[Note 08/31/23: In addition to using Tesla Powerwalls, vehicles, and charging processes as artillery in their drive to evict their neighbors, mobbers may install equipment like generators and pumps below grade in a manner that allows them to access, vent, and pipe exudate and other matter into their neighbors’ drain and vent systems. In the same way they jam you up with wireless exploits and DoS (Denial of Service) your communications and entertainment, their subterranean attacks can jam and DoS your plumbing system. Blocking or pumping your drain system with mobbing substrate produces the effect of a transient stopped drain. This is prevalent in Albany. In Seattle, a sump pump was installed within feet of a basement-level bathroom on the south side, and on the north side, some kind of lever system appeared to have been created to drop equipment below ground to line up with a sewer line cleanout that was installed when the sewer line on that side was sleeved. The below grade placement may allow access to electrical services through grounding. PG&E told me that digging could be a factor in the kind of behavior I was describing. Locating the installation points and understanding how they provide access to utilities over property lines would be a step toward curbing a dangerous form of sabotage.]
If manufacturers would like to follow up on the EV charging hack I describe in some other recent posts, I would be pleased to assist federal investigators in any way possible. Don’t wait for the city or local police to intercede and protect residents. Albany doesn’t care. People, including myself, have already been harmed because of ignorance, bias and corruption in the City of Albany, California. Ignoring it here encourages those involved to bring the same harm to others.
The hack enables a current of dirty and seemingly energized debris to be dragged into and across the environment of a victim household during charging. In my case, the charging vehicle is positioned horizontally in the driveway with the rear angled at the ingress of the water line into the house. Houses using galvanized piping and knob-and-tube electrical circuits may be particularly vulnerable. In my case, the effects were mitigated when I updated the galvanized incoming water line to copper.
[Note 08/18/23: However, with the contractor family’s removal of the fence in front the back of the Tesla has an unobstructed path to the siding of the house and it may be that in lieu of the galvanized water line, the large old-fashioned metal venting makes a good target just inside the siding. I’ve been out to dampen already tonight, to try to minimize the charged debris being flung at the house and probably drawn to the north side by the lowlife’s deliberately magnetized heaps of metal, his grounding, or a ground-plane antenna. If investigators are curious, nights like tonight when the Tesla next door is charging might be good nights to drop by. With the right equipment, you might even be able to sample the polluting stream from outside. If you come onto this property, you can stand within a foot of the Tesla’s rear. No advance notice required, and it might be more productive if none is given. Take care to avoid the IoT that appears to detect movement on this property, front to back.]
The exploit is dangerous and compromises air quality in the victim dwelling. The debris stream may have asphyxiant qualities.
[Note 08/18/23: At least some of those involved in mobbing have technical skills. In Seattle, there are connections to Boeing and to a couple of large tech employers. And while I don’t know that a Tesla employee is involved with this hack, at least one of those directly involved in Albany works for a prominent Bay Area tech company. In mobbing, men use the same skills that net them high salaries to covertly harass women.]
