The organ mafia is back. This time in Rheine. Allegedly.
It is said to be a group that is looking for organs. A fuller woman, the others slimmer. Armed with syringes and knives and with poor German, they are always on the move between 1 a.m. and 4 a.m. (probably meaning 1 p.m. and 4 p.m.) and can be found primarily in gas stations.
Yes, he's coming back to life! The old organ mafia fake is currently getting a revival in Rheine. The organ mafia fake appears on Facebook in the form of a sharepic that requires graphical assistance in the following way:

That's what the police in Rheine say
Even if the past has shown us that every organ mafia status report on Facebook has turned out to be fake, you still have to approach every claim that arises with the same caution.
Therefore, in this case too, we wrote to the police in Rheine and asked for information. We got the following answer:
Hello Mr. Wolf,
I read the Facebook message about organ hunters in Rheine being warned.
The Steinfurt police have no information that would justify such a warning.
This is probably a hoax (new German: fake news).
Best regards
Reiner Schöttler;
EPHK - press spokesman for the Steinfurt district police authority -
Organ mafia: old hat!
But really old! The alleged Bulgarian organ mafia has been bothering us since Mimikama existed, i.e. since 2011. In fact, we reported on it in October 2011 .
But the story is much older: the first version of such a story that we were able to find in our research dates back to the 17th century. It was about a child who went missing at a celebration and was found with his eyes gouged out.
They are everywhere!
The time and place change, but the components are always the same: men, preferably with a southern appearance, either from Romania or Bulgaria, are traveling in vans to catch children. These messages are often accompanied by an alleged photo evidence of two young men in a white van. In 2014, this hysteria over organ-stealing foreigners reached such a peak that we wrote a constantly updated article .

So what's the point?
It plays on people's primal fears by depicting an event that one would never want to experience. This then drives readers to share on Facebook and WhatsApp. Not reprehensible per se, but the “Peter and the Wolf” effect cannot be dismissed: If a real warning message actually circulates, it gets lost in the swamp of meaningless chain letters full of urban legends.
Therefore, sharing such posts should generally be discouraged unless it is an official warning message, for example from the police.
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Notes:
1) This content reflects the current state of affairs at the time of publication. The reproduction of individual images, screenshots, embeds or video sequences serves to discuss the topic. 2) Individual contributions were created through the use of machine assistance and were carefully checked by the Mimikama editorial team before publication. ( Reason )

