Who built this, and why.
This site is maintained by a resident of 1009 Jefferson Ave — directly across the street from the warehouse — as a public record of what has been documented since 2024.
Why a website
Single emails get lost. Folders of clips don't tell a story. Officials need context, journalists need background, and neighbors need to know they're not alone in noticing this. A single URL is the most efficient way to share everything at once — and the most efficient way for new evidence to be added as it accumulates.
What's on this site
- Video clips — every clip is dated, captioned with what's in it, and tagged with the violations it documents.
- Incident log — a searchable table of every documented incident.
- Applicable laws — the statutes and codes that apply, in plain English.
- Documents & OPRAs — every Open Public Records Act response received.
- Report something — neighbors can add what they've witnessed.
What's not on this site
At the case maintainer's request, the March 3, 2026 physical-assault incident video is not published on this public site. That clip is preserved in the case archive and available to investigators, counsel, and the courts as appropriate.
Faces of bystanders and drivers, and license plates, are blurred in the public versions where they appear in clips. Raw, unblurred originals are preserved for evidentiary purposes.
How to contact
Email 1000jeffersonwarehouse@gmail.com. Responses are usually within 24 hours.
Editorial standards
Every claim on this site is sourced to a clip, OPRA response, police case, or statute. Where evidence is partial or pending — for example, when an OPRA is still in flight — the status is noted. This is a record, not an argument. The argument is for the courts and the agencies with jurisdiction.