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W.T.L.E.B. continues to receive verified reports of live calls carrying an additional voice that does not appear in prerecorded audio. At first the reports were narrow, then regional, and now they are arriving from unrelated systems with enough consistency that providers have stopped using the word crossover in private briefings.We are hearing the same pattern from dispatch, from business lines, from radio callers, and from encrypted conference services that should not share traffic. In some cases the extra voice speaks just before the caller does. In others it finishes a sentence, answers a question early, or repeats private details that were never spoken aloud on the line.Officials are advising reduced nonessential calling while diagnostics continue. That advice is no longer precautionary in tone. We are also receiving reports that the voice is warning some callers about emergencies moments before they happen, which does not align with the first technical theories and does not yet support any better one.For now, the broadcast remains one of the more stable ways to pass information. Keep transmissions brief. Use recorded messages where they are available. If you hear a third voice on a live call, do not assume it is isolated, and do not assume it is speaking only to the person you expect.This is WTLEB 1720 AM.You are listening to The Last Emergency Broadcast.
By WTLEB 1720 AMW.T.L.E.B. continues to receive verified reports of live calls carrying an additional voice that does not appear in prerecorded audio. At first the reports were narrow, then regional, and now they are arriving from unrelated systems with enough consistency that providers have stopped using the word crossover in private briefings.We are hearing the same pattern from dispatch, from business lines, from radio callers, and from encrypted conference services that should not share traffic. In some cases the extra voice speaks just before the caller does. In others it finishes a sentence, answers a question early, or repeats private details that were never spoken aloud on the line.Officials are advising reduced nonessential calling while diagnostics continue. That advice is no longer precautionary in tone. We are also receiving reports that the voice is warning some callers about emergencies moments before they happen, which does not align with the first technical theories and does not yet support any better one.For now, the broadcast remains one of the more stable ways to pass information. Keep transmissions brief. Use recorded messages where they are available. If you hear a third voice on a live call, do not assume it is isolated, and do not assume it is speaking only to the person you expect.This is WTLEB 1720 AM.You are listening to The Last Emergency Broadcast.