It doesn’t necessarily have to be a police officer, a DEA agent, a U.S. Marshal, a detective, or an ATF agent; ANYONE in law enforcement or semi-law enforcement with access to a gang member database can enter someone’s name and vital statistics into a gang member database, registry, or directory. The results are catastrophic for the person entered as their chance to be gangstalked via clandestine military style surveillance, tracking, and disruption tactics goes up by 1000%. One of the ways a person becomes a targeted individual is “making the wrong enemy.” At some point in my 36 years, I made the wrong enemy. This enemy was likely in law enforcement, and put my name in a gang member directory as vengeance for something. My gangstalking campaign likely ensued. I still believe that pork barrel, earmark, and misappropriation mechanisms play a role in the gang member database placement mechanism. Something concerning the keepers of the gang databases’ unchecked authority to enter names into the registry was stealthily embedded into the United States’ legal code, making it easy to use the gang member database mechanism for evil purposes.
[Part of Emmanuel Isaiah Smith’s ‘ Gangstalking in Action Live Video Series ‘ – In this video you will see live unedited instances of street level gangstalking, a covert, organized, and highly mobile method of containing and obstructing someone, and impeding their physical movements and attempting to instigate altercations.]
Gang member databases, Gang member registries, Gang member directories, and Gang member computerized lists are a part of the gangstalking selection protocol.
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