A Cyber Bully Steps Out of YES NM Bounds
In response to the facts described below, I began to compose the message shown below. You may request Direct Forwards from me, of the portion shown below, as intended to be Forwarded. It never was. In fact, it wouldn’t even Save to Drafts, at the time.
To NM HHS OIG Adrian R. Gallegos,
The link shown in the notification below, initially went to a 403 Forbidden webpage, preventing logons, and thus, receipt of the, ”new correspondence.”
Likewise, the site’s, “Report an Issue” link.
All other YES NM (the state’s site’s) webpages opened just fine, at the time.
This selective YES NM site conduct looks like retaliation over my responses to a survey the state invited me to participate in. I’ll forward that invitation, separately.
That’s not all which went wrong. A cyber bully tying up my YES NM account, stepped out of the bounds of that state owned website, and also messed with my Yahoo email account. The latter’s Search function became aberrant. Yahoo would not let me find past messages to Gallegos. But to others? No problem. This was not a glitch: It’s misbehavior was selective.
Additionally in conjunction with the YES NM site only opening webpages which were irrelevant to the message below, my Yahoo email account prevented views of messages prior to July 9. Yet the message to be forwarded, with the invitation to complete a survey, was previous to that, on July 6. (Look for it, next.)
I eventually worked around this simul-control by a cyber bully, of both YES NM and my Yahoo email account, and managed to get in to my YES NM account; but should not have been burdened to have to have done so.
Once logged on at YES NM, the, “Report an Issue” webpage was then at the url:
https://www.yes.state.nm.us/yesnm/comments/comment
The, “Report Changes” webpage which was at:
https://www.yes.state.nm.us/yesnm/changes/main?execution=e1s1
burdens one to fill out separate change reports for each case number. Ridiculous! YES NM should make it easy to report changes which are the same for all case numbers. You may request a view of what it looked like, when I was logged on, by asking me to send it to you.
This cyber bullying looks like a combination of non-governmental whistle-blower retaliation, and perhaps, a hate crime. The retaliation appears to have been motivated by a misplaced arrogant sense of entitlement, up front, at the outset, to prey upon anyone vulnerable. With such inferior character driving these events, it’s inconceivable that they are not a symptom of organized crime operating within legitimate governmental function. Prosecution which is adequate, is called for.
—Forwarded Message—
From: donotreplytextmail@state.nm.us
Sent: Monday, July 11, 2022 …
Subject: You have received new Correspondence from YesNM…
New correspondence has been posted to your YesNM account …