a broken leg. A little out of season but whatever.


This version I'll admit is more realistic and possibly more unnerving because of that, but it's less bad. If it were real, the woman could roll out the back of the truck and run for help!

The leg in the trunk however... That would be fucking painful, and the rest of the body is trapped inside.
 
tbf it looks realistic enough from a distance that people might actually think it's real - atleast for a second.
And in traffic, that's not very good. Potentially dangerous IMO.
Yeah it's pretty realistic at first glance.

Reminds me of a news article I read awhile back where a dead body was hanging over a fence in plain sight and it was ignored for awhile because it was around Halloween so everyone thought it was a fake corpse. Seems that October is the best time to kill someone, and not for the reasons you'd think.
 
Britain is a post humor society.

I think it's fucking hilarious personally.
You know, back...well, many decades ago, say...when I first discovered the internet through Usenet and so on, I used to see posted often by Brits that Americans had no sense of humo(u)r. And they were very specific: no "sense" of it in that we didn't understand comedic timing, etc. They'd get very vehement about that.

Welp...if I could, I'd tell them one thing: I won't go to jail for a fucking joke, which this poor bastard is about to. So, yeah.
 
Miss Forte added: 'I'm a graphic designer and from a designer's perspective my job is to educate and inspire and it is sickening visually to think that someone has designed this and in my opinion, it is normalising violence, abuse, threat and control over women.
"THIS ART ISN'T ART BECAUSE I DON'T LIKE IT" - Well, that's something. I mean, shit nigga, just because I think pop-art is normalizing retardation doesn't mean that it can't exist in society or has to be taken down.
 
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