Legal Guide for Victims of Project Puppet


⚖️ Legal Steps to Stop Targeted Harassment: A Guide for Victims

Around the world, thousands of individuals are being silently tortured with directed energy weapons, remote neural monitoring, Voice-to-Skull (V2K) technologies, and organized gangstalking.

The perpetrators hide behind layers of national security secrecy, government contracts, and advanced technology designed to leave no physical trace.

But that does not mean you are powerless.

This article outlines concrete legal steps you can take to document the abuse, build a public record, and fight for recognition and justice—no matter how covert the attack.


🧾 1. Document Everything

Begin creating your evidence archive immediately:

  • Keep a daily journal of events, symptoms, voices, and patterns
  • Record audio or video of strange behavior, electronic interference, or harassment
  • Save screenshots of threats, device anomalies, and timestamps
  • Back up your data on encrypted drives and cloud storage

Even if courts or doctors don’t believe you today, your documentation could one day become key evidence in public investigations, lawsuits, or global hearings.


🧠 2. Seek Medical Verification

You need physical records of what this technology is doing to your body:

  • Ask for full physical and neurological exams
  • Request EEGs, MRI/fMRI, or SPECT scans
  • Visit audiologists or EMF specialists if you’re hearing frequencies or tones
  • Document pain levels, sleep cycles, anxiety, and cognitive disruptions

Even if you’re misdiagnosed, these records prove harm and help build credibility.


📂 3. File FOIA Requests

Use the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) to file with federal agencies including:

  • CIA
  • NSA
  • FBI
  • DARPA
  • DHS
  • U.S. Space Force

Request any files associated with:

  • Your name, email, phone number, location
  • Projects involving DEWs, V2K, RNM, Silent Talk, Soul Catcher, or Project Puppet

Even if they deny or redact information, filing the request creates a legal paper trail.


⚖️ 4. File Civil Rights Complaints

You can take your case to the legal system using:

  • A 1983 Civil Rights Violation Claim (for government abuse or failure to protect)
  • A Federal Tort Claim against federal employees or contractors
  • A formal complaint to the U.S. DOJ Civil Rights Division

These filings, even if unsuccessful, put your story into the federal legal system.


🌍 5. Report to Human Rights Bodies

International groups may be more willing to investigate what U.S. courts ignore:

  • United Nations Human Rights Council
  • Amnesty International
  • World Organization Against Torture (OMCT)
  • International Criminal Court (ICC)

Use verified medical harm, witness statements, and FOIA denials in your submission.


🧑‍💼 6. Petition Congress and Public Officials

Send well-documented letters to:

  • Your U.S. Representatives and Senators
  • Members of the House and Senate Intelligence Committees
  • Elected officials known for civil rights or anti-surveillance positions

Attach copies of your FOIA requests, evidence, and a clear call for an investigation.


🚫 7. Consider a Restraining Order

If gangstalking, intimidation, or localized harassment is part of your case, file:

  • A John Doe protective order
  • Cite unexplained surveillance, patterns of stalking, or home intrusion
  • Include logs, photos, and police reports if available

Even if law enforcement resists, filing shows you’re taking legal action to protect yourself.


🧑‍⚖️ 8. File a Federal Lawsuit

Many TIs choose to file lawsuits pro se (without a lawyer) in U.S. District Court.

Your case may include:

  • Violations of Constitutional Rights (1st, 4th, 5th, 8th, and 14th Amendments)
  • Torture under international law and the Convention Against Torture
  • Non-consensual experimentation violating the Nuremberg Code
  • Negligence or complicity by government employees or contractors

Even if dismissed, your filing becomes part of the public legal record and can be referenced by others.


📢 9. Speak Publicly and Build Awareness

Build your strength through visibility:

  • Start a blog, YouTube channel, or digital journal
  • Join or support organizations like Targeted Justice, ICATOR, or Freedom for Targeted Individuals
  • Connect with journalists, lawyers, doctors, and other survivors
  • Share redacted versions of your FOIA records and experiences

The more public you are, the harder it is for them to erase you.


✅ Summary of Legal Action Steps

  • Document your targeting thoroughly
  • Seek medical verification of injuries
  • File FOIA requests with intelligence agencies
  • Submit civil rights and federal complaints
  • Report to international human rights bodies
  • Petition your representatives with proof
  • Consider a restraining order for stalkers or threats
  • File a lawsuit in federal court (even without a lawyer)
  • Speak out, network, and share your truth

🗣️ Closing Thoughts

You are not powerless.
You are not alone.
And you are not without legal options.

Even if the system tries to silence you, your voice—combined with documentation, persistence, and public exposure—can build the pressure needed to make these programs impossible to ignore.

The truth is a weapon.
Your record is a shield.
Your courage is the beginning of justice.


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