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Hoax Police Blues.
The Ethics of Hoax Policing: Den Tarragon Threatens to Involve Fake Police.
A shocking new twist has emerged in the ongoing saga surrounding the so-called King’s Flag Scam Hoax.
As an independent journalist and campaigner I’ve received a direct warning from Den Tarragon, one of the key figures spreading misinformation about John Wanoa and the “King’s Flag Scam” narrative.
The message read:
“Matt don’t bother me or ile air what you had to hide no more warnings okay could even send it directly to PC Jones nonce police don’t take my kindness for a weakness.”
At face value, the statement is threatening. But the real ethical scandal lies in the reference to “PC Jones nonce police.”
Who is “PC Jones”?
Contrary to appearances, “PC Jones” is not a serving police officer. The name refers to Danny Jones, a YouTube personality infamous for his Hoax Police persona — a long-running act in which he impersonates a police officer online.
By threatening to pass “information” to Jones, Den Tarragon has admitted he is prepared to legitimise a fake policeman in order to intimidate his opponents.
The Ethics of Threatening with a Hoax.
The implications are clear:
No confidence in real authorities. If Tarragon’s claims had any weight, he would take them to actual police. He hasn’t.
Weaponising deception. Turning to a hoax “policeman” is an attempt to give false authority to baseless claims.
Desperation on display. Having been exposed with facts and evidence, Tarragon is now leaning on scare tactics rather than truth.
Why It Matters.
Impersonating authority figures — and legitimising those impersonations — undermines public trust. It erodes the seriousness of real police work and creates a toxic culture in which lies and intimidation are valued over accountability and evidence.
This isn’t just a personal attack on John Wanoa — it’s a case study in how misinformation merchants protect their false narratives. When their lies are exposed, they don’t apologise. They don’t correct themselves. They escalate to hoaxes, intimidation, and threats.
Conclusion.
Den Tarragon’s reference to the Hoax Police isn’t just a throwaway comment. It exposes the ethics of his entire operation: deception, desperation, and the weaponisation of lies.
And for observers of the King’s Flag Scam Hoax, it confirms what has long been suspected — that behind the noise, there is no evidence. Only threats.
Published by MattTaylorTV! – Fighting back against hoaxes, lies, and misinformation.
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