Did my mobbing neighbors deploy an LED speaker-light to their chimney top?

I don’t know if it’s an LED speaker-light, a drone, or what. But I try to note things like this so that others in my situation might be able to notice and document similar anomalies.

In this case, as I sit and try to work in this room closer to the front of the house, I am subject to harassment that includes verbal abuse. This room is on the south side of the house that shares a border with what I call “the contractor family”–there’s been a Honey Bucket toilet sitting in the driveway for more than two years now. (More recently, I learned that family also includes the employee of a company promoting online investment in single-family rental homes.) This side of the house is more vulnerable to exploits like the charging Tesla-enabled harassment over the water line, something I ameliorated to some extent by upgrading the water line from galvanized piping to copper. In the past, I noticed the overly sensitive motion-detecting lights on the front of the garage to the south and a clandestine security camera they set on the ground on their side of the fence they installed after breaking down the fence my family built decades earlier. The deployment allowed my presence in my side yard to be detected through a gap of several inches left between the soil and the fence bottom. This is the kind of thing you could probably block by screwing in some wood or metal low down on your side of the fence, but none of this should be necessary. There’s also the interfering Bluetooth LED torch lights positioned close to the fence by a neighbor whose Crossfit routine triggers an uptick in the early morning or evening verbal abuse. Those lights used to come on about when I’d turn on the television, apparently to be harassed over it.

For some time, however, I’ve noticed a bright light shining at night over their house and I wasn’t sure about its source or intention. Today, however, it glares in midday from a distance of maybe 50 feet. If you’re being mobbed, you may notice similar glaring lights from nearby dwellings that seem to coincide with the onset of evening harassment. Because police forces like that of the City of Albany are likely to ridicule you if you attempt to report this kind of harassment, because the police may know more about this kind of harassment than they would have you believe, or because some of them may even be involved with the gangstalking scam, it’s going to take cogent reporting and the active interest of the municipality to effect change. LED lights can interfere with your electricity. Lights that operate as WiFi extenders add other vectors for neighbor harassment and attacks.

In addition to capturing an image or film of such lights, if they are WiFi-connected, you may be able to learn more about them and document them and their location using network survey tools like Netspot and techniques like network frame analysis and heat-mapping. Cities that aren’t involved with trying to harass you into selling your home might also create codes to ban the use of speaker lights, lights on WiFi extenders, and so on, to discourage the kind of mobbing activity that is difficult to detect, understand, or report.

If they’re doing it in Albany, California, they’re doing it elsewhere. Stopping the people who mob must be approached in the same way that we deal with other organized crime rings: By going after the criminals who do it. Break up the ring, arrest them, expose what they do, and prosecute them.