Do any anons know how to check a vehicle for an explosive device so that a driver is not taken out by an ignition-related bomb or some other type of fatal device?
But wouldn't the device still go off once a person reconnected the battery for that time when the person needs to drive the car?
A little background is that I'm doing some research and have been threatened. Everyone in the family has a lawful weapon. Some of more useful than others, but we are prepared.
But the one thing I don't know how to do is recognize if a device were put on one of the cars that our family members use.
So is there something that a non-mechanical type could check for, in a predictable place or two, to be sure that nobody fucked with my family's cars while we were sleeping or at our jobs?
Tried finding useful videos but couldn't. If we know what to look for, on the cars, I'll be sure we're checking before anyone turns a key in an ignition.
Thank you.
We're not supposed to know how to look for weapons implanted in our vehicles to kill us? What, are we supposed to just turn the key and blow?
If I told you then you, too, would need to know the answer to the question that I've been asking here. . . .
Thanks, Anon. It's a serious question because I've already evaded two "tragedies" on the road, thanks to tactical driving and the Second Amendment. I hadn't worried about the "device in a family car" scenario much, but I'm streaming the Madoff "documentary" (which might be a lot of bullshit, for all we know, since [THEY] never really tell the truth in the media) and I heard a guy named Harry Markopoulos (the Boston financial guy who tried, repeatedly, to report Madoff's ongoing fraud) say that he got so concerned that he started checking his car for devices.
That got me wondering, "HOW? and WHERE?"
Tried seearching for info on how a simpleton who has info could do the same and I'm coming up with blanks.
Our cars are older than 2005. We pay to keep them going and have one undergoing a restoration as I type. No newfangled shit on them that I can tell, unless the restoration crew is outfitting them with new stuff and not teling us about it or charging me for it.
Yup, a little, but that ain't stopping what is coming.
We have big dogs who would have prevented the surprise strangulation in the house and we carry lawfully owned weapons that would at least give us a fighting chance in the woods.
We don't use cigarette lighters in the cars, but that doesn't mean the scenario in this video couldn't happen.
Bottom line is would the device be easily spotted on the bottom of the vehicle? Or in the engine compartment? They'd have to put those pipe(s) somewhere, I'm guessing.
Never really thought of it until I saw how worried Harry Markopoulos was about explosive devices on his vehicle.
Thank you, Anon. The info's been backed up, shared with people in several countries, and would be immediately released, in the event something happens before it's publicly shared with the world.