Saturday, July 8, 2017

It might help me to stop being homeless if someone would tell these people that it wasn't a false accusation that there were hidden, illegal cameras in my last apartment.

July 8, 2017




That's the address for a page at the website of the agency that placed me at that apartment.  It's not that agency's fault that people who work for the property management at the building where I was placed installed the hidden, illegal cameras in the apartment and then lied about it to avoid being arrested and/or fired.  

The police did nothing to investigate, so as far as that agency knows, my accusations that there were hidden, illegal cameras in the apartment were delusional or maliciously false, so even though I have applied to be placed at another apartment by that program, the people who run the program probably won't help me to obtain another apartment unless someone tells them that the voyeurism wasn't a false accusation.  

For someone to tell that agency that it's true would also help to prevent other people from being victimized by voyeurism in their homes.  

It would probably also help if someone were to tell On The Rise that it wasn't a false accusation that there were hidden, illegal cameras in its shower room.  I know that On The Rise never really looked for the cameras, so if the cameras were attached to an electrical source in that bathroom, and they never needed new batteries, then they haven't stopped filming all the homeless women who shower, change their clothes, or use the toilet at On The Rise.  

This is the first page of Yahoo results for "cambridge ma":



Cambridge and Boston are separated by some bridges that can be walked in a few minutes.  They are two of America's oldest and most historically significant cities.  I can't help what Cambridge is called; it's sad that the conglomerate has distorted so many things in its rabid quest to make sexual crime legal.  



Copyright, with noted exceptions, L. Kochman, July 8, 2017 @ 4:40 p.m.