Current Psychics and Crime

Psychics

  • Frauds all

    Votes: 33 70.2%
  • Some of them are legit

    Votes: 10 21.3%
  • I'm a psychic, this stuff is real

    Votes: 4 8.5%

  • Total voters
    47

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petedavo

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Either is a larger area than any one sleuther could possibly cover alone. But if the screams in Mosman Park are related to her disappearance, then we'd have to wonder whether she was transported very far, if at all.

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They are the baffling and horrific crimes that years later still have missing pieces.
Despite efforts to find the bodies of the victims so they can be laid to rest, their whereabouts remain a mystery.

As the leads run cold, police have turned to the help of psychics to provide insights which might become vital clues.

In other cases, controversial clairvoyants have voluntarily stepped in to provide their own views — often with divisive results.

PETER FALCONIO
Eighteen years after his death, the case of murdered British backpacker Peter Falconio still casts a shadow over central Australia.

The 28-year-old, from Yorkshire, was killed when he pulled over by Bradley John Murdoch on the isolated Stuart Highway in July 2001, north of Alice Springs.

Murdoch also handcuffed Joanne Lees, who had been touring with her boyfriend in their Kombi van, but she managed to escape.

Murdoch, convicted of murdering Falconio on July 14, 2001, has never disclosed where he dumped Mr Falconio’s body.

TV medium puts amateur psychic detectives to test

Psychic ‘sees’ missing William’s new life

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In 2010, News Corp Australia journalist Paul Toohey went on a bizarre outback search with psychic Lorelle Trickett in a bid to locate the body of the missing murder victim.

Ms Trickett, a retired welfare officer from the NSW Central Coast, used crystals and welding rods as guides in the search for Mr Falconio’s burial site.

She said she had the impression it was near a mountain range but the search proved fruitless.

It wasn’t the first time that psychics had been involved in the hunt for Mr Falconio’s remains.

In 2003, Melbourne-based crime author Robin Bowles launched a search with the help of three clairvoyants near Barrow Creek, where Mr Falconio went missing.

Workers directed by the clairvoyants used digging equipment to hunt for the remains north of the town of Alice Springs.

But two days of digging failed to turn up anything.

Bowles said she funded the expedition herself, after the three clairvoyants each separately identified a site near a dry river bed outside Barrow Creek as the place where Mr Falconio’s body was to be found.

WILLIAM TYRRELL
The case of missing three-year-old William Tyrrell one of Australia’s most devastating mystery disappearances.

William disappeared in September 2014 from his foster grandmother’s house in Kendall, south of Port Macquarie in NSW.

Last week, high-profile American psychic detective Pam Coronado claimed to have seen the missing child after a student asked her to tune into the case during a lecture in California.

“My students were curious what I would come up with, so I did a session on him,” she told True Crime Australia.

Ms Coronado said William Tyrrell seemed happy when she visualised him.

“I expected him to not be alive and so, when I first tuned into him, I usually try to touchdown to where they are and immediately saw this kid eating a sandwich and I thought, ‘ah he’s alive’. I just don’t think he is dead.

“I kept feeling it was Western Australia but it wasn’t clear for me, I kept thinking also he went to a private school, which I then went on to describe, and he appears to be with someone he knows.

“There was a guy who looked like a grown up version of William, looked just like him and he was on a motorbike, was like a cool character. I saw him (William) in some sort of academy like a music or religious school, it had that feeling. Navy blue shirt and shorts, a uniform.

“He didn’t seem to be under duress, he seemed happy and it felt like the person he was with he felt happy and safe with. What blows my mind is that can be possible.”

Ms Coronado said she rarely went to police unsolicited, but detectives in the US would reach out to her.

THE BEAUMONT CHILDREN
In 1967, controversial Dutch clairvoyant Gerard Croiset was adamant. The remains of the Beaumont children – who disappeared in Adelaide on Australia Day in 1966 – would be found under a concrete floor in an Adelaide factory.

“This is where they are buried,” he explained through a translator, standing on a concrete floor in the recently renovated building.

Croiset’s story was revisited in a moving Crime Investigation Australia special on Foxtel in January 2018.

The doco tracked the continuing investigations into the disappearance of Arnna, Grant and Jane Beaumont after a trip to Glenelg beach.

The concrete floor Croiset was standing on was dug up after a publicly funded campaign in 1967, because the police had dismissed his claims. No remains were found.

The factory site in Somerset Park Croiset mentioned is just five kilometres away from the one at North Plympton that police evacuated last year.

Police dug up the site of the old Castalloy factory in Adelaide, in the hope they would find a trace of the three children.

The search did not find the missing siblings.
Sightings of the three Beaumont children at Glenelg Beach on the day they disappeared put them in the company of a tall, blond, thin-faced man with a suntan.

After playing at the beach on January 26, 1966, Jane, Arnna and Grant were seen with the man soon before they vanished.

MADELEINE MCCANN
Madeleine McCann’s parents have turned down help from a psychic to track down their daughter who has been missing for 12 years, it was reported last month.

Kate and Gerry insisted they still have “complete confidence in Scotland Yard” as the investigation into the possible abduction continues.

Three-year-old Maddie vanished from a holiday apartment in Portugal’s Praia da Luz in 2007 – but her disappearance still remains a mystery.

Despite millions being spent on the case, no one has been convicted and the hunt for Maddie continues.

In 2012, controversial TV psychic David Acorah was forced to apologise to the little girl’s parents after he claimed that Maddie was dead.

Mr Acorah told The Sun that a messenger from the spirit world had told him:

“She’s not on this earth any more”.

The medium, who allegedly “sickened” the McCann family with his predictions, said the little girl would soon be reincarnated after joining the “spirit world”.

Mr Acorah said: “I know her parents are convinced Maddie is alive and I’m really sorry – but the little one has been over in the spirit world for some time.”

In a bizarre interview, based on information Mr Acorah claimed he had received from a spirit guide, he told The Sun: “I don’t think it’ll be long before she reincarnates.”

MURDER OF SYDNEY NURSES
A psychic has told of ‘witnessing’ the murders of two Sydney nurses in the 1970s — an act so “vile and disgusting” she is still haunted by it.

In her book Clues From Beyond, Debbie Malone, has been assisting Australian police for more than two decades, claims to have seen of the horrifying 1974 murders of Sydney nurses Lorraine Wilson, 20, and Wendy Evans, 18.

She said she had visions of the young women being tied up and raped by numerous men.

The pair were holidaying in Queensland in September and October 1974, but their remains were not found until June 1976 when two bush walkers discovered them in bushland at Murphys Creek near Toowoomba.

Malone didn’t know anything about the Murphys Creek atrocity until she was taken to the murder scene by the producers of Channel 9 show Sensing Murder.

She was given a Victorian gold ring to “tune into” and then flew to Queensland from Sydney. Their destination was an isolated road that was somewhere near where Lorraine and Wendy were killed.

“I got out of the car and was asked to go and locate the scene — and I went straight into it.”

She said the girls “guided” her there.

“It has to be one of the most vile and disgusting cases I’ve ever worked on. The things those poor girls were subjected to was just horrific.”

Malone told news.com.au the case still haunted her.

“I returned there in December 2015 with a Japanese production company. Even after all these years — the location has been changed, a lot of it has been cleared — but the feeling if the place was so eerie. It brought even the film crew to tears when they went in with me.”

In 2013, Queensland state coroner Michael Barnes found that Wayne “Boogie” Hilton, along with other unidentified men, killed Ms Wilson and Ms Evans.

Wayne “Boogie” Hilton died in a car crash in 1986.

Barnes also found that local police were aware of the gang’s violent reputation for raping women but failed to investigate the deaths of Wilson and Evans properly.

HAYLEY DODD


In 1999, teenager Hayley Dodd vanished in 1999 while walking along a remote road in Western Australia’s Wheatbelt.

In January 2018, Justice Lindy Jenkins found Francis John Wark lured the teenager into the borrowed ute he was driving in July 1999 and killed her in the course of a sexual assault.

He was sentenced to life with a minimum of 21 years in jail.

Ms Dodd’s body has never been found.

Months after the conviction, a psychic joined the search for Hayley, but failed to deliver clues to her resting place.

The psychic believed 17-year-old Hayley’s body was buried five kilometres away from her killer’s home, off a quiet stretch of road in Badgingarra.

Margaret Dodd, Hayey’s mother, says specially-trained dogs had also picked up a scent in the area.

Her grandchildren even helped dig for an aunty they never met and machinery was brought in to progress the search.

“This spot has come up time and time again basically because this woman truly believes Hayley is there,” Mrs Dodd said.

The latest search drew a blank and Mrs Dodd vowed not to undertake another because of the heartbreak it caused her family.

The only exception would be if Hayley’s killer reveals where she is buried.

“It put me really, really down, it’s messed around with my daughter’s head,” she said.

 

sprockets

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Full article:

They are the baffling and horrific crimes that years later still have missing pieces.
Despite efforts to find the bodies of the victims so they can be laid to rest, their whereabouts remain a mystery.

As the leads run cold, police have turned to the help of psychics to provide insights which might become vital clues.

In other cases, controversial clairvoyants have voluntarily stepped in to provide their own views — often with divisive results.
...



I doubt police would be turning to psychics too often, if at all, these days.
 
This psychic believes the Belgian backpacker is out there.....



They've had choppers out all over if he was stuck on a clifftop he probably would have been seen. There's another one tweeting Theo went swimming and wondering how to approach the conversation with investigators.
 

HTPunter

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Considering you only need 1 win to flog off for the rest of your career as a psychic, these guesses aren't extremely unlikely. A man in a cliff-laden ocean area...no one will remember these psychics being wrong, but if they're right it'll be seen as incredible, so that's the best reasoning for their guesses about being stranded or drowned swimming.
 
James Renner, pretty well known investigative journalist and crime author has a new podcast 'The Philosophy of Crime'. One episode very interesting, delves into the topic of this thread. He says in all his years interviewing cops, including an investigator from the FBI nearly all of them have consulted a 'psychic'.

He also mentions a woman the cops kept ignoring with her tip of where a girls body would be found. She eventually went out there herself with her daughter and found the dead girl. She was arrested for murder.

This reminds me of the guy who found the last lot of bodies in Belanglo Forest. Most reports say he was out there looking for firewood but when he was first interviewed, he said he was looking for a body and that he was compelled into searching in a particular area. A 'compulsion' not a psychic twinkle.

PSYCHICS & CRIME
 

petedavo

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I'm was guessing that the Ghost house must be further from the back entrance of Karrakatta than the warehouse, because there's no houses on Government Rd where the rear entrance is.

However, I could be wrong.
There's an Early Learning Centre on Government Rd that appears to be a converted house. It is next door to the warehouse in the Post Newspaper article. It is apparently where one of the alleged CSK victims worked. It is within 100 yards from the rear entrance of Karrakatta cemetery, as per the letter found in Trove from the occupant of the house that was subjected to the exorcism by an Anglican Bishop in 1950's.
If the Early Learning centre is actually of the site of the haunted house, could this be why Anglican priest and Police Chaplain, Fr Barry May became involved in the case?

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So, is the workplace of Jane Rimmer, the site of the infamous Ghost House that the Anglican Archdiocese of Perth had unsuccessfully invested resources in performing exorcisms in the 1950's. Is this why Father Barry May took an interest in the Claremont Serial Killings? Then did the Macro task force entertain a theory by Father Barry May, Police Anglican chaplain, that demonic possession was responsible for the then yet to be identified perpetrator committing the alleged serial killings?

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petedavo

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Where have I read this stuff before?

Another psychic who claimed to worked on the Claremont Serial Killings....


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Where have I read this stuff before?

Another psychic who claimed to worked on the Claremont Serial Killings....


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Nobody seems able to leave the Masons out of anything weird ;)
 

petedavo

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This psychic thinks that the spirits are telling her that Theo is dead and that perpetrator has forgotten to remove Theo's jacket from the house somewhere 8 minutes South of the Cheeky Monkey where either a fight occurred in which Theo died or that it involved drugs. Spirits apparently name Peter Mitchell or some combination of Mitchell Peter as being involved etc.


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This psychic thinks that the spirits are telling her that Theo is dead and that perpetrator has forgotten to remove Theo's jacket from the house somewhere 8 minutes South of the Cheeky Monkey where either a fight occurred in which Theo died or that it involved drugs. Spirits apparently name Peter Mitchell or some combination of Mitchell Peter as being involved etc.


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She's using a spirit box app! I don't know whether to laugh or be terrified.

 

petedavo

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She's using a spirit box app! I don't know whether to laugh or be terrified.

Spirit Box?
I thought that spirits only came in bottles, or wooden casks.
Oh, no... they do make spirits in goon bags ;)
Doesn't come with a Ouija board though.

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I gave it a go this morning. I couldn't make out the sound bites. Interesting concept, but I think they need to stick with clear words and phases in their database

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ha haaa I heard a woman say 'Hi!' very clearly and found myself saying "Hello? Hellllooo?!"

Then I felt like a dik.
 
Listening to a podcast last night where Nick from True Crime Garage was being interviewed by Paul Jensen on the Murder Squad. He talks about a group of intuitive or psychic children insisting a victim had been somewhere earlier and they were right. This wasn't information anybody had.
 
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11yo Jacob Wetterling went missing on night; for years afterward his parents got calls from all sorts including psychics who told them he was alive, trapped, and other bulltish. Turned out he was murdered the night he disappeard.

There's an episode in Season 1 of the In The Dark podcast with recordings of a few of the frauds.
 
11yo Jacob Wetterling went missing on night; for years afterward his parents got calls from all sorts including psychics who told them he was alive, trapped, and other bulltish. Turned out he was murdered the night he disappeard.

There's an episode in Season 1 of the In The Dark podcast with recordings of a few of the frauds.

That's when it becomes clear they've burdened the parents of a missing child with their own sick fantasies.
 
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