Residents fight back after spate of incidents thought to be fuelled by social media while real clowns are saddened by trend

This article is more than 5 years old

This article is more than 5 years old

French police are on high alert after fake clowns caused panic across France in a spreading phenomenon that has led to violence and a response by vigilantes.

Fourteen teenagers dressed as clowns and carrying pistols, knives and baseball bats were arrested outside a school in Agde, southern France, on Saturday. One provincial newspaper, Dauphiné Liberé, wrote: “These clowns aren’t funny any more.”

In Montpellier, a 35-year-old man was beaten with a metal rod on Saturday night by a man dressed as a clown who tried to rob him with two accomplices. They were arrested the next day.

A 19-year-old butcher’s apprentice, who had dressed as a clown to terrorise children in Douvrin, northern France, was given a six-month suspended prison sentence at a court in Béthune last week.

Real clowns are dismayed by the trend. “The best thing that could happen is that people stop talking about them,” said Philippe Herreman, who belongs to an association of specially trained clowns who visit hospitals and care homes.

Herreman, who runs a team of eight clowns in northern France called the Clowns of Hope, said he hoped the evil clowns would soon disappear.

But the trend, fuelled by Facebook and other social media, is spreading – prompting police to issue a national appeal urging people to report the fake clowns. Meanwhile, some people have taken the clown hunt into their own hands. Police in Bordeaux stopped a dozen youths who were carrying sticks and metal rods and said they were hunting clowns. One was a 12-year-old boy armed with a dagger.

In eastern France, five people were arrested in Mulhouse last week after setting out to catch scary clowns.

The impostors have told police they are inspired by viral videos from the US. The trend has also surfaced in Britain, where a fake clown was unmasked as a student and film-maker in Northampton this month.

“It’s a terrible development,” said professional clown Franck Dinet. “It’s not enough to put on a costume and stage a happening – you need to have an artistic goal.”