Michelle Freed is a talented and certified remote viewer and instructor with expertise in Controlled Remote Viewing. She has completed programs through organizations like the APP, Right Hemisphere, and Intuitive Specialists, and has received additional training from Joe McMoneagle. Michelle is an active member of IRVA and has conducted notable research in the field of remote viewing. Her exceptional work has earned her recognition, including the prestigious Warcollier Prize in 2017. Michelle's published contributions can be found in esteemed publications such as the Journal of Psychical Research, The Parapsychology Association, and Eight Martinis Magazine. Michelle's talents extend to the world of media, where she appears in the documentary "Third Eye Spies" and on an episode of "Ancient Aliens." She is also the Associate Producer of the documentary, "Flash of Beauty: Paranormal Bigfoot"! As a seasoned producer, she played a key role in Art Bell's show "Midnight in the Desert" and co-owns the Midnight.fm Network. Presently, she serves as the Producer of "Fade to Black w/Jimmy Church." In addition to her diverse pursuits, Michelle is the visionary behind LITM Media Inc., where she assists authors and podcast hosts with effective marketing and publicity.
Vere St. Leger Goold was born October 2, 1853 into a wealthy, Irish family. When he was 26 years old he became the first Irish tennis champion. His early success in sports faded, and by 1883 he turned to alcohol and opium. However it took a turn for the worse when he met Marie Giraudin, a French, twice-widowed dressmaker.
Marie and Vere married in 1891, and riddled with debt they moved to Canada in 1897. She opened a dressmaker shop, but by 1903 they were managing a laundry business in Seacombe-on-Mersey, Liverpool. Despite their common occupation, they adopted the title of Sir Vere and Lady Goold.
In 1897, on the corner of a building at the southeast corner of Geary Street and Grant Avenue, San Francisco the ghost of a missing man stalked the halls.
Windsor A. Keefer (Kiefer), the principal owner in the Jupiter Mine in Calaveras County went missing March 17, 1897.
He was last seen when he left to visit the mines in company of Mr. Thompson president of the mining company. They went hunting, and separated some time during the day.
Johann Schmidt was born in 1855 in Holzweiler, Germany. Born to a minister, ironically he had trained for this profession considering his later exploits. He immigrated to the United States in the last years of the 19th century. He changed his surname, and became known as Johann Otto Hoch after the murder of one of his first victims.
In 1890, a long time employee of the Louisville, St. Louis and Texas Railroad Company in Henderson, Kentucky, resigned from his position which he held for many years because of fear of encountering the ghosts haunting the yards at night.
Many times the reason for a haunting remains unknown, and even the identity of the ghost is a mystery.
Such is the ghost story reported in 1890 by an unwilling witness.
To all appearances Dolly and Fred Oesterrech were a dull, average couple who owned a factory. Little did anyone expect the scandal that would soon break loose that included allegations of murder and illicit sex.
Captain Meriwether Lewis was born into fortunate circumstances in 1774. He is best known for his expedition to the Pacific along with his friend William Clark. He was a diplomat, explorer, friend of the President and the governor of the Upper Louisiana Territory. The man who only three years before had survived a dangerous trek over the wilds of the Rocky Mountains, died of gunshot wounds at the age of 35. Many thought it was suicide, but from the beginning there have been whispers of murder.
On August 26, 1979, a family hunting for arrowheads inside the Civil Defense Caves in Dubois, Idaho found a torso stuffed inside a burlap bag. It was clothed in a white shirt with blue stripes and a red sweater It remained unidentified until January 2020.
Pon Pon Chapel of Ease situated on Parker's Ferry Road has been witness to war and bloodshed for hundreds of years. Prior to the Revolutionary War, ten parishes were established in this coastal area of South Carolina that linked the important towns such as Savannah and Charleston.Pon Pon Chapel of Ease restoration c.197
If there was ever a place where a soul could find no escape even after death it would be a prison, which are full of violence, hate and regrets. Here are some of those places.
Joseph Klimek’s guardian angels were working overtime on his behalf. They may have dropped the ball when he married his wife Tillie, but they used his brother to assist. Suspicions and a visit to the doctor proved what he feared, his brother was being poisoned.
The Jupiter Inlet Lighthouse sits on a piece of land replete with history and colorful legends. It was completed in 1860, and thousands of visitors have crossed its threshold through the years. Many of them have reported hearing "strange noises" and feeling "cold spots" while climbing the 100-foot spiral staircase. Others felt hands touching their shoulders when there is no one behind them.
In the Andes foothills sits the ancient Incan village known as Iglesia Colorada. It is
tucked in the Atacama desert, one of the driest regions of the world. From the late
1400s to early 1500s the Incan empire expanded its reach through war and conquest.
The Roaring Twenties are remembered for speakeasies hidden in remote locations or the basement of a building. Slim flappers shimmied while drinking illegal hooch, and gangland killings made the front page of newspapers. But there were other dark deeds being committed, even against the innocent.
The first military hospital in Aldershot, Hampshire was situated near a church. It was established as a lunatic asylum and pestilence hospital. Close by was the Union Hospital, which started out as a poor house. During the mid-1800s the Connaught Hospital for a while specialized in treating men with venereal disease, and ended as a dental facility which closed its doors in 1973. However long before it was abandoned there were stories about a mysterious gray lady.
There is a little-known but very interesting case of a serial sexual killer who targeted older women. Between 1995 to 1997 he claimed fifteen lives in the city of Apulia (also known as Puglia) located in Italy's heel.
Lone Pine, California has only one road with a traffic light. Whitney Portal Road heads westward across Highway 395, traversing the Alabama Hills and onto Mount Whitney which is nine miles away. It is the tallest mountain in mainland United States. Like many routes that started out as trails they are witness to human traffic and tragedy, and inevitably tales of hauntings.
There is a solitary outpost in Afghanistan known as "The Rock", short for Observation Point Rock (OP Rock). It's situated southeast of Patrol Base Hassan Abad, and developed a reputation for being haunted.
In 1875, Chicago's county hospital was located in the South Side. Even then it was considered old and rickety. The morgue was an out-house attached to the hospital. It was located apart from the main building because of the bad odor coming from it. Bodies would be stretched out on slabs awaiting burial. Only during winter months did the place not smell like a charnel house.
Almost a year to the date before the infamous Villisca Axe murders in Iowa, a family of four were killed in Ardenwald, Oregon in a similar manner, and like that crime this one remains unsolved until this day.
Along Old Sheldon Church Road stands the ruin of what was once known as Prince William’s Parish Church in Yemassee, South Carolina. Now it goes by the name of the Old Sheldon Church Ruins. Built between 1745 and 1753 it witnessed mundane family celebrations as well as history making events, so it is not surprising that it has a reputation for being haunted.
In June 1934 in Brighton, England a steamer trunk was found in King's Cross railway station. It contained a woman's torso and legs. The arms and head were missing. Scotland Yard reached out to the public in trying to identify the victim. In the United States, Agnes C. Tufverson, 43, had married a former Czech officer six months before. She disappeared, and the last heard from her was when she visited London. Her family wondered if it was her body that had been found.
Reports are received worldwide that in the aftermath of disasters those that perished appear to be ignorant that they are no longer among the living. Calls are received at emergency centers, taxis are hailed, and these lost souls try to reach homes that are demolished or connect with loved ones who are dead as well.