Thursday, March 23, 2017

The New York Times should stop promoting child molestation, voyeurism and involuntary pornography.

March 23, 2017

The New York Times should stop hacking my phone.

The New York Times should stop watching me from the illegal, hidden cameras in my apartment and circulating the video illegally filmed from those cameras and from everywhere else that I've been victimized by voyeurism.

I am losing my apartment because of the "false" accusation that there are hidden, illegal cameras in the apartment.  The New York Times is one of many media sources that know that it's not a false accusation.  Since December 22, 2016, which was when I received the first letter from the property management's lawyers, telling me that there are no cameras in the apartment and to stop saying that there are, NOBODY has called that law firm to say that it's not a false accusation, and so not only do I continue to have to live with these cameras in the apartment and the ridicule of people, like the New York Times, who are watching me from them, I'm being forced to find somewhere else to live.

This is the second apartment in a row where this has happened to me, and since there's nothing that I can do to stop it every time that it happens, there's nothing stopping it from happening again.  



Copyright L. Kochman, March 23, 2017 @ 10:51 p.m.