Saturday, July 19, 2025

NeoBio and the Missing Children

 Posted to The Clark List – 29 days post-disappearance


I didn’t want to write this one.
Even I have lines I hate crossing.
But when the facts claw at the back of your brain like they’re screaming to get out, you either share the story… or you go crazy in your cell.

So here we go.

Port Haven, Oregon – A Town That Shouldn’t Exist

Most people have never heard of Port Haven. That’s by design.

It’s a coastal community that shows up on old maritime logs, but not on Google Maps. You can find census records from the ’50s and ’60s—usually about 800–900 people—but after 1971? Nothing. No zip code. No postal routes. Just… gone.

And yet, in 1992, a NeoBio Pharmaceuticals logistics document—meant for internal eyes only—lists Port Haven as a “secondary containment site” for Project Seraphim.

You remember Seraphim, right? The synthetic soul project. Engineered empathy. Human cloning with a metaphysical twist.

According to this document, Port Haven was used to “house and monitor control subjects under naturalistic conditions.” But here’s the part that makes my blood run cold:

“All subjects under 10 years of age. No known guardianship. Consent waived by Executive Directive (Seraphim Phase III).”

Operation Orchard

In digging through archived FOIA requests (some of which were mysteriously fulfilled in 2008 and then purged in 2009), I found something called Operation Orchard.

On paper, it was a post-Vietnam veteran relocation experiment—offering former soldiers and “their families” a fresh start in Pacific Northwest towns being quietly subsidized by federal grants.

But here’s the twist: the majority of these “families” were single adults with no dependents… until they arrived in Port Haven.

Where they were suddenly assigned children.

Not birth certificates. Not adoption papers. Just given.

The wording in internal memos says “integration with assets successful.”
Assets.
Children.

It gets worse.

One audio file—likely recorded from an internal security briefing—mentions something called the Angel Protocol, in which “assigned guardians will receive behavioral reinforcement in the form of neuro-adjustive therapy and hormone stabilization.”

Translation? They drugged the adults.
Conditioned them.
Made them believe those kids were theirs.

And what happened when the project ended?

Port Haven burned.

The Port Haven Fire – “Arson by God”

In 1993, the Oregon coast was rocked by what media outlets called “a freak lightning storm that leveled a ghost town.” Very few pictures exist. Fire department records show delayed response times and restricted access.

The official casualty count?
Zero.
Because officially, Port Haven didn’t exist.

But satellite imaging from before and after the incident shows hundreds of heat signatures the day before the fire—and only two the day after.

One of those survivors was picked up by a Coast Guard cutter. Her name was Elise Tabor. Seven years old. No ID. She later appeared in state foster care documents under a new name, adopted in Portland.

I tracked her down in 2021. She wouldn’t talk.
But she handed me a drawing.

Crayons. Torn page.
A boy floating in midair with wires in his arms.
A woman in a lab coat with no face.
A massive tree, bleeding from its trunk.

Elise said only one thing:

“The angels told me not to scream.”

So Where Are the Other Children?

That’s the part that eats at me.

Some, I suspect, were relocated—folded into new projects under different names. A few might’ve been deemed “too unstable” and quietly removed. But I believe—no, I know—that at least a few survived the fire.

They’re out there.

And based on strange incident reports and behavioral studies emerging from psychiatric hospitals across the western U.S., I think they’re beginning to remember.

Not just who they were.
But what they were made to be.

And NeoBio? They’re terrified.

Because whatever they unleashed in Port Haven… it wasn’t human.

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