A Woman Reported Her Best Friend’s Fiancé To The Police, Then Found Out The Story Might Have Been A Lie

It was the kind of late-night call that instantly raises your pulse. A 24-year-old woman got a frantic message from her best friend of over a decade, begging to be picked up immediately.

The problem? The trip would have been a 450-mile round journey, and she didn’t have the money or fuel to make it happen. Still, something in her friend’s tone made it feel urgent, even dangerous.

When she asked what was going on, the answer was alarming. Her friend claimed her fiancé was a drug dealer who had just gotten into a violent altercation, even pulling a weapon.

It didn’t stop there. She added that his friend had stabbed people in front of children. The kind of story that sticks with you, especially when there are two young kids involved.

And here’s the crucial detail. The woman who received that call wasn’t just a friend.

'AITAH for reporting my best friend’s fiancé to the police?'

I (F24) and my best friend (F24) have known each other since we were 13, she has two children (M2 and F 6 months).

She rang me late Saturday night demanding that I go and pick her up and bring her back to where I live (450 mile round trip),

which I could not do due to the fuel crisis and having no money until I was paid.

I asked her what had gone on which needed me to get her so suddenly and she had explained that her fiancé (M32?) is a dr*g dealer and had gotten...

She also told me that her fiancé’s best friend has st\*bbed multiple people in front of their own children. This immediately caused me to worry.

Due to my job, I am a mandatory reporter so I had to report this to the police - which I did with little to no detail to not cause...

The police have told me that they will do a DASH (a risk assessment) but they won’t prosecute due to me not being able to provide any evidence.

With a DASH, social services will likely have to get involved, which I’ve since found out have previously been involved due to a report from her son’s nursery over his...

I was unaware of this and found out through our friend within the same group.

I spent all day trying to speak to my best friend and ensure she and the children were safe and I got a reply 12 hours later stating they are...

The following day (Monday), I checked in again and this is where my doubts set in.

She went off on me for reporting this and admitted she lied about the entire situation to guilt me into picking her up and was willing to say anything to...

We ended up going back and forth about the whole situation and she told me I should have spoken to her sober before making the report

which I had done on the Sunday and she carried on with the lie. I had to explain that if it was the truth and the event ended up being...

I would lose my job that I have been working towards since I was 16 which has also cost me thousands in tuition.

Part of me thinks that it did happen and she is backpedaling because now she is getting back together with her fiancé but another part of me is concerned she...

I’m just at a loss, and I feel like an AH for reporting it but I’m also blindsided by the fact she tried to manipulate me into believing she and...

At the time, it didn’t feel like a choice. Mandatory reporting laws exist for situations exactly like this, when there is a credible risk of harm, especially to children.

According to child protection frameworks in places like the UK and US, professionals in certain roles are legally required to report suspected abuse, violence, or dangerous environments. Even uncertainty is enough. The standard is not proof, it’s reasonable concern.

That’s why she contacted the police, carefully limiting details to avoid escalating things unnecessarily, while still fulfilling her duty.

Authorities responded that they would carry out a DASH risk assessment, a process used to evaluate domestic abuse risks and determine whether social services should step in.

At that point, she still believed she was helping.

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The next day, her friend confirmed she and the kids were safe, and that the fiancé had left the home. It seemed like things were moving in the right direction. But then everything flipped.

By Monday, the friend was furious.

Not only did she lash out for involving the police, she claimed the entire story had been fabricated. According to her, none of it had happened. She admitted she made it all up just to guilt her friend into making the long trip to pick her up.

That’s the moment where this situation stops being just stressful and starts becoming deeply unsettling.

Because if the story was a lie, it means someone was willing to invent extreme violence, involving children, to manipulate a friend. And if it wasn’t a lie, then it suggests she’s now backtracking, possibly to protect her fiancé or avoid consequences.

Either version is troubling.

From a psychological standpoint, this kind of behavior sits at a messy intersection of desperation and manipulation.

Research in interpersonal dynamics shows that people under stress sometimes exaggerate or fabricate crises to regain a sense of control or urgency.

But when those fabrications involve serious criminal behavior, it crosses into something far more harmful. It forces others into impossible positions, where doing the right thing can damage the relationship.

For the woman who made the report, the decision was shaped by both ethics and self-preservation. Ignoring a claim like that could have cost her career.

In many professions, failing to report suspected danger can lead to legal consequences, job loss, and long-term reputational damage. She didn’t just act as a friend. She acted within the boundaries of her professional responsibility.

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And yet, she’s the one being blamed.

That’s often how these situations unfold. When someone introduces chaos into a relationship, the person who responds rationally can end up painted as the problem. It shifts attention away from the original behavior and onto the reaction.

Looking at the broader picture, there are only two real possibilities here. Either the friend lied, which signals a pattern of manipulation that could escalate in the future.

Or the original story had truth to it, and now she’s covering it up, which puts both her and her children at continued risk.

Neither scenario leaves much room for a healthy friendship.

See what others had to share with OP:

The overwhelming response was clear. Most people believed she did exactly what she was supposed to do. 

Spiritual_Ad6547 − If she allegedly lied, what’s the reason she needed to be picked up?  Your friend sounds toxic.

She also sounds like she’s in a terrible relationship. Are her kids safe and properly cared for?

Make sure the kids are ok, but if she refuses to get help, you may have to distance yourself from this toxic situation.

Dal-Ron − NTA. You need to cut her out of your life. If it's a lie, it means she's toxic and manipulative over something trivial and willing to put your...

If it was true and now she's lying about it, she willing to hide the truth and put you at risk by having you around a violent person and put...

In either case, she's going to keep putting you at risk because she doesn't care about the consequences to you.

You're not resposible for her or her situation, don't risk yourself for someone's who's lying to protect herself, or protect a criminal. Please keep yourself safe.

Fangs_McWolf − NTA. Your ex-friend doesn't seem to realize that she stirred the s__t, so she shouldn't blame others for the stink. You did your job, and you should NEVER...

If it's a "low-key" situation where you have to report something but it's not time sensitive/urgent, then you might be able to get away with a slight delay in reporting...

But you would need to make sure that wouldn't violate your reporting duties.

It's better to report as required and it be nothing, than to wish you had reported when you didn't.

Many pointed out that when children are potentially involved in dangerous situations, it’s always better to report and be wrong than to stay silent and risk harm. 

Cybermagetx − Nta and shes not your friend. You had reported it. You should just walk away now.

Due-Yoghurt4916 − Why is this person your friend? Do you know who dates d__g dealers? D__G USERS! !! FYI her kids are in danger. From her bad choices and addiction

TrashGouda − NTAH like you said you're a mandatory reporter. You did the right thing regardless of friendship

EffectiveNo7681 − "Help! My fiancé's a d__g dealer and we witnessed a m__der! . ..wait, why are you calling the cops on him? He's a sweetheart! " NTA.

Trying to get you to drive over 200 miles to get her was already insane, but then getting mad that you did the right thing and claiming she lied? !...

What was she hoping would happen?

Others focused on the friend’s behavior, calling it manipulative at best and dangerous at worst.

Wise-Pin1756 − NTA. There two options here 1) She lied to you to manipulate you into doing what she wanted. That’s fucked and you don’t need that kind of friend.

Or 2) Everything she said really did happen, the kids did witness people being violently hurt, and she is now trying to cover up for her d__g dealing man.

If that’s the case you had to report it for the children’s sake because they are the innocent helpless ones in this case

Beta_1 − NTA You did the right thing, both morally and legally. I suspect the story she told you is true and her fiancée is pressuring her into withdrawing the...

Pretty much out of the text books for child protection over here in the UK.

Honestly, I'd be following up my previous report to tell them that she's now cleaning her story as that's a pretty big red flag on its own. Then I'd be...

If she is making this up she's not your friend. If she's not making it up then she's putting herself, her kids, you and your career at risk.

Nebula9k − You did the right thing for the children and your friend. Honestly if she is your best friend, she should know you well enough to expect your response...

If she had made this up to guilt you, then she deserves the consequences for telling such a horrible lie to manipulate you.

Either way you’re definitely not the A-hole. Lose this friend she sounds like a loser

In the End

This wasn’t just about friendship. It was about responsibility, safety, and trust. When someone puts you in a position where doing the right thing feels like a betrayal, something in that relationship is already broken. Whether the story was real or not, the damage is done.

Sometimes the hardest part isn’t making the right call. It’s accepting what that call reveals about the people around you.

So what do you think? Was this a necessary step to protect others, or a situation where loyalty should have come first?

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