Monday, January 23, 2017

People who want to help should contact Greater Boston Legal Services and tell them that there are hidden, illegal cameras in my apartment and that hundreds of people have gotten victimized by voyeurism and involuntary pornography in Boston and surrounding areas since 2011.

January 23, 2017


Bristol Lodge, Waltham

Chinatown YMCA, Boston

Somerville Crisis Stabilization Unit, Somerville

Bournewood Hospital, Brookline

Harbor Light Salvation Army Shelter, Boston (this shelter closed a couple of years ago, after I blogged about the voyeurism that I suspected was being inflicted on the homeless guests)


That's a list of all the places that I can think of tonight where I know people were filmed by hidden cameras where they had a reasonable expectation of privacy that was violated, like showers, toilet stalls and locker rooms.  Most of the victims probably don't know, especially those who don't speak English and the mental patients.

It could also be that the illegal cameras that were hidden in the apartment that I had at Braintree Village from 2013 to 2014 were never taken out of that apartment, and that the $40.5 million that the government gave to that apartment development in 2016 has encouraged the people who own that and other properties to victimize many other tenants.

I have had no control over the places where I have lived and been homeless; when you're this poor, you take what you can get.

Voyeurism and involuntary pornography might also have occurred or be occurring at:

All the Arbour hospitals

The Solomon Carter Fuller Crisis Stabilization Unit, Boston

The Longwood Crisis Stabilization Unit, Boston

Woods-Mullen Shelter, Boston

Boston Sports Clubs, starting at the Prudential Center, Boston

The Pine Street Inn, Boston

On The Rise, Cambridge


This is the address of the page that has contact information for Greater Boston Legal Services:




I'm meeting with someone from Greater Boston Legal Services this Wednesday, but I don't think that she believes me and I don't think that she'll ask the police to search my apartment for the hidden and illegal cameras that the conglomerate has tapped for live video around the clock since I got the apartment in March 2016 after two years of homelessness from 2014-2016.  I was evicted from Braintree Village in 2014 for saying there were hidden, illegal cameras in my apartment, after two years of homelessness from 2011-2013.

I've been homeless for 4 of the past 6 years, and I'll be homeless again or at least forced to stop talking about the cameras if I want to have a place to live other than a homeless shelter.  That's what the woman from Greater Boston Legal Services told me today, that since I "don't have proof" that the cameras are in my apartment, all I can do is ask the property management if I can keep the apartment as long as I "keep quiet" about the cameras.

I have to prove by the end of this week that the cameras are in the apartment.  If I can't get the police to electronically search the apartment for the cameras, find them, take them out, and document that the cameras were there, I'll lose the apartment or have to live there with the cameras and the conglomerate's public torture about the cameras, and I won't be able to talk about it.  

If the woman at Greater Boston Legal Services were to believe that the cameras are in my apartment, she might ask the police to do the search, BUT SHE DOESN'T BELIEVE ME!




That's the address of a video that I published in October 2016, talking about voyeurism and what it's like to be homeless.  I don't choose the addresses that videos get when I publish them at YouTube.



Copyright, with noted exceptions, L. Kochman, January 23, 2017 @ 6:55 p.m.