gangstalking | January 11, 2010
The secret persuaders
BSC invented a game called “Vik“, described as “a fascinating new pastime for lovers of democracy”. Printed booklets described up to 500 ways of harassing and annoying Nazi sympathisers. Players of Vik were encouraged to ring up their targets at all hours of the night and hang up. Dead rats could be put in water tanks, air could be let out of the subject’s car tyres, anonymous deliveries could be made to his house and so on. In the summer of 1941, BSC sent a sham Hungarian astrologer to the US called Louis de Wohl. At a press conference De Wohl said he had been studying Hitler’s astrological chart and could see nothing but disaster ahead for the German dictator. De Wohl became a minor celebrity and went on tour through the US, issuing similar dire prognostications about Hitler and his allies. De Wohl’s wholly bogus predictions were widely published.
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Category: Gang Stalking, Informants and Snitches, Mobbing |
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Tags: Games, Gang Stalking, Harassment, Targeted Individuals, The Secret Persuaders
gangstalking | November 25, 2009
News of the World faces £800,000 payout in bullying case
Hugh Muir and Chris Tryhorn
Monday 23 November 2009
A News of the World reporter who suffered from a culture of bullying led by former editor Andy Coulson, who is now David Cameron’s head of communications, has been awarded almost £800,000 for unfair dismissal and disability discrimination…..
According to the tribunal, the bullying continued after Driscoll went on sick leave. Senior management at the paper sent Driscoll a barrage of emails, phone calls and visited his home to demand that he see a company doctor, despite Driscoll’s GP advising him to “distance” himself from the source of his stress.
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Category: Articles, Mobbing |
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Tags: Bullying, Doctor, Harassment, Lawsuit, Mobbing, Payout, Shrink
gangstalking | October 20, 2009
Belizean student at UCLA facing attempted murder charges
Written by Administrator
Thursday, 15 October 2009 12:29
The allegation against 20-year-old Damon Thompson is that on Thursday October 9, he attacked a 20-year-old female classmate Katherine Rosen. It happened in an organic chemistry class in the William Young Hall at the university sometime around midday on Thursday when Thompson allegedly pulled out a knife and stabbed Rosen five times and slashed her throat.
Thompson, an A -student with consistent excellent academic performance is an only child of Judith Brook a legal clerk with the Legal Advice and Services Centre in Belize City. While the US media has painted a negative picture of Thompson,
sources close to him and his family indicated that prior to this incident he had made countless complaints against classmates and this specific lab partner but with no results. Contrary to US media reports, Thompson did know Rosen who was his lab partner and who has been very offensive to him on previous occasions and even the day in question. Now UCLA in an attempt to shift blame away from itself has sought to discredit the mental stability of Thompson by using his many complaints by e-mail as an indication of instability.
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Category: Articles, Mobbing, News and Links |
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Tags: Cover Up, Damon Thompson, Harassment, Katherine Rosen, Mental Health, Mobbing, UCLA
gangstalking | October 12, 2009
Tragic lessons of a shameful saga
A more sickening and depressing tale it would be hard to conceive. A woman and her disabled daughter suffer years of unspeakable abuse and harassment from a group of local bullies. After failing to receive any help from neighbours, the police or the social services, they are driven to despair and, ultimately, suicide.
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Category: Articles, Mobbing |
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Tags: Councils, Harassment, Mobbing, Stalking
gangstalking | October 11, 2009
ACLU Stabbing Suspect complained about taunts
UCLA professor reported concerns about stabbing suspect last year
Stephen Frank told university officials he was concerned about Damon Thompson’s mental health after the student sent him several e-mails accusing classmates of taunting him and disrupting his exams.
By Andrew Blankstein and Larry Gordon
October 11, 2009
A UCLA professor who taught the student accused of slashing a female classmate’s throat last week said Saturday that he told a university administrator 10 months ago that he had concerns about the student’s mental health, but strict federal privacy laws prevent UCLA officials from disclosing how they handled the issue.
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Category: Articles, Mobbing, News and Links |
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Tags: Belize, Black, Crazy, Harassment, Male, Mental Health, Mobbing, Stabbing, Taunting, UCLA Stabbing
gangstalking | October 3, 2009
Human flesh search engines:
Within hours, Ms Gao had become the latest victim of a human flesh search engine, where Chinese netizens become cyber-vigilantes and online communities turn into the world’s largest lynch mobs.
Using the vast human power behind the Chinese web, every detail of Ms Gao’s life, from her home and work address in Liaoning province, north east China, to the fact that her parents were divorced, was dug up and published on hundreds of forums and chatrooms.
“Now humiliate her,” ordered one internet user, Yang Zhiyan.
The outraged reaction to the video drew the attention of the local police and they detained Ms Gao the next day. They did not make clear what law she was alleged to have broken.
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Category: Articles, Gang Stalking, Mobbing |
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Tags: Chine, Community Stalking, Harassment, Human Flesh Search Engine, Online Mobbing, Vigilante Mob Justice
gangstalking | October 3, 2009
China’s Online Mob
Thursday, August 13, 2009 8:37 AM
Filed Under: Beijing, China
By NBC News’ Ed Flanagan
BEIJING – In the past few years, China’s Internet vigilantes have mobilized to root out, expose and shame people they perceive to be exhibiting corrupt or immoral behavior.
Marked for their unfettered zeal, the literal translation of the Chinese term for this ad hoc group of sleuthing online activists is: “human flesh search engine.”
Nevertheless, while the stature of this group of online watchmen continues to grow, a new Chinese movie may force the Internet phenomenon out of the online sphere and into the country’s public dialogue.
“Invisible Killer,” produced and co-written by Xie Xiaodong, is the first movie to broach the subject of Internet vigilantism and dramatize the pitfalls of having a mobilized and motivated online mob administering its own brand of justice.
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Category: Articles, Gang Stalking, Mobbing |
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Tags: China, Gang Stalking, Harassment, Informants, Mob Justice, Movie, Online Mobbing, Vigilantee Justice