Why ⚠️ NARTs Happen
NARTs occur when families operate with EMPTY gauges. They can't detect scams. They can't resist algorithm hooks. They can't protect what they love.
The Brock-Hall Tragedy — Ohio
The news stopped us cold. An 83-year-old grandfather, William Brock, was sentenced to 21 years to life in prison for shooting an Uber driver named Lo-Letha Hall in his own driveway. He will likely spend the rest of his life behind bars. Lo-Letha never came home.
Neither of them was a criminal. Both of them were victims of the exact same phone scam — at the exact same moment.
Scammers had called William and told him his family was in danger. They triggered every protective instinct an 83-year-old grandfather has. Then, simultaneously, those same scammers sent Lo-Letha — an Uber driver just doing her job, a mother, a grandmother herself — to William's address to "pick up a package."
A terrified old man. An innocent woman. One burner phone in another country. Two destroyed families.
That is what an empty Attention Reserve looks like when a scammer finds it. William had no circuit breaker. No one to call. No trained human between the fear in his chest and the gun in his hand. That gap is what Rescue Reserve exists to close.
✅ Rescue Reserve's Response
Rescue Reserve responds to tragedies like Brock-Hall with trained phone-safety protocols, a human Thera-B Warm Line, and Stand Pet companions — measurably reducing scam anxiety and documented near-miss incidents for adults 65+ in care communities. Currently in quiet early testing through family connections at a [local senior care partner] and a [local movement therapy partner] in Central Illinois.
This is what happens in ungovernable spaces. The FCC admits it can't govern attention abuse between screens and brains. These are the families Rescue Reserve was built to serve.