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Night Invasion Jane Doe 121

Perhaps the most controversial piece is a text file claiming to be a redacted incident report from the "Pleasant Valley Police Department." The report describes a call made at 12:03 AM from a homeowner who reported "a woman standing in the garden." When officers arrived, they found no intruder. However, they noted that every digital clock in the house—microwave, alarm clock, DVR—displayed 12:01. The homeowner’s daughter, age 7, was reportedly found sleepwalking in the backyard, barefoot, holding a pair of scissors.

The report ends with a handwritten note scanned into the file: "No charges filed. Subject identified only as Jane Doe, case number 121. Recommend psychological evaluation for family."

The video is 47 seconds of green-hued thermal imaging. The timestamp reads 2022-01-21, 00:01:02. The camera appears to be mounted on a back porch, facing a chain-link fence. For the first 30 seconds, nothing moves. Then, a figure—later dubbed "Jane Doe 121"—enters from the left edge of the frame.

She is not running. She is not sneaking. She walks with an unnaturally consistent gait, like a metronome. Her thermal signature is cold—darker than the ambient temperature of the grass. She stops exactly six feet from the camera, tilts her head at a 45-degree angle, and raises a single hand as if to wave. Then the video cuts to black.

No face is visible. No clothing detail emerges. But the internet has obsessed over her height (approx. 5’4"), her speed, and the fact that she casts no shadow in the infrared spectrum.

The most disturbing piece of the collection is a 1-minute, 14-second voicemail. The recording begins with what sounds like a landline dial tone, followed by a woman’s whisper: "You left the back door unlocked again." Then, silence. At 42 seconds in, a distant, melodic chime plays—identical to the Nokia ringtone "Nostalgia Nights." Finally, a thud, as if a phone was dropped onto a hardwood floor.

Forensic audio analysts on YouTube have tried to clean the track. Some claim to hear a second voice whispering a date: "January 21st." Others insist it is simply feedback looping. What is undeniable is the visceral reaction the audio provokes—a sense of being watched from just outside your peripheral vision.