Knock, knock, ginger

Knock, knock, ginger (also known as ding, dong, ditch and ring and run in the United States) is a prank or game dating back to 19th-century England, or possibly the earlier Cornish traditional holiday of Nickanan Night. The game is played by children in many cultures. It involves knocking on the front door (or ringing the doorbell) of a victim, then running away before the door can be answered.

The name knock, knock, ginger, “knock down ginger” or knocky door ginger, used in parts of Southern England, is attested at least as early as 1867, in an English poem found in the "Childhood in Poetry" collection:
 * Ginger, Ginger broke a winder
 * Hit the winda – crack!
 * The baker came out to give 'im a clout
 * And landed on his back.

Name variations
The game in various forms is known by different names geographically, including the following:

Europe

 * Knock a door dash (Liverpool)
 * Knock door run, (midlands)
 * Chappy (Scotland)
 * Cherry Knocking (Gloucestershire, England)
 * Belfast (Northern Ireland)
 * Knock Down Ginger (England)
 * Knock Off Ginger (England)
 * Bobby Knocking (Wales)
 * knock a door run/knock door run (England)
 * Knock door run (Leicester, England)
 * Knicky-Knocky Nine Doors (Durham)
 * Knocky door neighbours (Newcastle Upon Tyne)
 * Knock and bolt (Buckinghamshire, England)
 * Belletje trekken (Netherlands)
 * Klingelstreich (Germany)
 * Belleke trek (Belgium)
 * Knock and nash (United Kingdom)
 * Chicky melly chap-door-run, chappy, chappies (Scotland)
 * Knock and run (England)
 * Knick knack (Dublin, Ireland)
 * Knock a dolly (Ireland)
 * Knick Knock Nanny (Oxfordshire, England)
 * Knick Knock (Cornwall, England)
 * Cherry knocking (United Kingdom)
 * Ringepigg (Norway)
 * Ajtóbetyárkodás (Hungary)
 * Tocatimbres (Spain)
 * Rat a Tat Ginger (Coventry, England)
 * Dyraat (Iceland)

North America

 * Ding dong ditch (United States)
 * Doorbell ditch (United States)
 * Doorbell dixie (United States)
 * Knock, knock, ginger (Canada)
 * Knicky Knicky Nine Door (Canada)
 * Ring and run (United States)
 * Sonne-décrisse (Canada)

Oceania

 * Knick Knocking (Australia)
 * Ding dong dash (Australia)

Africa

 * Tok-tokkie (South Africa)

South America

 * Rinraje (Argentina)
 * Rín-Rín-Raja (Chile)
 * Tin-Tin Corre-Corre (Colombia)
 * Tocar a campainha e sair correndo (Brazil)

Asia

 * Bel-Twi (벨튀, South Korea)
 * Ping-Pong Dash (ピンポンダッシュ, Japan)

Legality
Victims of this prank are not likely to call the police, but if they decide to, the prankster can face charges of trespassing and disturbing the peace. In England and Wales, trespassing is a civil matter rather than a criminal one, and the police will not compile a case for a victim. However, under the Town Police Clauses Act 1847, it is a criminal offence to "wilfully and wantonly disturb any inhabitant, by pulling or ringing any door bell, or knocking at any door" punishable with up to 14 days' imprisonment. In Scotland, although the Land Reform (Scotland) Act 2003 establishes universal access rights, the so-called "right to roam" is only permitted where the privacy of others is respected. Such errant behaviour could be regarded as the Scottish common law criminal offence of "malicious mischief".

On 13 June 2011, Michael Bishop, a 56-year-old man, shot at a group of children playing ding dong ditch at his house in Louisville, Kentucky. A 12-year-old boy was hit in the back with a shotgun blast and was taken to Kosair Children's Hospital "with what police call non-life-threatening injuries". The shooter was charged with attempted murder. On 8 December 2015, his final day in office, outgoing Kentucky governor Steve Beshear issued 197 pardons, including a pardon for Bishop.

A 14-year-old Oklahoma teenager, Cole Peyton, was shot in the back and arm while playing "ding dong ditch" in the early hours of New Year's Day of 2016.

Dean Taylor, a 63-year-old coach and former San Francisco Police Department officer, was arrested following an incident involving an 11-year-old boy who rang his doorbell in San Rafael, California on 12 February 2021. After two boys rang his door and ran, Taylor chased the boys in a vehicle, cut off one of the youths and emerged from the car. Then he allegedly grabbed one 11-year-old boy by the neck, pushed him to the ground and forced him into his vehicle. He drove the terrified boy around the block, and allegedly told the boy that he would "put a bullet in his head" if the prank happened again. He dropped the boy off near Point San Pedro Road and Loch Lomond Drive, and police were called. Taylor faces felony charges including kidnapping, making criminal threats, false imprisonment, battery and child endangerment.

A California man, Anurag Chandra, 42, faces several murder charges for his role in the Temescal Canyon Road crash on 24 January 2020. After one of the boys had been dared, all six teenagers drove to a nearby home on Mojeska Summit Road in Corona, about 50 miles southeast of Los Angeles. The boy rang the doorbell and returned to the 2002 Prius that they were riding in, and the group took off. Chandra, who lives at the home, chased after them in his 2019 Infiniti Q50. His car rammed into the back of the Prius, causing it to veer off the road and into a tree. Daniel Hawkins, Jacob Ivascu and Drake Ruiz, all 16-year-old passengers, were killed in the crash. The 18-year-old driver and two other boys, ages 13 and 14, were injured but survived. In 2023, he was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.