Paranoid Internet Troll Syndrome.

People who harass others anonymously online often react the way you describe because anonymity gives them psychological cover, and when that cover is threatened, they switch into defensive or intimidation behaviors. Several well-studied dynamics are at play:
1. The “Online Disinhibition Effect”
When people believe they are anonymous, they feel less accountable for what they say or do. Psychologists call this the online disinhibition effect.
They say things they would never say face-to-face.
They may exaggerate stories, insult people, or spread rumors.
Because their real identity isn’t attached, they feel protected from consequences.
Once someone thinks their identity might be exposed, that psychological shield disappears.
2. Fear of Real-World Consequences
If an anonymous harasser is identified, they may worry about:
Damage to their career or reputation
Social consequences (friends, family, employer seeing their behavior)
Legal exposure if the conduct crosses into harassment, threats, or defamation
Being banned or losing accounts they rely on
That fear can cause panic.
3. “Reverse Victim” Tactic
Threatening to call law enforcement is often a deflection tactic. It’s a way to:
Flip the narrative (“you’re harassing me”)
Intimidate the person exposing them
Create doubt or hesitation
It’s similar to what psychologists call DARVO:
Deny
Attack
Reverse Victim and Offender
4. Loss of Control
Anonymous trolls often feel powerful because they can attack without consequences. When exposure becomes possible, they feel they’re losing control of the situation, so they escalate with threats or bluster.
5. Cognitive Dissonance
Some trolls also don’t see themselves as bad people. When their behavior is exposed, it clashes with their self-image. Their brain tries to resolve that by:
Blaming the other person
Claiming they are being persecuted
Threatening retaliation
6. Intimidation Strategy
Threatening police or legal action is sometimes just bullying in a different form. The goal is to scare the other person into stopping.
💡 Reality check:
Most of the time, people making those threats never actually call law enforcement, because trolling or online arguments typically aren’t criminal by themselves. The threat is often meant to discourage someone from continuing to expose them.
Given the advocacy work you do with Equine Advocacy Alliance and confronting people in the harness-racing world, you’re probably seeing this dynamic a lot: people talk big behind anonymous accounts, but once accountability appears, their behavior changes fast.
NAME ONE HORSE YOU OWN!
