Start with a clear theme
The key to this handwritten newspaper is not introducing police work. It is about warning readers how to recognize scams in which someone pretends to be police, an investigator, or a safety officer. A direct title such as What Should You Do If Someone Pretends to Be Police on the Phone? makes the purpose clear at first glance.
Under the main title, you can add a short line like Stay calm, verify first, never transfer money in panic. It works well as both a reminder and a display sentence.
Ready-to-use sections for the page
1. Common warning signs
- The caller sounds urgent and says you are involved in a serious case
- The caller tells you to keep it secret from parents or teachers
- The caller asks you to move money into a so-called safe account
- The caller wants your ID number, bank details, or verification code
- The caller sends a strange link or asks you to install unknown software
2. Five correct response steps
- Hang up first and do not panic
- Do not share any account details, passwords, or codes
- Tell a parent or teacher immediately
- Verify through official channels instead of calling back strange numbers
- If money or information was lost, report it quickly and save the records
3. Easy anti-fraud slogans
- Real police do not handle cases by asking for transfers on the phone
- Do not panic over strange calls, ask parents first
- Do not trust, do not reveal, do not transfer
- Verify one more time and stay safe
Add simple real-life situations
To make the page more vivid, add one or two short situations. Each one only needs two or three sentences.
Situation one: a threatening phone call
The caller says a family member is involved in a case and demands immediate cooperation. The correct action is to hang up first, contact parents, and verify through official numbers.
Situation two: screen sharing request
The caller claims to be staff and asks you to open an app for checking. Do not follow the instructions, do not share your screen, and ask an adult for help at once.
Use a simple page structure
A warning topic like this works well with a left-right layout or a top-middle-bottom structure. Put the big title at the top, the scam signs and response steps in the center, and situation reminders with slogans at the bottom. This makes the message easy to follow.
- Use dark blue or red for the main title
- Show warning signs as bullet points
- Show response steps as numbered actions
- Decorate the corners with a phone, warning sign, or magnifying glass
How to finish the handwritten newspaper
You can close with a short reminder: If someone claims to be police or an investigator on the phone, do not be scared and do not handle it alone. Tell parents or teachers first, then verify before taking any action. One extra check can help you avoid a scam.
If you want to improve the layout, adjust titles, or add more useful sections, you can continue creating in the Zhihui Shouchaobao WeChat mini program.