Sarai Hannah Ajai's Incident Report Regarding Ring Camera Outage, Suspected Internet Disruption, Apartment Security Concerns, Door-Access Timeline, Public Transit Travel Records, and Possible Unauthorized Access Affecting Apartment Unit **5
Redacted Incident Report
June 9, 2026 Incident Report Regarding Ring Camera Outage, Suspected Internet Disruption, Apartment Security Concerns, Door-Access Timeline, Public Transit Travel Records, and Possible Unauthorized Access Affecting Apartment Unit **5
Formal Incident Report Narrative
Reporting Party: Sarai Hannah Ajai
Apartment Unit: **5
Incident Date: June 9, 2026
Primary Timeframe: Approximately 3:18 PM through 9:07 PM
Primary Residence Location: Apartment Unit **5, full residential address redacted
Election Location: Public voting location, full address redacted
Transit Location: Public transit depot, full address redacted
Property Management / Apartment Community: Name redacted for public posting
Primary Devices / Systems Involved: Apple iPhone 17, Ring cameras, Ring app, SwitchBot door lock / door entrance log, apartment Wi-Fi / internet connection, public transit fare activity records
Prepared For: Personal legal records, housing/security documentation, cybersecurity documentation, property-management documentation, and possible submission to appropriate agencies or service providers.
Date Prepared: June 10, 2026
I. Summary of Incident
On June 9, 2026, I, Sarai Hannah Ajai, left my apartment unit, **5, to vote in the primary election at a public voting location. After voting, I walked to a public transit depot and waited for public bus service.
While at or near the public transit depot, I unlocked my Apple iPhone 17, opened the Ring app, and discovered that all of my Ring cameras appeared offline and were no longer connected to Wi-Fi. This was the first time I had experienced a sudden, unexplained Ring camera disconnection affecting all of my Ring camera devices at the same time while I was away from my apartment.
The Ring app screenshots attached as Exhibits A1 and A2 show multiple Ring camera devices marked “Device Offline,” including Kitchen, Ring - Sarai’s Patio, Ring Living Camera, Sarai’s Front Apt. Door, and Bedroom. The screenshots include warning icons beside multiple devices.
Because my Ring cameras are part of my apartment safety and documentation system, I became alarmed and returned to my apartment unit, **5. My SwitchBot door log, attached as Exhibit B1, records that the Kitchen Door Entrancewas unlocked at approximately 6:12 PM and later locked at approximately 6:20 PM. The same exhibit includes my explanatory notation that I rushed back to my apartment because my Ring cameras were no longer connected to Wi-Fi and I wanted to verify whether damage had occurred.
When I returned, I did not immediately observe obvious physical damage or confirm any theft. However, based on the simultaneous offline status of all Ring cameras, the absence of ordinary power-outage indicators, and my lack of a Ring internet-interruption email notification, I reasonably believed that the outage may have involved a suspected disruption to my apartment internet or Wi-Fi connection.
I am especially concerned because the internet or utility room / network service area is located outside or near my apartment bedroom window. Based on my observations, I believe unknown persons may have accessed or interfered with the internet connection serving my apartment or building area while I was away from Unit **5. I do not yet have direct router logs, internet-provider records, property-management access logs, or law-enforcement forensic confirmation identifying the responsible person or persons. However, the timing, device behavior, and travel records justify preserving this report as a suspected apartment security and network-interference incident.
II. Relevant Background and Prior Concern
Before this June 9, 2026 incident, I had already experienced prior concerns involving Wi-Fi, app-connected devices, Ring cameras, Amazon-connected devices, and possible unauthorized network association. A prior incident report documented suspected abnormal Wi-Fi behavior involving Amazon Echo devices, prior SSID reuse, Ring camera outage, and possible device/network compromise.
This June 9, 2026 incident is separate because it occurred while I was away from my apartment to vote and then travel by public bus. However, it is relevant to the same broader concern: my apartment-connected security devices appeared to become unavailable while I was outside Unit **5, creating a loss of camera coverage and a security gap during a period when I could not personally observe the apartment.
III. Detailed Timeline of Events
1. Approximately 3:18 PM to 3:22 PM — Door Activity Before Leaving Apartment
According to Exhibit B1, the SwitchBot log for June 9, 2026 shows:
- 3:18 PM: Kitchen Door Entrance unlocked, source listed as Remote.
- 3:22 PM: Kitchen Door Entrance locked, source listed as Keypad.
The screenshot includes my notation that I left Apartment Unit **5 to go vote.
2. Approximately 3:50 PM — Voting at Public Voting Location
At or about 3:50 PM, I went to vote in the primary election at a public voting location. The full address is redacted for public posting.
3. Approximately 4:12 PM — Arrival at Public Transit Depot
After voting, I walked to a public transit depot, arriving at approximately 4:12 PM.
While waiting for public bus service, I unlocked my Apple iPhone 17, opened the Ring app, and discovered that all Ring cameras appeared offline.
4. Approximately 4:24 PM — Public Transit Activity
Exhibit C1 shows public transit rider activity for June 9, 2026, including an entry at approximately 4:24 PM for public bus service. For public posting, card number, equipment number, bus number, route number, and other identifying transit details should be redacted.
This entry supports that I was away from my apartment and using public transit during the relevant timeframe.
5. Approximately 5:33 PM — Ring Cameras Shown Offline
Exhibits A1 and A2 show the Ring app at approximately 5:33 PM, displaying multiple Ring devices offline. The devices shown include:
- Kitchen — Device Offline
- Ring - Sarai’s Patio — Device Offline
- Ring Living Camera — Device Offline
- Sarai’s Front Apt. Door — Device Offline
- Bedroom — Offline
This evidence documents that my Ring camera system was unavailable during the incident window.
6. Approximately 5:48 PM — Public Transit Activity
Exhibit C1 shows an additional public transit rider activity entry at approximately 5:48 PM. This further supports that I was traveling outside my apartment during the timeframe when the Ring cameras were offline.
7. Approximately 6:12 PM to 6:20 PM — Return to Apartment
According to Exhibit B1, the SwitchBot log shows:
- 6:12 PM: Kitchen Door Entrance unlocked, source listed as Remote.
- 6:20 PM: Kitchen Door Entrance locked, source listed as Alexa.
The screenshot includes my explanatory notation that I rushed back to my apartment because my Ring cameras were no longer connected to Wi-Fi and I wanted to verify whether damage had occurred inside Apartment Unit **5.
At that time, I did not immediately observe obvious physical damage or confirm stolen property. However, the outage still caused significant concern because the Ring cameras are used for apartment security and evidence preservation.
8. Approximately 6:42 PM to 6:44 PM — Later Departure for Grocery Shopping
According to Exhibit B1, the SwitchBot log shows:
- 6:42 PM: Kitchen Door Entrance unlocked, source listed as Remote.
- 6:44 PM: Kitchen Door Entrance locked, source listed as Keypad.
The screenshot includes my notation that I left Apartment Unit **5 and traveled by bus to grocery shop.
9. Approximately 7:01 PM and 8:27 PM — Additional Public Transit Activity
Exhibit C1 shows additional public transit rider activity entries on June 9, 2026, including entries around:
- 7:01 PM
- 8:27 PM
These records support the broader travel timeline showing that I continued using public bus service later that evening.
10. Approximately 9:03 PM to 9:07 PM — Return from Grocery Shopping
According to Exhibit B1, the SwitchBot log shows:
- 9:03 PM: Kitchen Door Entrance unlocked, source listed as Remote.
- 9:07 PM: Kitchen Door Entrance locked, source listed as Alexa.
The screenshot includes my notation that I had returned from grocery shopping to Apartment Unit **5.
IV. Ring Camera Outage Observations
The Ring app screenshots show a broad outage involving multiple camera devices. Based on the screenshots, the outage was not limited to one individual camera. The outage affected multiple camera locations, including indoor and entry-related monitoring points.
The devices shown offline included:
- Kitchen
- Ring - Sarai’s Patio
- Ring Living Camera
- Sarai’s Front Apt. Door
- Bedroom
This simultaneous offline status was concerning because these devices are used to monitor my apartment unit and preserve evidence of activity near or within areas connected to Unit **5.
Normally, when a power outage occurs, I expect certain physical indicators inside my apartment, including the stove light flashing or other devices showing power-reset behavior. Based on my observation after returning, I did not see ordinary signs indicating a general electrical outage.
Additionally, if my internet service goes down, I expect to receive a Ring notification or email indicating that internet service was interrupted. Based on my observation, I did not receive an ordinary Ring alert explaining a service interruption. Therefore, I believed the Ring outage required immediate documentation.
V. Suspected Unauthorized Conduct
Based on my observations, the device screenshots, the SwitchBot door logs, the public transit travel record, and the lack of ordinary power-outage indicators, I believe this incident may involve one or more suspected issues:
1. Possible internet or Wi-Fi disruption affecting Apartment Unit **5
The Ring app showed multiple devices offline at the same time while I was away from my apartment. Because I did not observe ordinary power-outage indicators after returning, I believe the incident may have involved a disruption to internet or Wi-Fi connectivity rather than a general electric outage.
2. Possible access to an internet / utility room or network service area
I am concerned that unknown persons may have accessed the internet room, utility room, or network service area located outside or near my apartment bedroom window. I believe that area should be reviewed because interference with network equipment or service access could cause apartment security devices to go offline.
3. Possible unauthorized interference with apartment security devices
The Ring cameras are used for safety, documentation, and evidence preservation. If the camera outage was caused by intentional interference, the effect was to prevent me from remotely monitoring my apartment during a period when I was away from Unit **5.
4. Possible unauthorized access or attempted access to Apartment Unit **5
At this time, I did not observe obvious physical damage or confirm theft. However, the camera outage occurred while I was away from my apartment, and I returned because I was concerned that someone could have used the outage window to enter, attempt entry, inspect, access, or interfere with my residence.
5. Key-control concern involving Apartment Unit **5
The property management company provided me with one set of keys to Apartment Unit **5. Because of the timing of the Ring outage and my concern about possible entry or attempted entry, I believe key-control records, master-key access, maintenance access, and any spare-key protocols should be reviewed.
I am not stating that the screenshots alone prove that a tenant, staff member, or specific person entered my apartment. However, I believe the incident reasonably raises a property-access and apartment-security concern that should be documented and investigated.
6. Public-following and device-integrity concern
I have also experienced ongoing concerns involving unknown individuals following me in public places, including shopping areas and bus stops. I believe some individuals may be watching my movements and may be attempting to exploit moments when I am away from my apartment.
I am documenting this as a reported concern based on my personal observations. I do not yet have independent forensic confirmation identifying the persons involved or confirming a specific method used against my iPhone 17, Ring account, or Wi-Fi network.
VI. Exhibit List and Evidence Description
Exhibit A1 — Ring Cameras Offline, Part 1, June 9, 2026
This screenshot shows the Ring app displaying multiple Ring camera devices marked “Device Offline.” The visible devices include:
- Kitchen
- Ring - Sarai’s Patio
- Ring Living Camera
- Sarai’s Front Apt. Door
Each visible camera panel shows an offline status or warning indicator. This exhibit documents that multiple Ring cameras were unavailable during the relevant timeframe.
Public redaction note: The screenshot should have the visible app location redacted before public posting.
Exhibit A2 — Ring Cameras Offline, Part 2, June 9, 2026
This screenshot continues the Ring app device list and shows additional offline device information. It includes:
- Ring Living Camera — Device Offline
- Sarai’s Front Apt. Door — Device Offline
- Bedroom — Offline
This exhibit confirms that the outage was not limited to one camera and that multiple Ring devices were affected.
Public redaction note: Any visible app location, account marker, device identifier, or private location label should be redacted before public posting.
Exhibit B1 — SwitchBot Automatic Door Log, June 9, 2026
This screenshot shows the Kitchen Door Entrance log for June 9, 2026. The visible entries include:
- 3:18 PM: Unlocked — Remote
- 3:22 PM: Locked — Keypad
- 6:12 PM: Unlocked — Remote
- 6:20 PM: Locked — Alexa
- 6:42 PM: Unlocked — Remote
- 6:44 PM: Locked — Keypad
- 9:03 PM: Unlocked — Remote
- 9:07 PM: Locked — Alexa
The screenshot also contains my red explanatory notes describing when I left to vote, rushed back after discovering the Ring camera outage, left again to grocery shop, and returned later that evening.
For accuracy, the terms Remote, Keypad, and Alexa are recorded as they appear in the SwitchBot log. These labels should be reviewed with the device provider if further technical interpretation is needed.
Public redaction note: Any visible unit number should be changed to **5, and any full address, city, state, ZIP code, or highly specific location reference should be covered before public posting.
Exhibit C1 — Public Transit Rider Activity Report, June 9, 2026
This screenshot shows public transit rider activity records for June 9, 2026. The visible highlighted entries include activity around:
- 4:24 PM
- 5:48 PM
- 7:01 PM
- 8:27 PM
This exhibit supports that I was away from my apartment and using public transit during the relevant time periods.
The report also notes that recent activity may not reflect all records immediately, so the report should be preserved as supporting travel documentation rather than treated as the only possible record of movement.
Public redaction note: Before public posting, redact the transit agency name if desired, full addresses, card number, equipment number, bus number, route number, account information, browser URL, and any visible city/state/ZIP details.
VII. Security, Privacy, and Evidence Impact
This incident affected my ability to monitor my apartment remotely. My Ring cameras are part of my personal security and evidence-preservation process. When multiple cameras became unavailable at the same time, I lost the ability to verify activity at or near my apartment unit from my phone.
The outage also caused immediate fear because it occurred while I was away from home after voting and while using public transportation. I had no clear explanation from Ring, my internet provider, the electric company, or property management at the time I observed the outage.
If the outage was caused by ordinary service disruption, I request that it be verified through records. If the outage was caused by unauthorized interference with internet equipment, Wi-Fi connectivity, apartment access, or Ring-connected devices, then it may involve a serious security incident affecting Apartment Unit **5.
VIII. Property Management and Access-Control Concerns
Because the internet / network service area is located outside or near my apartment bedroom window, I believe property management should preserve and review any available records connected to that area.
I request review of:
- Any maintenance activity on June 9, 2026.
- Any property-staff access to Unit **5.
- Any work orders involving internet, utility, or network service areas near Unit **5.
- Any contractor or third-party access to building network rooms or utility rooms.
- Any master-key, spare-key, or emergency-key records for Unit **5.
- Any camera footage from common areas, hallways, building entrances, and exterior areas near the internet / utility room.
- Any tenant reports or complaints involving internet service interruption on June 9, 2026.
- Any known building-wide or unit-specific service work affecting internet connectivity.
I am not claiming that property management has confirmed any unauthorized entry. I am documenting that the Ring outage, my travel timeline, and the apartment access concerns should be reviewed together.
IX. Device and Account Review Concerns
Because the Ring outage was observed through my Apple iPhone 17, and because my Ring cameras are connected through online account access, I believe the following should also be reviewed:
- Ring account login history.
- Ring shared users.
- Ring camera device health reports.
- Ring Wi-Fi signal and disconnection history.
- Router logs, if available.
- Internet-provider outage records for Unit **5.
- Apple ID device list and account access history.
- iPhone 17 security settings, device list, and app permissions.
- Any unrecognized sessions or device access connected to Ring, Apple, Amazon, or Wi-Fi service accounts.
This review is important because I have experienced broader concerns involving possible unauthorized device access, public monitoring, and unexplained interference with app-connected devices.
X. Evidence Preservation
I preserved the following evidence:
- Exhibit A1: Ring app screenshot showing multiple cameras offline.
- Exhibit A2: Ring app screenshot showing continued camera/device offline status.
- Exhibit B1: SwitchBot Kitchen Door Entrance log for June 9, 2026.
- Exhibit C1: Public transit rider activity report showing travel activity on June 9, 2026.
- My personal timeline of voting, public transit travel, returning to Apartment Unit **5, leaving again for grocery shopping, and returning later that evening.
- My observation that I did not immediately see ordinary electric power-outage indicators after returning.
- My observation that I did not receive an ordinary Ring internet-interruption email notification explaining the outage.
- My observation that I did not immediately identify physical damage or confirmed theft after returning to inspect the apartment.
For public posting, I recommend redacting any visible full account/card numbers, sensitive addresses, device identifiers, browser URLs, location labels, apartment community names, building names, and any passwords or Wi-Fi credentials.
XI. Requested Follow-Up Actions
I request that this incident be preserved as part of my official personal security documentation and that the following follow-up actions be considered:
- Request Ring device health history for June 9, 2026.
- Request internet-provider outage or service-interruption records for Unit **5.
- Review router logs, connected-device history, blocked-device history, and MAC address history.
- Change router administrator password.
- Change Wi-Fi password using a new strong password.
- Verify WPA2/WPA3 settings.
- Disable WPS if enabled.
- Review Ring shared-user settings and account login history.
- Review Apple ID device list and sign out of unrecognized devices.
- Preserve all original screenshots with file names and timestamps.
- Ask property management to preserve any access logs, work orders, service records, common-area footage, or maintenance records from June 9, 2026.
- Ask property management to review key-control records for Apartment Unit **5.
- Ask property management whether any tenant, contractor, employee, or vendor accessed the internet / utility room or network area near Unit **5 on June 9, 2026.
- Continue documenting any future unexplained Ring camera outages, internet interruptions, or door-access irregularities.
- Consider reporting the incident to Ring, Apple, the internet provider, property management, and appropriate law-enforcement or cybercrime reporting agencies if additional evidence supports unauthorized access or interference.
XII. Statement of Good-Faith Belief
I am making this report based on my personal observations, uploaded screenshots, Ring app device status, SwitchBot door-access logs, public transit rider activity records, and the timeline of my movements on June 9, 2026.
I believe this incident raises legitimate concerns regarding possible unauthorized internet or Wi-Fi interference, possible disruption of Ring security cameras, possible access to a building internet / utility area, possible apartment-security risk, possible key-control issues, and possible unauthorized device or account activity.
The screenshots do not independently identify the person or persons responsible. However, they document that multiple Ring camera devices were offline while I was away from Apartment Unit **5 and that my door-access and public transit records support the timeline of my absence and return. For that reason, I am preserving this report and the attached exhibits as part of my official incident documentation.
Prepared by: Sarai Hannah Ajai
Date Prepared: June 10, 2026
Related Evidence: Exhibits A1, A2, B1, and C1
Passwords / Sensitive Credentials: Redacted for security purposes
Public Whiteboard Redaction Checklist
Before posting the screenshots publicly, I recommend covering:
Item | Redaction Format |
Apartment number | **5 |
Full street addresses | Full address redacted |
City / state / ZIP | Location redacted |
Property management name | Property management redacted |
Apartment community name | Apartment community redacted |
Public transit card number | Card ID redacted |
Bus / equipment / route numbers | Transit identifiers redacted |
Browser URL | URL redacted |
Ring location label | Location redacted |
Device/account identifiers | Identifier redacted |
Wi-Fi names/passwords | Redacted |
Any account numbers | **# or account number redacted |







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