Violation of No Contact Order
03/07/2021-03/08/2021
Catherine McDowall
No Complaint Filed
The legal matter of The City of Seattle vs. Shane Lozenich (Case No. 658931) serves as a primary case study for institutional collapse during the COVID-19 pandemic. Presided over by Judge Catherine McDowall, the case originated from an arrest on March 7, 2021, regarding an alleged violation of a domestic violence no-contact order. However, the case was ultimately dismissed without prejudice because no formal complaint was ever filed by the prosecution. This outcome highlights a significant due process violation, where an individual was subjected to arrest and detention without the fundamental evidentiary basis of a legal complaint.
The conflict emerged during the heightened isolation of pandemic lockdowns, characterized by a deteriorating rental relationship between Lozenich and a roommate. This domestic instability was compounded by a significant data breach at the State Auditor’s Office, which exposed Lozenich’s personal information and led to targeted digital stalking. During this period, he reported receiving threatening messages from strangers who demonstrated precise knowledge of his physical location and attire. Despite these escalating threats, attempts to secure protection through official channels were met with silence, as the Seattle Police Department cited precinct closures and pandemic protocols as justification for refusing to file reports or investigate claims of physical abuse
Central to this case are the allegations of invasive technological harassment, including the onset of Voice-to-Skull (V2K) phenomena and high-frequency auditory interference. Lozenich reported agonizing physical symptoms—such as severe cranial pressure and sharp pains—which he linked to specialized AV equipment operated by the roommate. This hardware included electrometers, switchboards, and frequency devices, which Lozenich suspected were being utilized for domestic surveillance and directed-energy harm. These claims were further supported by observations of "neighbor anomalies" and masked auditory distress signals at the residence, which remained unaddressed by local authorities.
Pandemic conditions, data breach, and unreported domestic conflicts occur.
Safety reports to police are unrecorded.
Arrested for alleged Violation of No Contact Order (DV).
Booked into custody (BA#221002695).
In-custody arraignment held.
Prosecution files No Complaint.
Defendant released.
Case officially closed with obligations resolved
Dexter Horton Building
710 Second Ave Suite 1000
Seattle, WA 98104 (206) 477-5814 (office)
Kris Shaw, Public Defender
kris.shaw@kingcounty.gov
(206) 305-1977 (office)
Allison Cooper, Ast. Attorney
alison.cooper@kingcounty.gov
(206) 321-7084 (cell)
The procedural handling of this case reveals a "mental health and competency bias" that often sidelines substantive claims of technological surveillance. By repeatedly questioning the defendant's mental competency without investigating the underlying evidence of stalking or hardware misuse, the system effectively delegitimized the victim's narrative. Furthermore, the case demonstrates the "low threshold" for issuing protective orders, which allowed an alleged abuser to weaponize the legal system to trigger an eviction and arrest while the defendant’s own reports of abuse remained undocumented. This fragmentation between law enforcement, legal representation, and mental health evaluations created a vacuum where procedural justice was unattainable.
Analysis of Case No. 658931 underscores the urgent necessity for legislative and procedural evolution to address complex, modern threats. Proposed reforms include establishing stricter standards for the issuance of protective orders and implementing mandatory investigation requirements for abuse claims that cannot be waived due to external crises like a pandemic. Additionally, there is a call for new legal frameworks to provide protections against digital and auditory harassment, ensuring that mental health evaluations prioritize empirical, forensic evidence over systemic assumptions. This case remains a critical reference point for the fragility of civil liberties when faced with intersecting legal and technological trauma.
Systemic Variables
The intersection of specialized electronic equipment and non-state group activity suggests a complex set of systemic variables that influence local stability and individual safety. The use of the e-meter—a device typically associated with monitoring electrodermal activity for psychological or spiritual auditing—within a household environment introduces a specific technological variable that can alter interpersonal dynamics and data privacy.
When these localized technological practices overlap with broader militia activity, the systemic risk increases; the presence of organized, armed factions often correlates with a breakdown in traditional oversight, creating environments where missing people cases become more frequent and harder to track. Understanding these links requires analyzing how private surveillance tools, ideological group structures, and systemic law enforcement gaps converge to impact the disappearances of individuals within these communities.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) logs and public testimony from individuals who believed they were being targeted.
Documents from federal and state agencies during this timeframe show a consistent volume of inquiries from Washington residents regarding these technologies:
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Logs: FOIA logs from 2021 and 2022 show multiple requests from individuals in the Pacific Northwest seeking records on "Directed Energy Weapons" (DEW) and "neurological weapons" being used on civilians.
Chemical Safety Board (CSB) Reports: In December 2020, a formal plea was logged by an individual claiming to be under "constant surveillance by police and community stalking" and being "hit with Directed Energy Weapons" in a manner that caused fear for their life.
Havana Syndrome Context: National news during 2021 regarding "Anomalous Health Incidents" (Havana Syndrome) fueled local discussions. While these reports focused on overseas diplomats, they led to increased online discourse among "Targeted Individuals" (TIs) in King County who believed similar microwave or sonic technologies were being used domestically.
Research into the "Targeted Individual" community, which frequently references King County as a hub for such claims, identifies several core themes from the 2020–2021 period:
Digital Context: Community members often link their experiences to data breaches (such as the 2021 Accellion breach mentioned previously), theorizing that their leaked information is being used to coordinate "organized harassment."
COVID-19 Impact: Psychologists and researchers noted that the isolation of 2020–2021 led to an uptick in individuals reporting "gangstalking" symptoms, as increased time online and social distancing exacerbated feelings of being watched or followed.
Lack of Evidence: To date, neither the Seattle Police Department (SPD) nor the King County Sheriff’s Office has validated any claims of electronic torture or V2K technology being deployed against the public.
Scientific Consensus: Experts in acoustics and neurobiology generally categorize "voice to skull" as a theoretical concept (Microwave Auditory Effect) that has not been successfully weaponized for the type of covert, long-distance "mind control" described in gangstalking narratives.
Former roommate with audio equipment including an electrometer
E-Meter (electrometer) used by the Church of Scientology.
Information regarding the Missing and Murdered Indigenous People (MMIP) crisis and Militia Activity in Washington (specifically King County) between 2020 and 2022, the following news summaries and official records provide a detailed look at these events.
The 2020–2022 period was a pivotal era for legislative and public action regarding the disproportionate rates of violence against Indigenous communities in Washington.
Establishment of the MMIWP Task Force (2021): In December 2021, the Washington State Attorney General’s Office (AGO) officially convened the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and People (MMIWP) Task Force. This was funded by the state legislature to address systemic failures in data collection, jurisdiction, and law enforcement response.
Missing Indigenous Person Alert (MIPA) System (2022): In early 2022, Governor Jay Inslee signed House Bill 1725, making Washington the first state in the nation to create a specific "Silver Alert" style system for missing Indigenous people. This system was activated for the first time in July 2022.
MMIWP Cold Case Unit: Following recommendations from the Task Force in 2022, the state authorized the creation of a specialized Cold Case Unit within the Attorney General’s Office specifically to investigate unsolved homicides and disappearances of Indigenous persons, which occur at a rate significantly higher than other demographics in King County and statewide.
Reporting on militia groups in the Pacific Northwest intensified following the events of January 6, 2021, and several data-related incidents linked local individuals to these organizations.
The Oath Keepers and January 6th: News reports and federal indictments from 2021 and 2022 highlighted the presence of the Oath Keepers in Washington. While many high-profile members were from other states, federal trackers (such as those from George Washington University) identified several individuals in Washington who were charged or investigated in connection with the Capitol breach.
The Accellion Data Breach (January 2021): This was a major news story in Washington when the Office of the Washington State Auditor (SAO) suffered a breach via the Accellion file transfer service. This incident compromised the personal data of approximately 1.6 million Washingtonians, primarily those who had filed for unemployment benefits between 2017 and 2020.
LDS and Extremist Groups: While there was no "LDS Militia" identified as an organized entity in King County, independent journalists and watchdog groups (such as the SPLC) reported on the 2021 "Oath Keeper Leaks." These leaks contained membership rolls that included residents from every county in Washington. In some cases, individuals within those rolls were identified as having ties to various religious communities, including the LDS church, though these were reported as individual affiliations rather than church-sanctioned activities.
As a direct result of militia activity reported during the 2020–2021 window, the Washington legislature took further steps
Restriction of "Out-of-State" Militias: More recently, legislation was passed (House Bill 1321) that restricts armed military forces from other states from entering Washington without the governor’s permission, a move specifically citing the rise in unauthorized paramilitary activity observed in recent years.