[WorldUrbanLegend] 999 phone charging
The urban legend about dialing 999 when your phone's battery is low claims that doing so will recharge the phone. This has been confirmed to be false by several UK police forces, which have publicly warned against the dangers of making such calls.
The belief originated from a feature of BlackBerry phones. When the battery level was too low, the phone would automatically lock and block all calls except to emergency services. People discovered that if they dialed 999 and hung up immediately, they could bypass the temporary lock on their phone for a few minutes. This myth seems to have started in a BlackBerry forum in 2012.
In 2015, a related belief emerged that saying "Siri, charge my phone to 100%" would secretly dial emergency services. This was confirmed to be a bug in Apple's programming and was fixed within a day. However, the myth continued to spread as a joke on social media.
In 2013, Derbyshire police issued a press release warning against believing the claim that calling 999 would recharge the battery. They noted that operators must check for emergencies on every silent or dropped 999 call, which wastes police time and can delay responses to actual emergencies. Bedfordshire police also issued information advising against calling 999 unless it’s an emergency, reporting an increase in false calls related to the urban legend in the last six months of 2013. Other sources reinforced these press releases, emphasizing that misuse of the 999 number is illegal. Police also stated that they could disconnect calls that abuse the 999 service.