Friday, January 20, 2017

I have until this Thursday to prove that the hidden, illegal cameras are in my apartment.

January 20, 2017

If I can't prove that by this Thursday, I'll have to leave the apartment.  

I might be able to get until the end of May 2017 to get another place to live.  The property management, which continues to deny that there are hidden, illegal cameras in my apartment, is willing to give me a one-month extension past the initial deadline of my moving out before the end of February 2017, with two possible, one-month extensions of that deadline. That also means that the property management can throw me out at the end of March if it wants to do that.  

The impetus of my being told that I have to leave is my "false accusation" that someone who works at Chroma installed hidden, illegal cameras in my apartment when he or she knew that I'd be getting the apartment in March 2016.

The police are not responding to my request that the police search the apartment for the cameras, so I won't be able to prove that these are not false accusations until the months of criminally voyeuristic video, filmed from the cameras 24 hours a day since March 2016, are splattered all over the Internet.  By then, I'll already have lost this apartment, which it took two years of homelessness to get.

I don't have the money for a deposit at another apartment.  I don't have the money to pay movers.  Because of the Internet search results for "Lena Kochman," which are full of hateblogs that people have published about me and which I can't get removed from the Internet, and also because I have said that I don't have to apologize for defending myself against harassers and stalkers by documenting being harassed and stalked, the Massachusetts Rehabilitation Commission continues to obstruct access to appropriate employment opportunities which it provides to other clients, essentially coercing me into the stereotype of a nonworking recipient of $783.40/month of Social Security.  I was in the hospital for the first time before my 18th birthday, so I probably could have started getting Social Security in 1992, but I didn't.  I didn't apply for Social Security until 2013, after 3 years of relentless persecution by the conglomerate had ruined my ability to work without being harassed and/or fired for objecting to being harassed.  

As far as I know, nobody who illegally hacks my phone or who illegally watches me in my apartment, or who knows that these invasions of my privacy are not delusions or lies, has called the property management's lawyer or emailed the police to tell them that the hidden, illegal cameras are in the apartment.  If someone were to do that, it would help.  If I could prove that it's not a false accusation, the property management would have to remove the cameras from the apartment instead of removing me from the apartment.  It would also reduce the risk that I'll be victimized by voyeurism in other places.  The only reason that I haven't killed myself since 2010 is my hope that I won't have to live like this for the rest of my life.  

If I can't prove that the hidden, illegal cameras are in the apartment, then not only will I have to move out, probably to homelessness or to an SRO if I can even get that, I will also have to continue to live with the hidden, illegal cameras for the next 1 to 3 months, while the conglomerate and whoever else wants to illegally hack my phone, watch and hear me from the cameras, and ridicule and victim-blame me for my inability to stop them.  I will also have to continue to live with the fear that, no matter where I move, I'll be victimized, vilified and victim-blamed again.  

The deadline for an agreement with the property management is January 28, 2017, which is Saturday and not a business day.  That's why I need the proof by Thursday.  


Copyright L. Kochman, January 20, 2017 @ 12:00 p.m./additions @ 12:35 p.m.