Avalon Gardens Investigation and Surveillance - Tue, Oct 17, 2017
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Report No: GT/GB-171017-049250501
Location: Greeley, CO
Agents:
Summary: Agents continued surveillance and conducted covert break-ins targeting the residences of Avalon Gardens executives Dakota Knight and John Bellamy. The investigation focused on potential unnatural influences linked to Avalon Gardens and its management, specifically uncovering disturbing biological anomalies and suspicious operational behaviors.
Operation Report:
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Surveillance of Avalon Gardens and related personnel continued from October 14 through October 17. Previously installed GPS trackers indicated limited vehicular movement from key personnel, notably Dakota Knight and John Bellamy.
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Dakota Knight’s residence, a high-end condo, and John Bellamy’s low-rent apartment were identified as high-priority targets for further investigative action.
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Preliminary electronic reconnaissance and surveillance indicated Knight’s condo had active electronic security; Bellamy’s apartment did not appear electronically secured.
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Break-in at Dakota Knight’s Residence (Daytime Operation):
- Drummond successfully circumvented electronic alarm systems by installing a signal bypass.
- Booth successfully breached the condo’s front door lock, gaining covert entry.
- Inside, agents found the residence poorly maintained, seemingly infrequently occupied.
- Six flip phones labeled with names and phone numbers, indicative of covert identities or burner operations, were discovered and documented.
- Agents located an abandoned hydroponic marijuana grow system containing a dead plant exhibiting anomalous biological features: trichome hairs resembling insect legs growing directly from the stalk.
- Drummond reported detecting a strong, unnatural odor (“meaty aroma”) from the anomalous plant matter, inducing severe psychological distress and aggressive compulsions temporarily managed by the agent.
- Multiple unlabeled vape cartridges consistent with Avalon Gardens’ products, likely off-production-line samples, were discovered; one cartridge was recovered for analysis.
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Break-in at John Bellamy’s Apartment (Nighttime Operation):
- Booth successfully breached Bellamy’s apartment lock, encountering no electronic security measures.
- The interior presented as sparse and military-disciplined, featuring minimal personal belongings.
- Bellamy’s handgun was found partially disassembled for routine cleaning, indicating a constant state of readiness or habitual vigilance.
- Numerous identical unlabeled vape cartridges were discovered, confirming Bellamy’s use of Avalon Gardens products.
- Agents uncovered administrative documents related to Instant Deterrent Security (IDS), the security firm owned by Bellamy. Financial records indicated personal payroll distributions to IDS employees handled directly by Bellamy via personal checks.
- A secured, bolted safe was located within the residence; agents refrained from forcibly removing or opening the safe, leaving its contents unknown.
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Parallel surveillance conducted by Agents Parker and McCarter on Dr. Reza Hoshain yielded standard behavioral patterns consistent with an uninvolved civilian. However, Hoshain exhibited notable stress, suggesting potential internal conflict or knowledge of activities at Avalon Gardens.
Analysis and Recommendations:
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The biological anomalies identified at Knight’s condo strongly indicate ongoing unnatural influence at Avalon Gardens, aligning with similar anomalous organic incidents encountered in Operation GREEN BOTTLE and Operation FERTILE GROUND. Immediate biochemical and genetic analysis of recovered plant matter and vape cartridge contents is recommended to confirm contamination and identify potential vectors of unnatural influence.
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Drummond’s visceral reaction to anomalous materials indicates potential vulnerability or developing sensitivity to specific unnatural stimuli. Continuous psychological monitoring and limitation of direct contact with anomalous biological samples is advised.
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The burner phones recovered suggest Knight is managing multiple covert identities, possibly to manipulate public perception or covertly communicate with unknown contacts. Agents should further investigate these identities and trace call records to determine their operational significance.
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Bellamy’s highly disciplined lifestyle, coupled with disproportionate security resources at Avalon Gardens, indicates that facility security far exceeds normal industry standards. It is recommended to expand surveillance on Instant Deterrent Security employees to assess potential military-grade operations, unusual training procedures, or off-the-books assignments.
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The unexplored safe at Bellamy’s residence presents a significant intelligence opportunity. Authorization for a secondary, discreet entry to access the safe’s contents is recommended to further clarify Bellamy’s exact operational role and assess additional threats or connections to external entities.
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Dr. Hoshain’s evident stress and isolated social patterns suggest he may be an unwilling participant or potential whistleblower candidate. Recommend cautious personal engagement to evaluate his utility as an intelligence asset or informant.
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Continued investigation into Cimarron’s Credit Union, Avalon Gardens’ financial institution, is warranted to identify potential money laundering, financing of illicit activities, or transactional evidence linked to external occult interests or entities.
Immediate priority should be assigned to confirm the extent and intent of the anomalous substances originating from Avalon Gardens, identifying responsible entities, and mitigating potential widespread unnatural exposure.
Session opens (Saturday morning, 14 October 2017) with a recap of prior intelligence-gathering against Avalon Gardens Drone fly-over of the cultivation site revealed only two armored Chevy Tahoes parked in a secured rear area. Tax-record analysis (via AUSA Antonia Pizzarelli) for all employees uncovered: Avalon Gardens banks exclusively with Cimarron Credit Union (Greeley, CO). GPS trackers planted by Graham Drummond on: Background check on John Bellamy (Frank Booth): Water “vibes” sweep: Cole Parker drove Matthew McCarter and Agent J to various Greeley sites. McCarter found the water “deeply troubling,” became hysterical; Jay restrained and medicated him. Parker himself detected a faint strange odor near Avalon Gardens. Surveillance planning discussion Four primary personal targets identified for stakeouts: Decision to conduct drive-bys and gather layout details before attempting entry. Drive-by observations Open-source dig on Dr. Reza Hoshain Multi-day stakeouts (approx. 14–17 Oct) Dakota Knight observed at condo once: John Bellamy observed at apartment once: Dr. Hoshain household surveillance (by Parker, McCarter, Jay): Break-in #1: Dakota Knight’s condo (mid-day, disguise as utility workers) Drummond (SIGINT) bypassed alarm by cutting phone line and installing a keep-alive relay (roll 21). Booth picked front-door lock (roll 21). Interior condition: spacious but dirty, sparsely furnished “bachelor pad.” Findings: Six taped flip-phones, each labeled with a unique phone number and name; call logs show only one contact number per phone. Each phone linked to a social-media booster account praising “Avalon Strong” posts by Dakota Knight. Guest bedroom: abandoned hydroponic rig with a long-dead cannabis plant. Nightstand drawer: several unused, unlabeled vape cartridges matching Avalon packaging; additional spent cartridges in trash. Both agents bagged one full cartridge as evidence. Booth viewed plant photos later → SAN failure (-1). Break-in #2: John Bellamy’s apartment (night after his stay) Booth unlocked cheap door lock (+20 bonus, success). Interior: spartan, meticulously tidy military-style bachelor quarters; fridge holds condiments only. Paperwork station on kitchen table: Firearm maintenance station: disassembled handgun mid-clean; magazine absent. Spent unlabeled vape cartridges scattered on counters and trash. Small safe bolted into bedroom wall; unable to crack during search; photographed banking details from checkbook instead. No quick-grab valuables taken; no cameras or alarm detected. General evidence pattern emerging Session ends Tuesday 17 October with agents regroupingSession Notes
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