Introduction
Gangstalking, also known variously as community stalking, mass stalking, proxy stalking, cause stalking, coordinated stalking, organized stalking and community harassment, is the act of large surveillance teams continuously tracking, stalking and surveilling targets on a watchlist. The person being stalked is most likely to refer to themselves as a 'Targeted Individual'.
It's often thought that to be on a watchlist you must be a potentially politically influential person, have a significant criminal record or be a danger to society, but that IS NO LONGER TRUE. Due to technological advancements, surveillance has become more efficient and cheaper. Now anyone, even someone without ANY criminal history whatsoever, can be placed on a list.
The tracking is done primarily via picking up the target's mobile phone location using cell site simulators (referred to most commonly colloquially as 'stingray'). The stalking is done primarily by each member of the surveillance team taking it in turns to stalk the target whilst doing 'role play' or 'street theatre'- ie trying to blend into the environment. The surveillance is then done via covert cameras which take imagery of the target as they go about their daily business which is then transmitted via 5G back to a control center.
Considering the bizarre nature of gangstalking and the amount of people involved, it is often not believed when people first hear about it. People will often believe instead that the target must be suffering from paranoia or delusion, when they describe what is happening to them.
The purpose is to gather information about the target and potentially to gather evidence of wrongdoing (i.e. to build a case against them), though the specific reason why someone is placed on a watchlist is never explained or justified.
Even though attempts are made to make it covert, the target will likely realize quite quickly that they are being followed based on the cumulative effect, and statistical impossibility, of lots of smaller and bizarre things happening all along their journey. This realization will be followed by a 'confusion phase' as the target tries to understand the who, what, why, how and when of the stalking. They will eventually learn to adapt (ie form coping mechanisms) to the stalking (such as not going outdoors, leaving their phone at home, developing a safe space etc.). They may also attempt to stop the stalking by contacting the police (likely to result in a referral to mental health services), moving house (which doesn't work) or leaving the country (which is oftentimes the only thing which is successful). The target may also participate in social media, either as a content creator or consumer, which can act as a support network. They will also likely describe intense and chronic stress and being at 'permanent breaking point', as there are so many problems and unanswered questions introduced into the target's life by the stalking.
In addition to the continuous surveillance, a significant proportion of targets report other investigatory techniques used against them, and/or the use of experimental military technology.
It is a violation of the human right to liberty, freedom from torture (which includes
psychological torture) and privacy, as well as other laws, though these laws remain
untested. Part of the problem with mounting a legal challenge is the difficulty in proving who is stalking them (including the lack of access to numberplate databases).
Surveilling
The purpose of the gangstalking is to continuously surveil the target as the go about their daily business. This is achieved via covert camera's in, for example, the front and back lights of the surveillance vehicles, covert body worn covert camera's and also smartphones pointed in the direction of the target. These camera's are HD and via 5G can transmit a live stream of the illuminated target back to a control center.
The purpose of the stalking is to continuously surveil the target. Here, a target is illuminated and recorded using covert cameras in the headlights of a vehicle. This gets transmitted live back to a control center where they have imagery and tracking data of various targets who are currently on the move.
Illumination of the target / 'brighting'
As camera's are not as good as the human eye at picking up low-light images, the targets are usually illuminated by various forms of light sources - vehicle headlights, flashlights, body-worn head lamps etc. The target will, particularly at night, and even during the day, notice they are being 'brighted' continuously. Sometimes members of the surveillance team will use existing lighting in the environment to illuminate the target - such as jogging past the target as they walk under a street lamp.
Primary tracking via the mobile phone
Surveillance teams have custom-made apps, which are fundamental to the tracking stalking and surveillance. What follows is a depiction and description of what the surveillance team apps will look like and how they will function.
Fig 12. A depiction of a custom-made surveillance team app.
The homepage of the app contains profiles for each target, a list of nearby targets, a messaging system for the surveillance team members to communicate with each other and live camera feeds (of, for example, the front and back camera on the surveillance vehicle).
If the user selects 'nearby targets', it brings up a list, ordered by proximity. If the user clicks one of the target's, they are presented with a map of the target's exact location, commonly frequented locations (so the surveillance team member can be there before the target get's there) and various options including getting satnav directions straight to the target.
The app can also detect automatically when the target is on the move, using the tracking beacon.
It can also have a feature whereby, if the target leaves their phone at home, the target's position can be updated manually. All it takes is for one member of the surveillance team to spot the target and they can then update the target's position on the map so everyone in the team knows where they are.
One of the buttons is 'accept job'. If this button is clicked. the surveillance team member will be expected to travel close to the target and surveil them using the covert camera's (the footage of which will be transmitted back to a control center using 5g).
Once the user finishes the surveilling, they will end the current job, and find a new target to stalk.
Vehicles stalking individuals
To capture an image of the target, a vehicle needs merely to be pointing towards or away from the target.
In addition to cars driving continuously slowly past them, the individual will be forced to walk past headlights from a car which pulls up in front of them, or is waiting in a side street, will have cars doing U-turns near them and will have cars waiting on the periphery of the targets vision to see which street they turn down next. The cars may park away from the target so they are recorded with the rear camera's.
A common experience is no-one being outside, then as soon as a target leaves their house 3 or 4 people and/or vehicles will appear in close proximity to the target within 30 seconds to 1 minute. The target will also regularly experience trails of 3-4 cars driving past them and sprawling off to different roads to cover different exit points.
The target will also notice that everywhere they go there are idling car's with idle people in them.
Individuals stalking individuals
Fig 9. Examples of individuals stalking individuals
Individuals will experience other individuals physically stalking them and loitering near them with no purpose, only a fake purpose.
One of the strangest forms of stalking is when walking in the very early hours of the morning these stalkers can sometimes pretend to live in a house near to where the target is walking, walk into the driveway of this house, fiddle with their keys as they are fumbling about, then when they think the target is out of sight, leave that driveway about 30 seconds to 1 minute later. They may also deliver a leaflet as 'role play', but only to that one house.
In order to get a good image of the target, the surveillance team member will often 'bright' the target. This can be with a torch, headlamp, on a bicycle or scooter with a very bright light on the front, or it can be by using existing lighting in the environment, such as jogging past the target under a street lamp.
They may also utilize their smartphone camera by pretending to be on the phone and recording the target through the cameras or pretending to use their smartphone for something else, then subtly tilting the camera in the direction of the target to take a picture.
Vehicles stalking vehicles
Vehicles may be stalked by pulling out in front of the target's vehicle (so that they can be recorded using the rear cameras).
If the target goes on a journey, a subset of the surveillance team will split off and form a smaller team to follow them. This may be noticed, and described, by the target as being continuously surrounded on a motorway by the same group of cars.
Stalking
Serial vs parallel stalking
The term gang in gangstalking evokes an image of a street gang all following someone in parallel, when in fact the gang is a large surveillance team who follow the target mostly in serial, ie. taking it in turns to stalk them along their route, with a frequency of perhaps on average 1 new stalker per street.
Surveillance teams will consist of at least 50 people in, for example, a city. The members of the team will take it in turns to stalk a target that is 'on the move' street by street or location by location. This stalking will be done mainly in serial (i.e. they will line the target's route in a pass the baton fashion), though it can oftentimes be in paralel (i.e. multiple members of the surveillance team are surrounding the target at any one time). Potentially there can be dozens of members of the surveillance team surroundng one target at any one time.
The guise of the surveillance teams
In order to attempt to make the stalking 'covert' the members of the surveillance team will be branded as regular members of the community - such as taxi drivers, delivery drivers, milk floats (in the early morning), motorbikes with L plates, joggers, cyclists, dog walkers etc. and will try to blend into the rest of the community. The vehicles used are real company vehicles, such as taxis, that the company running the surveillance team will be paying the local company to use.
Any type of vehicle or person that would be 'out and about' travelling all over the place is a candidate for the disguising of the surveillance team members. This disguising allows the members of the surveillance teams to 'hide in plain sight'. [
The fact that they are made to look like regular members of the community is why it is sometimes referred to as community stalking or community harasment.
They never have a real purpose for being near the target, only a fake one.
'Surveillance role play' / 'street theatre'
When trying to blend in, they will often 'act' in order to appear convincing. A fake taxi, for example, will pretend to have passengers in the back of the taxi (when they are actually also members of the surveillance team). A fake taxi will also drop passenger's off and pick them up in order to try to create the illusion of being real. Another person might be standing in the middle of the road with a phone to their ear, pretending to be on the phone. Another person may be near the target with the car bonnet flipped, pretending to fix their vehicle.
The target notices the unlikely nature of this often very bad acting and how their world has suddenly changed from how it used to be - in terms of traffic flow and unlikely and strange things happening all along their journey - and most commonly refers to this continuous acting all along their route as 'street theatre'.
Rotation of the surveillance teams around the country
It's likely that someone being stalked will attempt to track the numberplates of the cars stalking them. In order to prevent this, the surveillance teams are rotated around the country, so that on each day there is a new surveillance team operating in a particular area. If the target attempts to track the numberplates, therefore, it will be practically impossible. The effect of this rotation is that, over time, the individual will have literally thousands of stalkers going through the middle of their life.
Members of the surveillance team will sometimes color coordinate themselves - such as having mostly red or white vehicles, or all wearing items of red clothing. They will also use very subtle hand signal gestures to communicate with other members of the team, for example, indicating the target's position (hand signals are a common form of communication in many industries in everything from police and military to sport referees to crane operators). As they are subtle, these hand signals may only be visible when recording the members of the surveillance team with a camera with optical zoom.
CCTV camera's used as an adjunct
There are not enough CCTV camera's to follow an individual 24/7, but they are linked in with the mobile surveillance system and are used as an adjunct. If the target on the watchlist manages somehow to evade surveillance they will be picked up again where CCTV cameras are located.
The law
Gangstalking constitutes far more than just surveillance and it has devastating effects on the lives of the people being stalked. Human rights laws are designed to guarantee a basic standard of living in most countries. Of particular interest are:
The human right to liberty - Liberty is: 'the state of being free within society from oppressive restrictions imposed by authority on one's way of life and behavior'.
The human right to be free from torture - This includes psychological torture.
Gangstalking is often described as a form of psychological torture.
The human right to respect one's private and family life
Considering the high degree of people being gangstalked not leaving their own home and/or adapting their life significantly due to the distress caused, and also the fact that gangstalking is universally described as torturous, these human rights are being contravened.
The people doing the surveillance seem to have no regard for these laws.
One of the main challenges is how the individual being stalked proves what is happening to them in a court of law. They do not have access to numberplate databases so they cannot prove, for example, that the cars following them and surrounding them are not local and/or that they are owned by people who work for the same company. They are also up against so many forces in the government - police, military, other big government departments - global companies, local companies and the mainstream and local media. It is difficult for someone to put themselves up against such power, and it would deplete the individual's resources, such as time, money etc.
It's also very hypocritical when the government take stalking so seriously when an individual does it with potentially up to 10 years in prison, yet when they do it, continuously for years, it's considered ok.
more can be found here:
https://gangstalkingexplained.org/
***DNI TULSI and FBI DIR. KASH This is the playbook...
IN HONOR OF CHARLIE KIRK WHO STOOD FOR FREEDOM - LET'S END THIS!
please repost...