A Christchurch mum is warning other parents to monitor their kids鈥 toy walkie-talkies after receiving unwanted communications from an unknown man making moaning sounds and talking about sausages.
The mother-of-two, who wishes to remain anonymous, had bought the toys from Kmart as presents for her sons鈥 Christmas.
She says she was making dinner when she noticed strange sounds from the other end of her house.
鈥淚 went down to my children鈥檚 bedroom and saw my kid鈥檚 walkie-talkie on his bed, and the noises were clearly coming from there, and the man was making like sexual moaning sounds over the walkie-talkie,鈥 she told the Herald.
She says the communications grew creepier.
鈥淐lear sexual innuendos, just saying things like 鈥楧o you like sausages? I鈥檓 gonna come over, you鈥檙e gonna cook my sausage and I鈥檓 gonna make you eat it. Mmmm, I鈥檓 coming for you. I鈥檓 coming over to you now鈥. It went on for a good few minutes,鈥 she said.
The concerned mother says she was unable to switch the toy off.
鈥淔rom the moment the kids started playing with the walkie-talkie, the on button just was permanently stuck on. So I was just running around the house trying to find a screwdriver so I could get the batteries out, and of course the children were hearing it,鈥 she said.
Concerned about where the chat was coming from 鈥 and how close the sender was to her home, she locked the doors.
Kmart sells the $19 walkie-talkie set that the Christchurch mother purchased for her sons, unaware that others could access the same frequency. Photo / Paul Taylor
鈥淥n the packaging, it states that there鈥檚 a 300m maximum distance with the walkie-talkies. My initial concern was that there must be someone within 300m of our house saying stuff.鈥
The Christchurch woman then rang police 鈥 who eased her fears, at least to the possible proximity of the man.
鈥淭hey explained that with someone else if they have a stronger frequency radio they could be further away and still send you a message, but you just wouldn鈥檛 be able to reply back to them,鈥 she says.
Police also suggested changing the frequency of the walkie-talkies.
鈥淏ut the problem is that it鈥檚 set to one radio channel, so you can鈥檛 change the channel on it.鈥
Police confirmed to the Herald that they鈥檇 received the report on December 30 - but without any lines of enquiry identified, it wasn鈥檛 possible to carry out further investigation.
The mother of two young boys says she has also alerted Kmart.
鈥淭hey were really good. They passed me on to a second level of complaints services, and the man sounded really shocked and appalled and said he鈥檚 lodged an official complaint against the product,鈥 she said.
Kmart did not respond to questions from the Herald.
The woman says police also suggested she post about her experience to a relevant social media platform to warn others who had bought the product.
鈥淢y agenda wasn鈥檛 at all for parents to start throwing out their kids' toys. It was more just to raise awareness,鈥 she said.
Her post had drawn hundreds of comments on social media - some from others who鈥檇 had similar experiences.
鈥淎s a toy that is marketed at children, it should have some sort of warning on it. Especially when it very much does incur a possibility of something like that happening,鈥 she said.
- NZ Herald
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