Evil Pranks
As a student Joel Veitch attached a hose from the sink into my bed. I slowly woke thinking I'd pissed myself. I had the last laugh though. He had to pay for my ruined mattress.
What's the most evil prank you've ever played on someone?
( , Thu 13 Dec 2007, 14:01)
As a student Joel Veitch attached a hose from the sink into my bed. I slowly woke thinking I'd pissed myself. I had the last laugh though. He had to pay for my ruined mattress.
What's the most evil prank you've ever played on someone?
( , Thu 13 Dec 2007, 14:01)
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Pron in the post
This one started with good intentions...
In a shared house in Manchester, with fellow students.
One day Kelvin comes back home with a handful of envelopes. He'd been out to post a letter, but the box had been overflowing, so he decided to use another one instead. Being a helpful type, he took the overflowing letters too. It wouldn't do, after all, for them to be stolen by a random passer-by.
But as he didn't pass another box on the way home, he decided to leave it til the morning.
Of course, we couldn't resist having a look through them.
Most of it was pretty boring. But we opened up one that was addressed to an insurance company.
It was a bloke claiming on his insurance for a broken patio window. He described how his wife had slipped over and broken it as she came in from the garden.
It sounded a bit bogus to us, so we decided to help him out.
We cut a picture out of Readers Wives (British amateur pron mag) of a 40something woman naked on some grass.
Then we stuck it to the bottom of the claim form, with the note: "Here's a picture of my wife in the garden."
And the next morning popped the letter back in the post to the insurance company.
I'd love to know what happened next.
( , Mon 17 Dec 2007, 23:05, 4 replies)
This one started with good intentions...
In a shared house in Manchester, with fellow students.
One day Kelvin comes back home with a handful of envelopes. He'd been out to post a letter, but the box had been overflowing, so he decided to use another one instead. Being a helpful type, he took the overflowing letters too. It wouldn't do, after all, for them to be stolen by a random passer-by.
But as he didn't pass another box on the way home, he decided to leave it til the morning.
Of course, we couldn't resist having a look through them.
Most of it was pretty boring. But we opened up one that was addressed to an insurance company.
It was a bloke claiming on his insurance for a broken patio window. He described how his wife had slipped over and broken it as she came in from the garden.
It sounded a bit bogus to us, so we decided to help him out.
We cut a picture out of Readers Wives (British amateur pron mag) of a 40something woman naked on some grass.
Then we stuck it to the bottom of the claim form, with the note: "Here's a picture of my wife in the garden."
And the next morning popped the letter back in the post to the insurance company.
I'd love to know what happened next.
( , Mon 17 Dec 2007, 23:05, 4 replies)
ah when practical jokes slide into the realm of illigality
Stealing and tampering with the post?
Contravention of the Postal Services Act 2000
www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/ukpga_20000026_en_8#pt5-pb1-l1g84
6 months in clink for you and your mates then
( , Tue 18 Dec 2007, 10:14, closed)
Stealing and tampering with the post?
Contravention of the Postal Services Act 2000
www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/ukpga_20000026_en_8#pt5-pb1-l1g84
6 months in clink for you and your mates then
( , Tue 18 Dec 2007, 10:14, closed)
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