KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A crystal meth addict who believed she was doing her civic duty by calling 911 to report imagined acts of violence won’t be held criminally responsible for mischief, a B.C. judge has ruled.

Provincial Court Judge Stephen Harrison decided Robyn Fraser, 54, was suffering a mental disorder in May 2010 when she called 911 several times to report crimes that were not happening.

“The delusions compel her to action; she believes she is fulfilling her civic duties (by calling 911),” Harrison said.

“To her, these hallucinations were real. It’s plain she believed these horrible things were going on. There was a distortion of her appreciation of reality.”

One of Fraser’s calls sparked a serious RCMP response after she said she said saw someone being abducted.

“They threw him in the back of a cube van. He looks in distress to me,” she told the dispatcher. “They were wrestling with him, and they were screaming out there.”

Officers arrived and found only the empty cube van and its surprised driver, court heard.

Later the same day, Fraser again called 911 to say she saw someone being dragged down an alleyway, adding it appeared those who were pulling him were trying to set him on fire.

Fraser was also charged with uttering threats and possession of a weapon stemming from incidents in a trailer park in July 2009.

Again, Fraser called police to report she believed people were being held hostage in one of the trailers. She also described seeing little men in trees.