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Dec 23, 2025

Toddler Found Under Unusual Circumstances — Who Is He?

The Bruised Toddler That Wasn’t: How a Fake Facebook Post Fooled Thousands

It was the kind of post that stops you mid-scroll — a haunting image of a bruised toddler, paired with a desperate plea for help. According to the viral Facebook story, the boy had been found wandering alone in the night by a police officer named “Deputy Tyler Cooper” in either Hereford or King’s Lynn. The message urged users to share widely, in hopes of reuniting the child with his family.

 

The problem? None of it was true.

 

Within days, local police departments were inundated with concerned calls — but not one report backed the story. West Mercia Police publicly confirmed there was no record of such an incident in Hereford, and no officer named Tyler Cooper on their force. Norfolk Constabulary echoed the same: nothing happened in King’s Lynn, and “Deputy” isn’t even a rank used in their system.

 

What appeared to be a heartbreaking cry for help was, in fact, a digital hoax — carefully engineered to spread rapidly through emotion, confusion, and misplaced compassion.

 

Why These Hoaxes Work — and Why They Keep Coming Back

These types of viral deceptions are nothing new, but they’re becoming more sophisticated. The formula is consistent: an emotional trigger, vague details, and a call to action that plays on urgency and goodwill.

 

What’s worse, these posts are often later edited — the emotional story swapped out for scam links, fake real estate ads, or bogus cashback offers. By the time the bait-and-switch happens, the post may already have thousands of shares.

 

It’s a tactic that preys on empathy while building a huge audience for shady online marketers or fraudsters.

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