Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Madeleine McCann: Haunting Evidence

 British police have released a new photofit of the missing child Maddie McCann :
Three American clairvoyants from hit US show 'Haunting Evidence' travelled to the Algarve, in January 2008, in an attempt to find Madeleine. The trio use their "powers" to visit the scenes of crimes and speak to people "from beyond the grave".

Gerry and Kate McCann decided not to take up an offer to co-operate with the show - which has been described as a 'sick TV stunt'.
The programme was first screened in the US in October 2008.

'Psychic profiler' Carla Baron in Praia da Luz
See more here :
http://www.mccannfiles.com/id183.html

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Couple claims rental home is haunted, sues landlord

A New Jersey couple claims that shortly after moving into their new rental home, they discovered an unwanted roommate: a poltergeist.
Now they're suing the landlord for their $2,250 security deposit, claiming that all the paranormal activity forced them to flee just a week after moving in.
Josue Chinchilla, his fiancee Michele Callan and her two children moved into the three-bedroom home on March 1, and claim to have started experience strange things almost immediately.
Ghostly footsteps and whispering could be heard throughout the house, the couple told the Ashbury Park Press. Doors would slam and lights would flicker on their own, and clothes that were tucked away in closets would be found strewn all over the floor.
Chinchilla and Callan even claimed to record a menacing voice saying "Let it burn," according to ABC News.
The couple told the Ashbury Park Press that they were slow to believe the strange occurances in their home
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/jersey-couple-claims-rental-home-haunted-sues-landlord-article-1.1062032

Titanic Victim William T. Stead


Remembering Titanic Victim William T. Stead 100 Years Later
Posted on 02 April 2012, 10:01
With the 100th anniversary of the Titanic disaster coming up on April 15, it seems like an appropriate time to remember William T. Stead, one of the victims of the tragedy. A 62-year-old British journalist and pacifist, Stead was on his way to New York City to give a lecture on world peace at Carnegie Hall.  President William Howard Taft was also one of the speakers.
 Several survivors reported seeing Stead at various places in the 2 hours, 40 minutes that elapsed between the time the floating palace on its maiden voyage hit an iceberg and then made its plunge to the bottom of the North Atlantic.  All told of a very composed and calm man, one prepared to meet his death with courage and hope.  Frederick Seward, a 34-year-old New York lawyer, said that Stead was one of the few on deck when the iceberg was impacted.  “I saw him soon after and was thoroughly scared, but he preserved the most beautiful composure,” Seward, who boarded lifeboat number 7, recalled.  Andrew Cunningham, a 35-year-old English cabin steward serving Stead (below) and several other passengers, recalled that Stead had not been feeling well all day and had supper in his room.  “I did not see him again until after the accident,” Cunningham related. “Then I went to see all my passengers.  He had gone on deck but soon came back.  I said, ‘Mr. Stead, you’ll have to put on your life-belt.’ He said, ‘Cunningham, what is that for?’  I said, ‘You may need it.’ I put the belt over his head.  We bade each other good-bye, and that was the last I saw him.”
the story continues here on Michael Tibb's website White Crow Books.

Monday, April 9, 2012

Titanic Sinking Foretold


Titanic Sinking Foretold In Fictional Accounts Years Before Disaster

 The Titanic's plunge into the frigid Atlantic was predicted several years before the disaster — not by an oracle or in a conspiracy theory but in seemingly innocuous works of fiction about shipwrecks.


The Sinking of a Modern Liner


The most striking and prophetic example is The Sinking of a Modern Liner, written in 1886 by English journalist W.T. Stead.
The story is eerily similar to the actual Titanic's ill-fated demise. In Stead's book, an ocean liner leaves Liverpool and while on a journey to New York City, becomes involved in a collision. In the ensuing panic, many passengers drown because there are too few lifeboats.In a strange twist of fate, Stead inadvertently foretold his own death in the book: he was onboard the Titanic when it sank in April 1912.
It would appear his own work didn't dissuade him from embarking on long ocean journeys across the Atlantic.
The captain of the ship in Stead's book brandishes a revolver to keep steerage passengers from storming the lifeboat deck, a detail that some have chalked up as another similarity with the real-life disaster but that historical accounts like A Night to Remember by Walter Lord have debunked.

Followers