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Thursday 24 September 2015

Terrifying Poltergeist Activity Caught on Camera

We have a guest in our home': Terrifying video shows 'poltergeist' in a kitchen as the ceiling light swings and a bin is hurled across the room


  • A woman has captured eerie footage of a 'ghost' terrorising her home
  • Ashy Murphy, from Cork, shared the footage claiming she 'had a guest'
  • Video shows light swaying, plates smashing and cupboard doors opening



An Irish woman has captured terrifying footage of 'paranormal activity' occurring in her home, after inanimate objects began flying around her kitchen.


Loud crashes can be heard as the video shows metal bowls clattering to the floor, cupboard doors swinging open and a red bucket sliding across the room, appearing to be heading straight for her.
'We have a guest in our home,' Ashy Murphy said after she shared the disturbing footage from Cork, Ireland, on Tuesday.

At the outset, the footage appears to show a standard kitchen with nothing untoward occurring.
However, it doesn't take long for the peculiar activity to begin, as the ceiling lamp slowly begin to sway before gaining momentum and violently move back and forth.

Underneath, a loud crash can be heard, as two broom sticks clatter to the floor.

The camera then quickly pans to the sink, where metal pots make a piercing crash as they collide before settling on the bench.

Strange things then begin to happen on the other side of the room where the bread box slides forward and the cupboard swings open.



Perhaps the most concerning, is at the end of the video when a red plastic bucket slides across the floor, right in the direction of Ms Murphy.

Ms Murphy said: 'It’s getting way worse I defo have to move house.'

While many have dubbed the footage as fake and merely a trick 'with a piece of string,' most viewers were genuinely disturbed by the activity.

'Oh hell no I'd be out in a minute,' one concerned viewer wrote.
'I guess it didn't like the music' another jokingly wrote.
Nearly four million people have watched the footage on Facebook.
One viewer offered a logical explanation when they wrote: 'You can clearly see the wire being pulled at 1.05.'


Wednesday 22 July 2015

Family Haunted By Demon That Beats Them As They Sleep!

A family reckon they are being molested by an evil ghost in a Paranormal Activity-style haunting.

The Fry family say they are being molested by an evil incubus demon. (Picture: WALES NEWS SERVICE)

The Fry family from South Wales say they have been left battered and bruised by an evil ‘incubus demon’ which preys on them while they sleep.
Tracey, 46, says she is convinced they are being haunted and dad Keiron, 32, has forked out £100 to get the house in Tredegar cleansed by an expert.
The family have even summoned a local priest to bless their council house.
The Fry family said the phantom, which has also been menacing the couple’s three children, was summoned by an Ouija board.
Dad-of-three Keiron, took this picture which he says shows the demon sitting in his son’s bedroom....


Keiron said: ‘We are being molested by demons.
‘My wife goes to bed fine, doesn’t feel anything in the night but when she wakes up she’s in agony.
‘I wake up the next day and said: ‘I didn’t do that. I would never beat my wife.’
The family’s cats have been left too frightened to go upstairs.
Keiron called a paranormal expert after the phantom told his children: ‘I’m going to slit your parents’ throats.’

Tracey Fry has been left with bruises after allegedly being beaten by the demon in her sleep. (Picture: WALES NEWS SERVICE)
Tracy, who is a full-time carer, said: ‘It’s getting worse and worse and there’s nothing we can do.’
‘It has affected our marriage because we have been rowing and fighting all the time about the demon. It has been feeding off all the negative energy.’
Church of Wales Vicar Johnathan Widdess has also visited the Frys to help them tackle the ghost.
He said: ‘They invited us there and we spoke about what was going on. We said a prayer to try and help him.’

Is This A Demon Captured On Camera?

Is this a DEMON captured on camera? 
Spooky picture taken in 'haunted house' shows 'disgusting' face! 

 A British teacher took this spooky image while visiting his parents in Jamaica.


A British teacher claims to have captured a DEMON on camera after visiting his parents "haunted" house in Jamaica. This spooky image shows what family members believe is the demon of a disgruntled elderly relative. The 42-year-old secondary school teacher was visiting his parents in Clarendon when he captured the image. The man - who lives in Richmond, south London - said he took a picture of a painting on a wall in the house showing a scenic image of a waterfall. But when he looked at the picture he saw the 'demon' instead. The man, who wishes to remain anonymous, said: "There was a wall with a painting on it and i thought that I would take a picture." The picture was taken inside a home in Clarendon, Jamaica "I was looking at it and I thought 'what is that!'. Everybody in the house started screaming and running away. "I have never seen anything like this, it is disgusting and has given me headaches." The man's family are convinced it is a demon and say the home in Jamaica is haunted. They believe the demon is that of an elderly relative who was unhappy about being moved into a care home before her death. "My family believe she has come back to haunt the house," said the man. The image has so spooked the man's family they have now moved out of their home into rented accommodation.

Mystery As 600 Dogs Jump From 'Haunted Suicide Bridge'

Experts are baffled by the bizarre phenomenon that has seen several hundred pets plunge to the floor leaving at least 50 dead.




At least 50 dogs have leapt to their deaths from a 50ft 'suicide bridge' - and nobody knows why.
Animal psychologists are baffled by the bizarre phenomenon that has seen up to 600 dogs jump off the bridge for no apparent reason. Explanations range from the curious canines being over-excited, to ghosts haunting the century-old bridge next to Gothic castle Overtoun House. Some locals in West Dunbartonshire, Scotland, even claim it could be the spirit of the 'White Lady of Overtoun' who has been sighted there for over 100 years.

Peering out: Is this the ghost of Lady Overtoun at the window of the nearby 19th-century manor house?

Religious and philosophy teacher Paul Owens told the Sun: "I was standing there two years ago when I felt a firm, hard prod that felt like a finger. "Something or someone was trying to push me over the bridge too, just like the dogs." In 1994 Kevin Moy threw his baby son to his death and later tried to kill himself at the same spot, it was reported.

A sign now warns dog owners of the "dangerous bridge" reading: "Please keep your dogs on a lead."
The tragic pets mostly jump from the same side, in clear weather and are breeds with long snouts.


Another, more scientific, theory suggests minks below are responsible for attracting dogs with their powerful musk scent.

Three-year-old Cassie is one of the few dogs to survive the fall. She was being walked by her owner Alice Trevorrow and her son Thomas when the springer spaniel suddenly leapt from the 50ft high bridge for no apparent reason. Alice told the Daily Record: “We had just got out the car and Cassie immediately made her way to the bridge... she turned her head, looked up and did this massive leap.
“I will never forget the awful whine she made as she leaped. “My son looked down and all he could see was a dot. She managed to get herself up and met my son, collapsing when she saw him. How she survived that, I’ll never know.”

Lucky: Alice Trevorrow and dog Cassie, who survived the drop


However, Donna Cooper was not so lucky. She witnessed her collie dog Ben's tragic sudden death when it leapt over a parapet on the granite bridge without warning. Donna previously told Mail Online: "His paw was broken, his jaw was broken and his back was broken and badly twisted."
Ben was taken back to the vets, before they made the decision to put him down.

The area's MSP Jackie Baillie said: "I have heard many heartbreaking stories about dog owners who have lost their pets due to this unexplained phenomenon."

Danger: The sign warns dog owners about the 50ft bridge

Leading animal behaviourist Dr David Sands investigated the cases for Animal Planet and offered an alternative explanation. He said: "Just me as a person, all of your sense are on fire, you can sense and smell the waterfall. I can smell the undergrowth and I can see the Gothic part of the bridge. "I've looked at pictures but coming to the place for the first time, it has a kind of strange feeling. "It's perfectly natural for people to want to look down and I'm wondering if it's the same for dogs. "I think it's highly likely at all of the cases that it was curiosity that killed the dog."

Monday 20 April 2015

Filmmakers Look To Tell The Legend of Calgary's Haunted Devil's Playground


Please be true.

For those who believe in ghosts and the supernatural, and those who so badly want to, it’s the unspoken prayer that follows any tantalizing tale of haunting: please, oh please be true.

Whether it’s Michael Jackson’s ghost appearing on national television or a creepy rumour about the old house at the end of the block, those who give credence to the paranormal desperately want such stories to be accurate.

And so it is with Calgary’s mysterious Devil’s Playground.

The alleged abandoned school site on the eastern edge of Calgary is ranked by some as one of the most haunted places in Canada.

And like most good ghost stories, it’s a chiller.

At some time in the past, a tragic fire in a school house just east of Calgary consumed most of the building, killing three children inside — and to this day, those who dare explore the ruins report the sounds of children laughing and playing.

It’s said that long after the children died, workers tried to tear down what remained of the school, but they fell ill — and when the City of Calgary sent a wrecking ball to bash the old school to the ground, the motor died, and then the ball fell off, so they gave up.

That about sums up the most common version of the story. And of course, a good haunting encourages people to go looking.

“I could have sworn to see a face in the boarded up windows, (We) BOTH heard an eerie creaking noise. Then the screams, walking back I thought it would be funny to scream and scare (him) so I did, following my scream was a shrill scream almost the scream of a woman,” reads one of many chatroom reports on the subject.

For Calgarians into ghost stories, Devil’s Playground has become something of a quest, made more mysterious by the vague and contradictory directions found online.

It’s a great way to spend a murky night, scouring the city’s outskirts for a ghostly school — unless of course, you’re a farmer or acreage owner sick of people trespassing on your property.

“They drive the farmers crazy,” said Dori Davidson-Revill.

For the past three years, Davidson-Revill and a group of paranormal girl detectives have made the legend of Devil’s Playground their pet project — and when it comes to the supernatural, the young crew are becoming old hands.

As investigators into ghosts, superstitions and so forth, the ParaShorts team has produced one full season of online episodes dealing with everything for ectoplasm to the electronic voice phenomena.

Now keen to uncover the truth behind one of Calgary’s most infamous hauntings in Season 2, the group is currently crowd-funding the final $4,000 needed to finish their documentary on the Devil’s Playground — and when it’s released next October, Davidson-Revill says the truth may finally be known.

“Our research has uncovered a lot through witness reports, online resources and news archives ranging from interesting to the absurd,” said Davidson-Revill.

“One story we came across was that Devil’s Playground was where they once hanged witches even though the witch trials never were in Calgary or Canada.”

The investigation took ParaShorts to various locations around Calgary, and to as far away as Texas, trying to find the facts behind the dark tale.

“The story originally is about an old school on the outskirts of the city burning down. How it burned down changes from lightning to a crazy demon worshipping nun. The number of children who die range from one to eight and the location keeps changing as the city grows,” said Davidson-Revill.

Of course, embellishment and misinformation are always a factor when it comes to ghost stories — and Calgary’s haunted schoolyard is no different.

But did ParaShorts find an answer, beyond the rumours and creepy contradictions?

“We think so. But we don’t want to give too much away,” he said.

To visit the ParaShorts website: www.parashorts.com/

Monday 9 February 2015

Mother and daughter used Ouija board to contact dead dog and are now fighting for their lives!



A mother and daughter are fighting for their lives following a mystery fire at their home after allegedly using a Ouija board to contact their dead dog.


THE wife and stepdaughter of a man who drowned and dismembered his pet dog, then blamed black magic for his crimes, were in hospital last night after their home was destroyed in a fire.

Margaret Carroll and Katrina Livingstone have been arrested by police on suspicion of arson with intent to endanger life.

The pair are believed to be in a critical condition for a condition unrelated to the blaze which ripped through their home near Leadgate, Consett, County Durham, on Saturday.

Police are investigating claims that the pair had been using a Ouija board the night before and received the chilling message that they were going to die.



Last week Mrs Carroll's husband, Paul, pleaded guilty to causing unnecessary suffering to a protected animal.

Magistrates heard how he drowned and dismembered a Bedlington terrier then claimed supernatural spirits from a Ouija board session on Christmas Eve had killed it.

The 51-year-old, who has learning difficulties, is due to be sentenced later this month.

Despite that, neighbours claimed that the family had continued trying to commune with the spirit world.

Donna Sowerby, who lives nearby in First Street, said Miss Livingstone told her she used a Ouija board on Friday night, which told her she and her mother were going to die.

Emergency services were called to the home at around 8.45am on Saturday morning.

Mrs Sowerby, 30, said: “The fire was right the way through the property. It was horrible. The roof was right up. We could not see up the street because of the smoke.

“There was a mini explosion and one of the firefighters was blown back.”

Residents have said the mother and daughter, who have lived in the property less than a year, were found in the garden as the blaze took hold.

Neighbours had to be evacuated over fears the flames would spread and that gas canisters in the house could explode.


Next door neighbour, Ann Newman, who has lived there with her husband Geordie, for 32 years, said: “The fire was horrendous. There was smoke billowing out. A neighbour came to warn us and was panicking because there were gas bottles next door and was worried there was going to be an explosion.We were in our night clothes, but she said we had to evacuate straight away.”

Mr Newman, who suffers from a wide range of health problems and requires a constant oxygen supply, was not allowed back into his home until Saturday teatime.

Mrs Newman said: “We could not come back to our house all day because our house smoke logged and my husband suffers with his chest. We are very angry about what has happened.”

Police have been at the house since the fire to keep it safe and structural engineers are due to visit the property to assess the damage, but it is said to have been ‘gutted’ by the fire.

Watch manager Damian Brennan, of County Durham and Darlington Fire and Rescue Service, said: “By the time the crew got there it was really well developed and we had to fight from the rear. They did well because we could have lost properties on both sides.

“The property itself is gutted. The roof has gone. The cause is still under investigation. It is a suspicious fire.”

Mrs Carroll and Miss Livingstone are being treated at the University Hospital of North Durham and their condition is described as ‘critical’.

A Durham Constabulary spokesman said: “Two women, aged 60 and 37, were taken to the University Hospital of North Durham where they remain in a critical condition and under arrest for arson with intent to danger life.

“We are not looking for anyone else in connection with the incident.”

Police said no other dogs were in the properly at the time of the fire having being removed by the RSPCA last month.

Woman 'Pushed By A Ghost' In Santiago

34-year-old Cecilia Carrasco was inexplicably flung to the ground while standing beside a reception desk.

Bizarre CCTV footage has emerged this week showing a Chilean woman standing next to a desk in the lobby of her lawyer's office when she is suddenly thrown backwards on to the floor by an unseen force to the surprise of those around her.

When asked about the incident she claimed she had felt two hands pushing her just before she fell down and couldn't believe that the culprit hadn't been picked up on the video.
"I wasn't aware of anybody in front of me as I passed the reception desk talking to a girl, & as I looked towards the receptionist I suddenly felt two pairs of hands shove me over," she said. "I hit the floor but when I looked up I couldn't see anybody, and I thought they probably had run off."

Cecilia ended up spending three days in hospital as a result of her injuries and had to take time off work. The incident left her so shaken that she is now reluctant to leave her house.

Who You Gonna Call?

Family send in paranormal experts after 'capturing ghost' in home video!


  • Family given small crucifixes to wear by priest who visited house
  • House is a 'portal hole' for ghosts and ghouls, claims medium



A spooked family have called in a real-life 'ghostbuster' - after claiming to have captured on video a poltergeist moving a chair across a bedroom.   

Lisa Manning and her children Ellie, 11, and Jaydon, six, have fled their house in terror several times because of bizarre goings-on.

They include pots and pans being thrown around the kitchen, window blinds moving up and down by themselves, lights being switched on and off and drawers being opened.

Now they have been advised to wear crucifixes by a priest after capturing video footage of a chair moving by itself in Ellie's bedroom.

Carer Miss Manning, 34, shot the film two weeks ago after putting hidden cameras in the family's home in Holbrooks, an area of Coventry.

The 52-second clip shows a wardrobe door opening before a pink swivel chair moves slowly backwards towards the wall.


While cynics might scoff and suggest the chair could have been moved by a length of strategically placed fishing line, Miss Manning is adamant the footage proves a ghost exists. 
She said she feels like she is 'living in a scary movie'.


Miss Manning, who lives with her partner Anthony, 25, in the house, added: 'One medium came in and said our house is a portal, a kind of bus stop for spirits, which they use to pass into our world.


The 52-second clip shows a wardrobe door opening before a pink swivel chair moves slowly backwards towards the wall.

While cynics might scoff and suggest the chair could have been moved by a length of strategically placed fishing line, Miss Manning is adamant the footage proves a ghost exists. 
She said she feels like she is 'living in a scary movie'.

Miss Manning, who lives with her partner Anthony, 25, in the house, added: 'One medium came in and said our house is a portal, a kind of bus stop for spirits, which they use to pass into our world.

'I set up the video camera because I wanted to prove the ghost exists.
'I couldn't believe it when I played the tape back, it sent chills up my spine.
'We called our landlords and they sent in a priest who blessed the house but said himself that we shouldn't live here, we definitely shouldn't stay.   

'He gave us all small crucifixes which we carry at all times in the house.
'The problem is because we can't see it, we don't know where it's going to be or what it's going to do.



'This is a horror house. It's like living in a scary movie. The worst thing about it is, even I can't believe what's happening myself.'  Lisa, a full-time carer, said she was sceptical when her children started complaining about hearing noises and seeing objects move on their own. But she became suspicious after her pet dog was mysteriously killed last October after apparently being shoved down the stairs. She said: 'I found him lying at the bottom of the stairs badly hurt.   

'No one was in the house at the time. I took him to the vet but he died. The vet told me later his injuries were consistent with being shoved.'   Lisa is now begging her landlord Whitefriars to re-house her family. She scatters the house with salt, puts up crucifixes and wears crystals while she waits to hear whether the family can move to another home.
And last week Miss Manning claims the spooky antics have got worse, with lights flickering on and off and hearing footsteps at night.

Last Wednesday the family were so scared they even hid in the living room and were forced to escape out the window after the door was mysteriously blocked. Miss Manning said: 'Ellie tried to open the door and shouted at Anthony to stop pulling it to stop her from getting out.
'She didn't realise he was right behind her.    



'We all tried to open the door but it was stuck as though someone had put their weight behind it. In the end we got out through the window.'  Ellie said: 'I'm scared to go home and I don't like to go upstairs on my own.'   Whitefriars say they are advising Miss Manning on applying for a new home. Dave Round, area service manager, said: 'We sympathise with Miss Manning and have been supporting her with the issues she has been experiencing.
'We first met with Miss Manning in January and our staff have listened to her concerns in a sensitive manner.   


'In February, after detailed discussions between Miss Manning and our staff, we agreed to arrange for a priest to attend the property, at her request. 'We have offered advice and support to Miss Manning on the options available to her for applying to move home and we are happy to continue to do this.'

Sunday 25 January 2015

Watch As This Terrifying 'Ghost' Pursues A Reversing Car Along A Deserted Unlit UK Road! - Shocking!



The petrified passenger of the vehicle can be heard yelling "move the car backwards, faster, faster!" as the dread creature gets closer and closer

This terrifying video shows the moment a 'ghost' appears on a deserted road - and CHASES after a car.

The petrifying three minute clip shows a car approach a mysterious white creature from behind as it walks along the road between Blackburn and Belmont in Lancashire.

The dread creature then turns and heads TOWARDS the vehicle as a passenger scream at the driver to reverse as fast as possible.

The horrified passenger can be heard yelling in Arabic: "Move the car backwards.

"Faster! Faster!"




[RAW] Watch Terrifying 'Blackburn Ghost' Pursue... by RandomVideoChannel

Wednesday 7 January 2015

The Columbus Poltergeist

Did a poltergeist infest a home in Columbus, Ohio? Or was this the work of a mischievous teen?

In 1982 a terrifying phenomena was lifted from the pages of parapsychology literature and turned into the highly successful film, Poltergeist. Although the film was not based on a real case, and the phenomena in the film veered wildly from the historical symptoms, it did make this peculiar type of event culturally available in a way it had never been before. So when a trouble household in Columbus, Ohio began experiencing flying objects and mysterious disturbances, one had to wonder: was this a poltergeist or merely zeitgeist?

Enthusiasts of paranormal lore will know that the word poltergeist is derived from the german words for noisy and spirit. Before we get into the particulars of the Columbus Poltergeist, lets talk about skeptics and hauntings. Skeptics are often depicted as dismissing the idea of ghosts and spirits without investigation, but there is actually a rich history of thorough scientific investigations of such alleged phenomena. The most difficult challenge is that the allegedly paranormal events rarely manifest themselves when skeptical researchers are present. This leaves the investigator to more of a forensic role and sometimes with nothing but a collection of anecdotes.

Even the terminology for such events is difficult because a skeptical view of any such phenomena is predicated on examining each unusual component rather than collectively viewing them as a haunting. This is a problem for paranormal believers too in that ghost investigations are all trying to explain elusive phenomena. Consider these words: phantoms, shadows, phantasms, ghosts, spirits… there is a robust lexicon to describe these non-corporeal entities, but no scientific proof that any of them exist. For the purposes of this article I'm going to talk about various aspects of this field but remember that these are terms which the scientific community - and Skeptoid - do not endorse as real or genuine. So when I talk about hauntings I'm not endorsing the existence of supernatural manifestations, but using the word to mean "the collection of unusual events" associated with such cases.

Poltergeists cases are characterized by loud noises, things being thrown, apportations of tiny objects, mysterious liquids appearing, rocks falling on the roof, and occasionally people being pushed, clawed, pressed or otherwise harassed. In most cases the poltergeist events are centered around one person - often a teenager. Many times when this central figure is removed from the scene the events stop and do not follow them to other locations.
In 1984 the home of John and Joan Resch became the scene of such events. Glasses, photographs, telephones and lamps were being thrown about and broken and the events all seemed centered on the Resch's adopted daughter Tina. Reporter Mike Harden had written about the Resch family because the couple had such a robust role in the community as foster parents. They'd helped care for more than 250 children by the time these events took place.

Tina Resch was 14 years old when the unusual activities started. She was a troubled teenager. She had a very volatile relationship with the Reschs which often led to shouting matches. She wanted very badly to find her birth mother. In March of 1984 her tantrums had become less of a concern than the weird occurrences that seemed to surround her. With household items whizzing through the air, the Reschs turned to reporter Mike Harden to see if he could help.

Harden brought photographer Fred Shannon to the Resch's home, having prepared him to expect the miraculous. The veteran photographer was astounded by what he captured on film. He had taken a series of photographs while visiting the family, and the best of these showed Tina cringing on the couch as a telephone is moving through the air in front of her. The story was picked up by the Associated Press, and a media storm hit the home. On March 8, 1984, approximately 40 reporters filled a 20' x 20' room in the Resch home looking to capture any evidence of paranormal activity, but it didn't seem forthcoming. Hours drug by with nothing to see. The effects seemed to only take place when nobody was looking, but by the end of the day at least one video crew felt they'd captured something paranormal when a lamp was knocked over.



Reporter Harden reached out to parapsychologist William Roll. Roll, who ran the Parapsychology Research Foundation (PRF) at Duke University, certainly had the credentials for such an investigation. He'd studied parapsychology alongside J. B. Rhine, perhaps the most prominent name in the field. In 1958 he had coined the phrase "recurrent spontaneous psychokinesis" (RSPK) to describe the type of phenomena seen in such cases. He wrote a book about his research into this phenomena titled The Poltergeist in 1972. Accompanying Roll on the investigation was Kelly Powers, a young man from Florida State University with a background in psychology and counseling. The Columbus Dispatch sent a private plane to pick up the two in North Carolina. They arrived on March 10th.


There had been preparation and planning to get Roll on site, but the day before he arrived another twist in the story was revealed. The TV crew who recorded the falling lamp had left their camera running and it revealed that Tina had pushed over the lamp. Questioned about it, Tina laughed it off and said she'd been tired of all the reporters there pressuring her to make something happen so she gave them what they'd come for so they would leave.
But Roll was not eager to dismiss the case as a hoax. In his view there had been too many reliable witnesses who had seen mysterious phenomena and he wanted to perform his own tests. He stayed with the Resch family to conduct his research.

Meanwhile, in Buffalo New York, the story of the Columbus Poltergeist reached the offices of the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP). Paul Kurtz who was head of the organization at the time arranged for a team of skeptical investigators to go visit the Resch family. The team consisted of two astronomers, Steve Shore and Nick Sanduleak, as well as a man who was perhaps the most well known skeptic of the paranormal at the time, James "The Amazing" Randi. Team CSICOP arrived on Tuesday evening, March 12, 1984.

So the stage is set. Inside the home we have the Resch family and William Roll and his assistant. Outside we have reporters and the the CSICOP investigators. Randi is wearing his cape-like winter coat, he pulls out a check for $10,000 and tells the reporters that he will gladly pay this to the Resch family if they can show any kind of paranormal activity. Team CSICOP goes to the front door and they're greeted by an angry Joan Resch who did not appreciate the check or the unrequested visit. This is a point in the story where accounts differ, but the end result is much the same. Joan refuses to let Randi inside to investigate. The two scientists who accompanied him dismiss the idea of investigating without Randi. Randi quotes Joan as saying, "We've had a circus going already, and I don't need a magic show as well." (Roll's version of the quote is slightly different, "We've had a circus. Now we have a magic show. No, not here.")

The Resch family told the CSICOP team that they were going on a vacation and would not be available for further research. However, Randi found that at least for two weeks they were still at their home. William Roll claimed that Joan didn't want Randi involved in the investigation. But Randi was told by a reporter for the Columbus Citizen-Journal that Roll had urged Joan to keep Randi out of the investigation.

Roll would go on to use the fact that Joan wouldn't let Randi in the house to dismiss the CSICOP findings, saying they never did a proper investigation. But lack of access to the central figure in the investigation did not mean they were not able to review the evidence in the case. Randi interviewed the interviewers, talking to people who had been at the press conference in the Resch's home.

On March 13, the Columbus Dispatch - the paper who broke the story and which had flown Roll and his assistant up from Duke University - ran a story showing the CSICOP team on the front lawn of the Resch home, and told of how Randi had been refused admittance. In that article they pledge to share contact sheets of the Fred Shannon photos with the skeptics.
According to Randi, he travelled to the offices of the Dispatch and purchased a contact sheet of the photos. But apparently while he was still there, the newspaper changed its mind and tried to get back the contact sheet after he'd paid for it. He says he had to threaten legal action to make his way out:
"The editor moved over to me and he tried to take the contact sheet from me, and I snatched it back, and I had the receipt right there and I held it up in front and I said, "I paid for this, this is my property, and I'm leaving." And he said, "Oh no you're not!", and he called the guard. The guard came over and said, "Yes, sir?". He said, "this man has merchandise that I want back." I looked at the guard and said, "This is my receipt, this is the merchandise, I'm going out the door. If you stop me, I'll sue the ass of you, and the entire newspaper, and I'm not kidding, I'm very, very, serious," and I stuck the receipt into the envelope, walked to the door, and I didn't hear a word behind me. They didn't know what to do and I walked outside and I had the contact sheet."
That contact sheet would become a central part of Randi's investigation. In the Spring 1985 issue of Skeptical Inquirer magazine, Randi detailed how the contact sheet revealed the truth behind Tina Resch's alleged powers. In the age of non-digital photography, camera negatives could make highly detailed contact sheets - a single page with an image of each photo on a roll of film. The contact sheet Randi obtained showed all of the photos Fred Shannon had shot. Photos that were not included in any of the stories, the ones that the paper had deemed unworthy of publication, showed features which suggested Tina was throwing the objects witnessed by others.

In the September 1984 issue of Fate Magazine, Fred Shannon explained how he had obtained his photos. He couldn't manage to catch anything when he held his camera - but as he lowered the camera or looked away he would see something but it would be too late. He felt like there was a force of some kind that didn't want to be directly observed. So he positioned his camera in Tina's direction, then looked away and when he saw a blur of indistinct motion from the corner of his eye he would snap the photos.

Randi's article goes into great detail about the settings on the camera, but it is the position of Tina in the photos along with the cord's positions compared with the claims that he felt were the most damning. In some frames a clear method for how Tina could have caused the effect is shown and in at least one unpublished photo Tina's arm is positioned in a direct line as if she had just thrown the phone.

The skeptical position is one of parsimony. Because Tina had been caught on film hoaxing, and because the photos suggested hoaxing, the most likely scenario is that the Columbus Poltergeist was a case of people being gullible and credulous in the face of a hoaxer. The introduction of paranormal activity to explain the phenomena reported did not seem to be warranted. It is worth noting that by the time that Randi arrived the news footage of Tina being shown pushing the lamp had been aired and competing newspapers were dismissing her story as hoax. But the Columbus Dispatch and William Roll were committed to the story, with Roll going on to bring Tina to his lab in North Carolina for continued study.

Fred Shannon's photos and his own experience were enough to convince him that something amazing had happened. He did not accept Randi's interpretation of the photos.

Despite the Columbus Dispatch having written that it would provide the skeptics with the contact sheet of photos, when it came time for Skeptical Inquirer to publish the results of their investigation, the paper refused them permission to run the photos. The editors of both publications had a lengthy back and forth debate, a summary of which was included in Randi's report. It was Skeptical Inquirer's opinion that the editors and publisher of the paper were embarrassed at having been duped and were wishing to avoid further scrutiny. 

To work around this, the skeptical magazine had to hire an artist to create close approximations of the originals. Comparison of the sketches to the published versions suggest the original contact sheet did strongly suggest a mundane explanation for the mysterious flying phone photos.

Randi's investigation promised a part two in which he would talk about the aftermath of the investigation and some of the inconsistencies with some witnesses, but in 1988 with the second half still not published, Randi made this statement:
"I met with Shannon and pointed out the errors in his account of the event, but he persisted in his determination to rashly misrepresent the entire situation. The case against his version is devastating indeed. During one of his public appearances, I was able to demonstrate my proof; he still persisted. Even Dispatch reporter Mike Hardin, who covered the story in the company of the photographer and managed to overlook considerable evidence that did not serve the preferred storyline, could not support the hyperbolized and highly colored version that the photographer offered. This version was presented to readers of Fate magazine in a lengthy account that greatly pleased the gullible."
Years later, Randi pledged to finish up his coverage of this story in a book he's working on called A Magician in the Laboratory.

Media attention about the story died down, with many assuming that Randi's investigation plus the video evidence of trickery meant that Tina Resch had faked all of the mysterious events. William Roll continued to research Tina, hoping to find evidence for some brain abnormality or other cause which might support his hypothesis that her emotional frustrations were unleashing latent psychokinesis powers.

As is often the case with poltergeist research, in the end we are left with enough ambiguity that those prone to believe in the existence of PSI and paranormal activity still have footholds for their convictions. At the same time, while there is damning evidence of some hoaxing, it may not be possible to explain every aspect of the phenomena with that one word.

Randi's assessment was that Tina saw an opportunity to reach out and find her birth mother through the publicity around the case, but that in doing so what she really unleashed was the media - a monster not easily contained.

Scientific paranormal investigator Joe Nickell suggests that such hoaxing behavior forms what he calls poltergeist-faking syndrome. As people become fooled by poltergeist trickery, even mundane events and accidents become additional evidence for the haunting - or manifestation. He quotes a poltergeist faker who had come clean, "I didn't throw all those things...people just imagined some of them."

In the case of the Columbus Poltergeist, the tale doesn't end in revealed superpowers or a new understanding of physics, but in tragedy.

Two years after the story broke, Tina Resch was kicked out of her home. She narrowly avoided juvenile hall by marrying at age 16. She was abused, robbed and ultimately ended up the mother of baby girl at age 18. The baby's name was Amber. Tina changed her own name to Christina Boyer. She had a series of boyfriends and husbands, most of whom were abusive.

William Roll moved his parapsychology research to West Georgia College. Christina contacted Roll in 1990 and he suggested she move to Carrollton, GA to be near his research facility. There he began to work with her again. In his book Unleashed, Roll describes how Amber would misbehave around Christina to get her to react, and he felt that the child had become convinced that being physically punished by her mother was "Amber's way of knowing her mother cared for her."

Christina and Amber began to spend a lot of time with David Herrin, her new boyfriend, staying at his trailer some 10 miles outside Carrollton. On April 13, 1992 Amber was murdered. She had died from blunt force trauma to the head, and her body showed that she had been beaten for several days - and sexually abused.

Despite Roll's efforts to urge Christina go to trial and fight the charges, she followed her lawyer's advice and took something called an Alford Plea to avoid the possibility of a death sentence. This meant she plead guilty to murder while maintaining her innocence. She has continued to claim her innocence, pointing out that she wasn't home when the child was injured. She claimed that she hesitated to take Amber to the Emergency Room for fear that the authorities would take her daughter away.

Little Amber was with David Herrin when she received the fatal injuries and been left in his care for multiple days - each day Christina came home and found new injuries on Amber, but David claimed each was from a different mundane accident. The little girl wouldn't contradict the man's story.

David Herron was sentenced to twenty years in prison for "cruelty to children" - a plea deal of his own, and he was released from prison in November of 2011. Christina is still in prison at the time of this episode's writing.

This tragic ending to the story might seem to have no bearing on Tina Resch's alleged poltergeist experience except for this dark footnote: Where was Tina Resch while her daughter was being abused and battered by her boyfriend? At the home of another parapsychology researcher working on a memoir about her days as the celebrated teen at the heart of a poltergeist attack.

SOURCE: http://skeptoid.com/