Most stalking behavior is done by someone known to the victim, such as current or former partner. However, some victims are being tracked completely by strangers
When going to work, do you come out with your friends or near your house, does someone seem to be in the immediate vicinity?
When you are away from home, have you found someone in your house, car, workplace, or nearby?
Would you like to receive duplicate letters, gifts, cards, posts from social media, or e-mail, even if you instruct the sender to stop sending?
Is there anyone trying to get information about you from a third party, such as a family member, friend, colleague?
Someone on the Internet, public places, information from mouth to mouth, or rumors about you are spreading.
Stalking is an unnecessary concern of others (unnecessary crowd). Stalking is related to harassment and intimidation. The term "chasing" has various meanings in various contexts of psychology and psychiatry, and in some jurisdictions it is used to refer to specific types of criminal offenses. It may also refer to criminal or civil errors, including acts believed to be tracked, such as those described as "harassment" or similar terms by law.
In 2013, the Indian parliament revised the "Indian Penal Code" to criminalize the stalking. Stalking behavior is defined as being followed by a male or in contact with a woman, but women clearly show that they are not interested or watch the use of the Internet or electronic communication I will. People who are convicted of stalking are sentenced to a maximum of three years imprisonment penalty and fine, and subsequent convictions are imposed on imprisonment with a maximum of five years and a fine.
For the first time in the past 15 years, the legal system began recognizing the stalking and dealt with it. In 1990, California handed off the tracking and killing of actress Rebecca Schaefer and former intimate partner to follow and kill five women in Orange County (Gilligan, 1992). In 1990 the bill passed domestic first anti-tracking law. Quoted from Jenson in 1996). In the next decade, tracking prevention laws were passed in all 50 states, the District of Columbia and the federal level (Stalking Resource Center, 2003). Despite several differences, these laws define the general definition of stalking behavior as "a process of action against a group of specific people, leading to reasonable human fear" (National Crime Victims Center, 2004, p. 1).