Monday, August 6, 2012

VIDEO | Spiked instrument used repeatedly on my neck and back to inflict pain

By mere coincidence, my laptop video camera got a fairly clear shot of a spiked instrument of torture used by the Voices Demons to inflict sharp and sudden pain in my neck and shoulders, which was used repeatedly on me yesterday, day two of the around-the-clock Anger Management Ritual:
A spiked instrument lashes out to cause pain and injury to areas of my neck and shoulders, caught on video
The speed at which it is moved is usually much too fast to capture on video, which is evident by the fact that there is only one still frame with a clear shot:
The torture device moves too fast for a good look on video
It is also likely to be cloaked, which means that it can only be seen on video if the camera and the instrument are in opposing motions. This is the only way that hobgoblin demons are detected on video, as described in What does a hobgoblin demon look like.

Where did it come from? Demons of the elongated, sucker-demon type simply transport to whatever location you are via human collaborators—either in their ears, noses, mouths, anuses, or armpits.
NOTE | For more on where sucker demons are put in people in Demons put "eye spiders" in eye sockets, nose and ears—and worse). To learn how people transport sucker demons and the like to their victims, read Sucker Demons Fly, Ride in Backpacks and watch VIDEO TIMELINE | Oliver Conceals a Sucker Demon.
They then slink to the ground, slither to a hiding spot, and then attack from their position.

A still frame taken from an older video made at my old apartment at 471 East Julian Street in San Jose, California, shows that other devices have been used against me:
A demon reaches around a corner in my apartment, holding some sort of device in it
I do not know what the device does; but, it's safe to assume it's not intended for my health and well-being.
COMING UP | Demons use electronic devices that cause fear on children during "nightmare" sessions.

Murder, Satan wrote | “They popped a cork on you…”

"Rock him off" and "Cash him in" are both phrases used to describe murder, or at least acts likely to lead to death, in ...