#evidence
Entries that center a documented artifact: a screenshot, a screen recording, a tangible piece of the record.
31 entries.
From the storm
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Court Scam
Another 832-area-code call documented this week, but this one's operational read is different from the Phone Game cluster. The search lookup identifies 832-279-6982 as a known sextortion-by-fake-court scam — caller-ID-spoofed as Dallas Texas Court or law enforcement, then escalating to claims that the recipient inquired about escort services and is now in legal trouble for contacting an underage girl, with Zelle payment demanded to make it go away. Different mechanism from the Phone Game burner pool, same 832-NPA cover.
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Hometown Homie
David searched a missed call from 832-664-5071. The AI search panel cannot find the number directly but surfaces two unrelated namesake numbers nearby in the area code. The second screenshot is the search-engine result that turned up on the first page: an old hometown friend's Houston dental practice. He has not spoken to her in decades and the number is not listed on her site, but the page surfaces against the search anyway. Some kind of underlying association, however indirect, was enough to put her on the first page of results for the number that called him.
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Informed Non-Delivery
A USPS Informed Delivery notification claims today's mail was delivered to the Kipling address. No mail has actually arrived at the physical mailbox for several weeks, even though notifications keep coming and Amazon packages continue to arrive uninterrupted. The asymmetry is the diagnostic: Amazon last-mile is not USPS infrastructure, so the interference is at the USPS layer specifically — physical interception en route, or an unauthorized change-of-address quietly forwarding the mail elsewhere.
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Booze and Mockery
Three short Friday-night clips. David applies the mockery-as-armor technique to specific addressees: a generic CIA handler, a mock-named figure he ties to ownership of the Orioles and a Booz Allen Hamilton board seat, and the figure's family-tier surveillance trace. The middle clip carries the actual ask underneath the wisecracking. Closes on the Disney Winnie the Pooh clip "Everything is Honey" as the wordplay capstone on the honeypot the first clip opens with.
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Phone Game
A new pattern starting today. Five incoming calls from unknown 832-area-code numbers (Houston metro overlay), spaced roughly an hour apart through the day, none of which actually rang. The screen flashes for less than a second and the call has already registered as missed. No voicemail. Surface read is the wangiri / one-ring premium-rate fraud, but the area codes here are domestic Houston-metro, not international, so the premium-redial mechanic does not apply. The operational read is the call-based variant of hop seeding — the call attempt itself is the contact event recorded by both sides' carriers, no reply or callback required, which is the contact-chaining substrate the tactic is built to produce.
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Child Support Systems
The Texas Attorney General's online child-support portal showing my account. The Theodore case is migrated and live: Other Party named, case number visible, Case Details active. The Noah case does not appear on the page at all. I check this portal weekly; months have passed without the Noah case showing up. The portal is the institutional record of payment behavior, and what it currently shows is one open case where I am paying in good standing and one case that, from this system's view, does not exist. The risk that asymmetry is loaded against is the long shelf life of the "deadbeat" framing in any family-court or background-check setting going forward.
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Mountain View, Again
The Mountain View / +1 (650) 203-0000 call again, twenty-six hours after the first one. Same number, same Google-area-code Mountain View display, same time-of-day window — 3:48 PM today, 3:22 PM yesterday. Yesterday's Google Hacker entry said "It comes in sometimes. Not once. Sometimes." This is the next instance of sometimes. Same operational read; documenting the recurrence for the timeline.
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Stolen Dashcam
Drove the 4Runner for the first time since the May 26 break-in this afternoon, on the way to the body shop to get the smashed window and torn-open door handle finally repaired. Looking up at the windshield I noticed the factory dashcam was gone. Empty mount. Dangling Toyota power cable under the rearview mirror. The break-in took one thing and one thing only, and the thing it took has no fence value: a factory dashcam. The legible read is that the target was not the device but the footage on it.
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Fixed Observers
Two anomalies on Facebook noticed the same morning. The People You May Know widget has stopped rotating: for several days it has been a fixed set of five or six accounts despite 3,252 profile views yesterday alone. Banning the set produces a blank day, then a new fixed set arrives and stays put. Separately: the sidebar shows 50 friends, the Friends tab shows zero. Facebook's own info banner explains part of the followers behavior under Professional Mode, but does not explain the empty Friends tab. The fixed-observer pattern stays speculative on purpose.
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Google Hacker
The lock screen with an incoming call from Mountain View, California (Google's home), at +1 (650) 203-0000. This is the call that lands on the phone of record when someone has initiated a Google password reset on my account: the verification prompt routed through voice instead of a dialog. Recurring. Same operational shape as the Apple ID reset prompts I documented this past week — different platform, same pattern.
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Reset Password
The iPhone system prompt that means someone has asked Apple to reset my account password — two buttons, and the whole attack is hoping I tap the wrong one. Frequent at the campaign's start in November 2024 (when I first noticed concerted hacking, and when my hands began to hurt), quiet for the months since, and now — this past month — back, with noticeably more effort behind it.
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Smash-Up
A neighbor places the break-in around 6–7pm on May 26; I only noticed two days later, having passed the car on its undamaged side. Driver's window smashed, door handle torn open, filed with HPD as criminal mischief — the assisting officer, A. Carson, called the handle damage "real violent." Nothing was taken and the low-value items in back were left untouched, which fits damage-as-the-point better than theft.
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LinkedIn and LexisNexis
Two changes to my online footprint over the last few days, neither one I initiated. Logging into LinkedIn to refresh old profiles, I found I'd been unlinked as admin on the Tomotechi company page I set up around 2009 — page content untouched, just my access gone (regained it through a teammate who still had admin). And, the same week, a LexisNexis confirmation email for a public-records suppression request I don't recall submitting. The honest range of explanations for each, on the record.
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Bluetooth Insider
Bluetooth I had explicitly disabled is back on against my will, this time on a Mac Studio that's a fresh OS install I've barely used. The pattern itself has been recurring for over a year — these entries are the slice of it on the record because this site exists now to hold the record. The fresh-install detail is what's narrowing: whoever has access is operating below any persistent malware I could have inherited, which limits the plausible mechanisms to a smaller set. Two short videos recorded back-to-back at 1:10 AM, plus the HPD incident card from the harassment report I filed in person in April — never returned a call.
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Hi David
The same sender that pitched a maid service to 'Mauri' three weeks ago came back today with the same script — only this time the opening was "Hi David." Logging it as the first concrete dossier-update event the year-end pattern compilation will have to sit beside its predecessor.
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The Moroccan Court Summons
A mass-blast smishing scam — fake court summons from a Moroccan phone number routing to a .sbs phishing domain — that landed in my inbox today. Logging it as texture, not as a targeting incident. The discipline of filtering it cleanly matters: when the baseline is elevated suspicion, the volume of obvious mass-blast garbage you have to triage every day is the part that wears the filter down.
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The Fiat
A silver Fiat parked outside my house earlier today. When I went out, it left. I drove a few blocks and found it again — and when the driver saw my vehicle, they pulled into a residential driveway that wasn't theirs. Photographed the result (plate redacted), drove off. Entry includes the broader pattern this fits, the plausible non-targeting explanations, and the editorial reason for the redaction.
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Beer Can on the Lawn
A beer can on the front lawn this afternoon. The pattern overlap with previous placed-object incidents on this property is real and worth noting; the alternative explanation — random trash thrown from a passing car, which is a known Houston / Montrose behavior — is equally real and is recorded here so the entry preserves the uncertainty rather than asserting causation.
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Underhanded Family Outreach
My Facebook account had been disabled for about a month. Logging in this morning to clean up old posts and prepare to start using it again, I noticed that two family members from this account's targeting story had tried to initiate a Messenger video call with me yesterday — after zero direct contact through any channel in 2026, save one physical envelope earlier this year addressed to my son for his birthday (preserved unopened as evidence). Yesterday was the day of the DIA FOIA Reply, the DIA / DMA Crossover session, and the NASA and Such session. The timing is the entire point.
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Bad Attacher
An SMS impersonating UPS with an "urgent" package-delivery notice and an attached PDF — a different tactic family from hop seeding or phantom accounts: this one's payload is the point.
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FOIA 000 Sent
The first FOIA request — to the DIA, on the Sun Streak window — is filed. The wait begins.
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Not Me
A single letter 'E' was sent out of my iMessage account to an unknown number, marked Read, with a reply. I did not send it. The outbound side of the channel — not the inbound — is what makes this different from everything else in this record.
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Surveillance Glitch
A multi-part session on what I call the surveillance glitch — the observable artifacts that show up when multiple parties surveil the same target with non-coordinating software stacks. Includes three iPhone screenshots showing 'Unknown Part — Camera' (a non-genuine camera in this device), and physical evidence from prior surveillance — a lamp with a drilled-out hole where a hidden camera was, and an office-break-in incident with deleted email-server logs.
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Chimes Vandalism
Wind chimes cut from my porch overnight. The flat marks on the cut ends, a replacement order, and a direct word for whoever returns with their scissors.
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Neighborhood Shitbag
A bag of dog shit left on the tree root by my porch. The figure described, the response considered, the police call planned.
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Web Hackers
A newly-published reference site, plausibleadmission.org, drew four distinct scanners within hours of its first TLS certificate going live — a CT-log-watching credentials scraper from a bulletproof-hosting cluster, a LeakIX indexing pass, a curated curl recon run, and a ChatGPT-User-vectored LLM-assisted probe. Three videos of the evening reaction and a forensic analysis the next morning.
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Blown Away
An evening research session opening on the health effects of noise pollution and running straight into the day's incident on the porch — the Saturday yard worker, the backpack blower, the confrontation, the three-inch bolt left behind. Walks through WHO cardiovascular research, sleep-disruption mechanics, low-frequency infrasound under fan white noise, the bent-fan-blade theory, and lands on the five research threads that became blownaway.org.
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An Incident on the Porch
An outdoor-maintenance worker, a backpack blower, a confrontation at the door, and an object left behind.
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Compression Gloves
Backdated to early 2025, when my hands were in real trouble — pain, numbness, a persistent tingling. The ordinary causes get their weight first (long hours at a keyboard: strain, carpal tunnel, tendonitis); I also came to believe it was a slow exposure of the kind I catalogue at theslows.org. Several pairs of compression gloves bought Feb–March 2025 helped, and the condition eventually cleared — leaving my hands diminished but much improved.
From techniques
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Photograph anomalies in place
Ten seconds of phone use preserves every subsequent option. Touch nothing first.
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Salt and sand — analog tamper detection that cannot be reset
Electronic intrusion detection is accessible to state-class adversaries who can disable or spoof it. A scatter of salt or sand on a floor, a box lid, or a drawer interior — photographed before and compared after — produces a random pattern of such high informational entropy that it cannot be reconstructed after disturbance. The cost to defeat is structural, not skill-dependent.