Quote:
Originally Posted by GlamourGirl827
My main concern would be, if you make an "anonymous" call, can you be 100% sure it will remain anonymous? If there any way they might figure out it was you?
In my experience (which is limited to within the U.S., in case you're outside the states), one of two things will happen if you make an anonymous call: they will immediately skip the identification part - they may still ask for your relationship to the family in question - and respect that you wish to remain anonymous. Or, they will freaking harass you to reveal who you are, sometimes without you really realizing. They may guilt you into giving your name - "what if we can't find her or need more information, how are we supposed to reach you?" - they may pseudo-threaten you by saying they can't do anything without a complainant (this is total BS, in domestic violence issues, the state can be the complainant and/or file on behalf of a non-cooperating victim), or they may try to piece together who you are by asking only for your first name, then later your phone number or e-mail address, then later the name of the street on which you live, which they will use to determine who you are. They will NOT share this information with your neighbor or anyone else; it's kept internally for their investigation, in case they need more information, which is why they want to know who you are. The only way anyone could learn your identity is if it's later determined you made a false report.
However, if you feel more comfortable being completely anonymous, you can refuse to give ANY personally-identifying information. If they push you to provide a method of contact, create a throw-away e-mail address and tell them they may e-mail you if they need more information. You do NOT have to reveal who you are in this situation, no matter how much they try to convince you otherwise.
So keep that in mind. Their goal is to get as much information from you as possible so they can investigate before tipping off the abuser by contacting anyone in his family - they don't care if you lose your friendship over it, nor should they. It's harder to do their job when they don't have a way to contact you if they need your help, but it's certainly not impossible, and an anonymous call is better than no call at all.