Share your Coordinated Harassment Experiences with Us - Completely Anonymously - Closing Date 31 May 2026
Coordinated harassment. Organised stalking. Group stalking. Gangstalking. Community stalking. Cause stalking. Multi-stalking. Mobbing (especially in the workplace). Street theatre. These are just some of the terms used to describe the same core experience: the systematic and coordinated harassment and surveillance of an individual by multiple people or entities - often operating in a decentralised way.
In victim circles it is commonly referred to as coordinated harassment. Within the Targeted Individual (TI) community, it is most commonly referred to as gangstalking or multiple perpetrator stalking.
Many victims prefer "coordinated harassment" because it more accurately reflects what people report: a pattern of subtle, ongoing psychological and practical interference rather than something limited to one specific tactic.
Importantly, the term "gangstalking" itself may not always be the most appropriate or precise label. It can unintentionally suggest that literal criminal gangs are working together in a highly organised, visible "stalking" operation.
In reality, reported experiences often involve loose networks of individuals (neighbours, coworkers, strangers, sometimes even family members), institutions, or community actors using a wide range of tactics - not just physical following. The harassment can feel orchestrated yet deniable, with participants seemingly acting independently.
This isn’t confined to one setting. Victims describe it manifesting in multiple spheres of life:
At work → Workplace mobbing: colleagues or management teaming up to isolate, sabotage, or undermine someone through rumours, exclusion, or constant criticism.
In the community → Neighbours, local businesses, or strangers engaging in surveillance, repeated "coincidental" encounters, noise campaigns, or staged "street theatre" events.
Within families → Gaslighting, manipulation of relatives, estrangement tactics, or even involving family members in the harassment.
And beyond → Online amplification, institutional interference, vehicle following, electronic sensitisation and interference, or other subtle daily disruptions.
For many victims, these experiences are life-altering, causing profound emotional, psychological, financial, and social distress.
One of the biggest frustrations victims face is how difficult it is to get real help or justice through the legal system. Cases of coordinated harassment are notoriously challenging to prosecute effectively for several reasons:
The tactics are often subtle and designed with plausible deniability - individual acts can be dismissed as coincidences, "just being neighbourly", or unrelated annoyances.
There’s rarely a single identifiable perpetrator; it’s a distributed network of people who may not even know the full picture.
Gathering concrete, court-admissible evidence linking the actors and proving intent or coordination is extremely difficult.
Police training is often inadequate - most officers receive little to no instruction on recognising or investigating multi-perpetrator, organised harassment campaigns.
Police systems and incident recording are usually not linked across reports, so repeated patterns from the same victim or area are rarely flagged or connected.
Law enforcement and courts frequently attribute reports to mental health issues rather than investigating patterns of group behaviour.
Additionally, some victims believe that the police and other authorities may be involved or complicit - a perception that further damages trust and discourages reporting.
Existing stalking and harassment laws were written mainly for lone perpetrators, not complex, multi-person campaigns.
All of these reasons leave victims feeling invisible and without recourse.
Raising awareness is vital so that these experiences are taken seriously and support systems improve.
We now have this dedicated awareness website which will focus entirely on coordinated harassment (including experiences commonly referred to as gangstalking).
This site is for everyone affected - not just those who identify as Targeted Individuals. It is open to all victims of coordinated harassment, no matter how it shows up in your life or where in the world you live.
We see coordinated harassment as a growing and serious problem. Because current laws, reporting procedures, police training, and record-keeping systems are so poorly equipped to handle these cases, perpetrators often continue unchecked while victims suffer in silence.
The website serves as a central hub for awareness and education. Its core focus is aiming for real change through a petition calling for:
Updates to existing harassment laws
Better and safer reporting procedures
Improved police training
Linked incident-recording systems
Visitors will also be able to submit their personal stories anonymously if they wish. This will help us build a strong, global community of people impacted by coordinated harassment - in any form and from any background.
Together, we can raise awareness, support one another, and push for the systemic changes which are so desperately needed so victims have a chance of finally being heard (and hopefully protected).
Please stay tuned for more updates along the way.
If you’re experiencing this, know you’re not alone. We are with you on this same journey. In the meantime, remember to take care of your mental and physical health. It’s important to focus more on the positive and there are various resources out there which can help to increase more of the positive energy in your life, rather than letting the negative energy take hold.
If you are dealing with coordinated harassment, you may find this book helpful. Reclaiming Calm has been written specifically for targeted individuals and those experiencing coordinated harassment. It offers practical strategies for reclaiming inner peace and practising self-kindness even in difficult circumstances.
Anyone can start the techniques immediately which are within the book - no doctor’s permission, special equipment or training needed. That said, it's important to emphasise that while the methods within the book are available to anyone to pick up and utilise, they are not in any shape or form a substitute for professional medical advice, such as a doctor or qualified therapist, if you feel you need that help - in these scenarios the book is not your answer - this is covered more in the Introduction section.
Please note: The information in the book is purely for general information purposes and is not intended as legal, medical or professional advice. The author and publisher disclaim any liability for actions taken or not taken based on the contents of the book.
Here is a link to the book - Reclaiming Calm: A Gentle Self-Help & Self-Care Guide for Targeted Individuals.
By entering and accessing the CoordinatedHarassment.com site, you agreed to be bound by our Terms of Use. Nothing on this page or site constitutes medical, legal, psychological, or professional advice. All content is for informational and educational purposes only. If you are experiencing harassment or distress, this site does not offer any form of personal advice, support, or guidance. It is entirely up to you how (or whether) you choose to proceed with contacting appropriate authorities or support services in your country for any advice or support you feel you need.
We wish you a good day and a good week from us. Take care.
#Gangstalking #OrganisedStalking #CoordinatedHarassment #Awareness