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The Clipboard Petition Scam

A clipboard 'petition' pushed in your face occupies your hands while an accomplice works your bag. Here's how it works and how to walk past it.

✓ What the scam is
✓ How to avoid it
✓ Where it happens

The clipboard petition scam is one of the most effective distraction cons in Europe because it does two jobs at once. A young person — often pretending to be deaf or mute — pushes a clipboard "petition" at you to sign for a good cause. While your hands and eyes are busy, an accomplice works your bag or pocket, and once you've signed you're pressured for a cash "donation." It's not dangerous, and a single habit defeats it. Here's how it works and how to walk past it.

How the Clipboard Petition Scam Works

A friendly young person approaches with a clipboard and a pen, asking you to sign a petition — to support a charity for the deaf, a children's cause, the environment, anything sympathetic. Sometimes they gesture that they can't hear or speak, which discourages questions. The clipboard is the key prop: holding it up to read and sign occupies both your hands and your attention, and it screens your waist and bag from your own view. That's the moment an accomplice standing nearby lifts your wallet or phone. Even without a pickpocket, the "petition" ends in a demand: once you've signed, they point to a column of donations and press you to add cash, often becoming insistent.

Where You'll Encounter It

It clusters wherever tourists stand still in crowds — outside major attractions and in big squares:

  • Rome: near the Vatican queues, the Colosseum, and the busy piazzas.
  • Barcelona: along La Rambla, in Plaça Catalunya, and around the Sagrada Família.
  • Paris and other major European capitals: near landmarks, bridges, and museum entrances.

The Red Flags

  • A young person approaches you with a clipboard and asks you to sign.
  • They gesture that they're deaf or mute to head off conversation.
  • The clipboard is held up close, between you and your bag.
  • There are others loitering nearby who seem connected.
  • After signing, you're shown "donations" and pressed for cash.

How to Avoid It

Don't stop and don't take the clipboard. Legitimate charities do not collect signatures and cash this way by ambushing tourists outside monuments. Keep one hand on your bag, give a clear "no," and keep walking — you're not being rude, you're protecting yourself. Because the petition is so often paired with a pickpocket, this is also a good moment to make sure your bag is worn across your front and zipped. If you genuinely want to support a cause, do it through the charity directly, not a street clipboard.

What to Do if You're Targeted

Simply decline and move on; there's nothing to resolve. If you discover a wallet or phone is missing afterward, get to a safe spot, report the theft to local police (dial 112 across the EU) and get a written report for your insurance or card claim, and call your bank to cancel any stolen cards immediately. If your details were exposed, our guides on what to do after a scam, how to report it, and freezing your credit cover the next steps back home. And since the real loss here is whatever the pickpocket takes, a travel insurance policy arranged before your trip is what reimburses a stolen wallet or phone.

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Frequently Asked Questions

It's a distraction con in which someone asks you to sign a "petition" on a clipboard. While you read and sign, an accomplice picks your pocket, and you're then pressured to make a cash donation. It's common in crowded tourist areas across Europe.
The clipboard "petitioners" who approach tourists outside major attractions are almost always running this scam. Legitimate charities don't gather signatures and cash by ambushing visitors at monuments. Treat any unsolicited street petition as a setup.
Don't take it and don't stop. Keep one hand on your bag, say "no" clearly, and keep walking. Don't sign and don't open your wallet — the petition exists to distract you and set up a donation demand.
It's widespread in major European tourist cities, with the Vatican area and piazzas of Rome, La Rambla and the Sagrada Família in Barcelona, and the landmarks of Paris among the most common spots.

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