West Haven, Connecticut, has a new invisible roommate: a creepy, chest-rattling low-frequency hum that’s driving people nuts at 3 a.m. Some swear it’s industrial sabotage, others think their sanity’s cracking—pets pacing, dishes vibrating, one resident straight-up felt like she was “going cuckoo” while her family heard nothing. The city’s dropping $16K on mics to spy on the sound like it’s a Cold War thriller, because nothing says small-town drama like a noise pollution ghost hunt.
Mysterious hum rattles American city as residents report sleepless nights and rising fear