PSNI investigate hoax mountain rescue call

A police investigation was launched today after a hoax call led to the waste of hundreds of thousands of pounds in a mountain…

A police investigation was launched today after a hoax call led to the waste of hundreds of thousands of pounds in a mountain search for a French tourist.

A call for help saw a massive search and rescue operation mounted in the Mountains of Mourne in Co Down yesterday.

After a day-long operation police announced they were treating the call as “a deliberate hoax” and mounting an investigation.

The alert was said to have started when a French tourist staying at a local hotel called the establishment yesterday morning saying he was lost in the mountains. He gave no further details, said the Police Service of Northern Ireland.

READ MORE

Four helicopters and a spotter plane along with dog teams and other rescue teams were sent to look for the man.

But police later called off the search saying they no longer believed the man was missing.

Chairman of the local Down District Council, Colin McGrath, condemned the hoaxer saying : “Here we have one person making one phone call and over £200,000 (€218,762) of public money being spent. That money could be put to much better use.

“The money that has been spent here on one hoax call is unbelievable.

“Obviously when you have four helicopters — one brought in from Wales — Ambulance Service, Fire & Rescue Service, Mourne Rescue teams, PSNI, Coastguard involvement, this is a massive, massive operation which is going to drain services and resources.”

PA