JETSON and the Heartbeat: How They Find You Before They Fire
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They Find You by Heartbeat
Before a directed energy weapon can target you, someone has to find you. Not your address. Not your phone. You — your physical body, through walls, in real time. A Pentagon program called JETSON does exactly that.
JETSON uses infrared laser vibrometry to identify individuals by their cardiac signature at distances exceeding 200 meters with 95 percent accuracy.
Your Heartbeat Is a Fingerprint
Every human heart beats in a pattern as unique as a fingerprint. JETSON uses an invisible infrared laser to detect these micro-vibrations from over 600 feet away. Once your cardiac signature is captured — from a hospital visit, a fitness tracker, or direct laser sensing — it can be stored and used to locate you anywhere.
Two Systems: Locate, Then Attack
The attack model follows a two-step pattern documented in both military research and forensic victim reports. Step one: locate the target by biometric signature. JETSON finds the person through walls, in a crowd, or in a vehicle. Step two: direct the energy weapon to the identified individual.
Two systems. One finds you. One fires. Both use lasers. Both are documented Pentagon programs.
Privacy Implications for Everyone
If your heartbeat can identify you from 600 feet through a wall, then anonymity in physical space no longer exists for anyone whose cardiac signature has been captured. Every fitness tracker sync, every medical procedure that records cardiac data becomes a potential source of identification that cannot be revoked.
For legal guidance on biometric privacy or Voice to Skull defense: 707-362-4166 | attorneymichaelbenavides.com
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.

