Tuesday, September 25, 2018

I didn't report the criminal voyeurism in my first apartment in Massachusetts to the police, because I knew that the police wouldn't believe me and wouldn't help me.

When I told the property management in Braintree to take the hidden and illegal cameras out of that apartment, the property management called the police.  Two male police officers and two male paramedics came to my apartment and made me go to a hospital emergency room, from which I was committed to a mental hospital.  While I was at the mental hospital, the property management lawyers sent me an eviction letter.  I was evicted from that apartment and into the snow in February 2014.  

I had already spent years being criminally victimized by voyeurism before I had that apartment, and so had everyone else in the homeless shelters and psychiatric units where the conglomerate's persecution of me sends me on a regular basis.  

I spent another 2 years being homeless and criminally victimized by voyeurism from 2014-2016, rejected from every apartment to which I applied because of the eviction from the previous apartment.

When I was finally able to rent an apartment in March 2016, I was criminally victimized by voyeurism again.  I told the Cambridge Police Department, which did nothing about it.  I was evicted from that apartment in June 2017, for telling the property management to take the hidden and illegal cameras out of the apartment.  

This is my 6th year of homelessness since 2011.  The conglomerate's promotion of criminal voyeurism and its victim-blaming of me are causing more women to be the targets of this crime every day.  

Since August 2018, I have filed 2 anonymous reports to the Boston Police Department about the criminal voyeurism that is proliferating in Massachusetts.  The Boston Police Department has done nothing.

Now, these ads line both sides of a bridge from Boston to Cambridge:



This is where the conglomerate has posted numerous ads, promoting sexual crime and blaming the victims, for years.