The sentence this stranger uses to lure seven-year-old girl from playground
<p>Parents, family members and carers have been warned to educate their children about stranger danger after an experiment on <em><a href="https://9now.nine.com.au/today/stranger-danger-experiment-today-show-alerts-parents-difference-in-age-group-relations/b7e49c16-38fc-4e45-8297-f97385651c33">Today</a> </em>showed how easily young people can be lured.</p>
<p>Seven-year-old Georgia Cooke was at the playground where a strange man approached her.</p>
<p>“Excuse me. Have you seen my puppy? Can you come have a look with me?” said Brett Lee, a former Queensland Police officer who posed as a stranger.</p>
<p>“Just come give me a hand. Good on you.”</p>
<p>According to <em>Today </em>reporter Sarah Stewart, Georgia agreed to follow the man because she did not understand that he might have an ulterior motive.</p>
<p>“All she focused on was that lost puppy,” Stewart said.</p>
<p>“She wanted to find the dog. She had no concept that Brett was a stranger, someone she didn’t know that could be leading her away from her parents.”</p>
<p>While Georgia could be coaxed into leaving the park, her older brother Mitchell gave a different reaction.</p>
<p>“No, leave me alone!” the 8-year-old screamed before running away from Lee.</p>
<p>Bruce Morcombe, whose son Daniel was abducted from the Sunshine Coast in 2003, said parents need to have a discussion on personal safety with their children and look out for any signs of danger.</p>
<p>“The parents need to be observant, they need to trust their instincts and they need to report any time they feel something is a little suspicious or something is not quite right,” Morcombe told <em><a href="https://www.news.com.au/national/queensland/crime/the-20minute-video-saving-kids-from-stranger-danger/news-story/58bf5568135eb199dfd44bbfb9b87b08">Sunrise</a></em>.</p>
<p>“So recognising personal danger, knowing how to react – so get to a safe place or scream or yell, ‘I need help’, but most importantly and the interesting thing about this particular case is, that child did the right thing.”</p>
<p>Last week, security guard Mohammad Hassan Al Bayati was sentenced to two years in jail for kidnapping and indecently assaulting a three-year-old girl at DFO Homebush in Sydney.</p>
<p>Al Bayati took the young child from the shopping centre’s playground to the stairwell, where he exposed himself and touched her underwear.</p>