'PHANTOMS & MONSTERS'


Link to Phantoms and Monsters: Pulse of the Paranormal

Posted: 05 Oct 2016 03:57 PM PDT

John in Seattle, Washington called in to tell of his Reptilian encounter:

“I want to tell you a story that happened to me back in '85. Basically what happened was, it was Christmas eve and my brother was in town. We were staying out at my folk's house out by the lake. He and I both had a cot in the dining room. My mom had put out a couple of cots. Everybody was in bed. I was watching TV and my brother had gone to bed. So I turned the TV off. My brother was on the dining room table. I noticed he was meditating. He was sitting cross legged. That's weird, I thought... that's kinda nutty looking. I didn't really get that stuff so I kinda snickered. I went to the bathroom, then came back out and got into the cot and laid down. I was trying to be quiet because I didn't want to disturb him, you know.

As soon as I laid down. As soon as my head hit the pillow actually, I was paralyzed. I couldn't move and I just started freaking out. I could only move my eyes. (Noory asks if he was awake) Absolutely. Fully awake! I mean this happened the second I got in bed. It was frightening. So I'm trying to look at him. I'm somehow thinking that he's causing this. I don't know. It's very confusing. But the fear was incredible. I started yelling at him. Stop, you know. And I was screaming at him and he wasn't moving and I realized he couldn't hear me.

This is where it gets completely insane. So, I'm like covered in sweat. I'm freaking out. I don't know what's going on. I never heard of sleep paralysis or any of this freaky stuff. I look at the foot of the cot and there's this... and this is completely true... there's this lizard guy standing there with his arms folded and he's just laughing at me and I'm like 'what the?' (Noory asked if he looked like a ghost) No. No. He was solid and he had like a vest on and he had like a holster on. And I was angry and I was like freaking out. I couldn't move and I obviously knew he was causing this and he was just laughing at me... and it had like an ant or like a turtle on its back and then he just disappeared (Noory asks if the paralysis went away) Instantly.”

Source: Coast To Coast AM - September 30, 2016

Transcribed by JLB


NOTE: Honestly...I have thoughts about the 'ant or turtle' on its back. Maybe it was carrying a juvenile or it was part of the uniform. I have previously heard of meditation 'manifesting' an alien being. Was this a thought-form? BTW...I recently read where someone is going around say that the Reptilians were responsible for the disappearance of the Roanoke Colony. I believe someone is watching too much 'American Horror Story.' Bizarre. Lon

The Secret History of the Reptilians: The Pervasive Presence of the Serpent in Human History, Religion and Alien Mythos

Flying Serpents and Dragons: The Story of Mankind's Reptilian Past

Ancient Serpent Gods: The Alien Connection to Reptilian Dinosaurs

The Djinn Connection: The Hidden Links Between Djinn, Shadow People, ETs, Nephilim, Archons, Reptilians and Other Entities


Posted: 05 Oct 2016 02:36 PM PDT

Alien Abduction, Body-Length Scar & Audio Recording

Sagle, Idaho - 2016-10-01 - 9:00PM: I was inside my house, which was just outside of Boise, reading a book when I heard a roaring sound overhead. I went outside to check and saw this bright, white ship that was about 120 feet wide with reddish-orange lights - all of which were extremely bright and flashed in a sequence. It was just floating there, I thought the sound was a thunderclap, but I guess I was wrong. It landed about 80 feet away from me, and I saw a door open, and humanoid aliens stepped out of the ship.

When the aliens saw me, they came towards me. I tried to escape, but they ended up being too fast for me to outrun them. They must have knocked me out, because I woke up naked, strapped to some sort of examination table, which had a lot of sharp devices around it. One of the aliens came up to the table and picked up what looked like a syringe with a very large needle. The alien stuck the needle in my right thigh, and that was when everything became a blur... The alien was doing some sort of full-body examination, but when he was done, he knocked me out again.

I woke up back on my lawn, clothed and clean, and with a device in my hand. The device contained a clip of one of the aliens speaking. I went inside to make sure they did not do anything more than an examination. When I was checking myself, I found this very long scar going down my entire right side, from just below my armpit all the way to my ankle. I am now genuinely afraid for my life, and every time I go somewhere, I have to look to the skies to make sure the aliens are not stalking me. - MUFON CMS

Click for audio - Alien Speaking

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Dead 'Mermaid?'

A screenshot taken from a video uploaded by YouTube user steve jones purportedly showing a "dead mermaid" on the beach at Great Yarmouth.

A man has claimed in a Facebook post to have found what he describes as a “dead mermaid” on the beach at Great Yarmouth.

Paul Jones posted a photograph purportedly taken at Great Yarmouth which has been shared 15,000 times on the social media website in two days.

In his post he wrote: “Today at Great Yarmouth we found what looks like a dead Mermaid washed up on the beach.”

Facebook users have been excited and horrified in equal numbers.

A popular suggestion is that it is the body of a seal which has washed up on the shore. - Man claims to have found “dead mermaid” on Great Yarmouth beach

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Clown Costume Sales Up 300%

Creepy clowns have dominated news headlines over the last few months, with reports from people feeling threatened or just plain creeped out in at least 32 states.

Claims have ranged from kids saying clowns were trying to lure them into the woods, to people seeing them lurking on running trails. Some reports have been confirmed as hoaxes, but others come with photo proof.

These news headlines are creating profit for many Halloween retailers across the country. Halloween sales already add up to an estimated $7 billion in the U.S. each year; and it now appears a big part of that number will come from clown costumes.

“Clown mask sales are up more than [300%] from a year ago the same period online,” Brad Butler of national Halloween costume chain Halloween Express told Eye Opener TV Tuesday.

“In the top 10, eight of them are ‘evil’ clown masks this season whereas last year, five of the top 10 were ‘evil,’” Butler added.

Eye Opener TV also reached out to national Halloween pop-up store chain Spirit Halloween. They declined to comment on their sales, strangely citing a policy not to comment on ongoing police investigations.

Wal-Mart and Party City didn’t immediately respond to requests for preliminary sales data.

With all these sightings and reports of children feeling threatened, we asked former prosecutor, licensed peace officer and defense attorney Pete Schulte if law enforcement or stores should keep track of sales of clown costumes.

Schulte said, “No.”

“[The costumes] aren’t illegal. Even what they’re doing with the costumes is not against the law,” Schulte said.

“Creepy, yes. Illegal, no.”

So if you’re thinking of jumping on the creepy clown bandwagon this Halloween, you’ll have a lot of company. And, judging by the costume sales data released to Eye Opener TV, it doesn’t look like reports of sightings will stop any time soon. - Clown costume sales up 300% in wake of creepy clown headlines

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Massive Fireball Streaks Across Eastern US & Canada

PITTSBURGH (KDKA) – A massive fireball lit up the skies across parts of the East Coast and Canada Tuesday night, leading many to panic over fears of a plane crash.

Phones lit up at police offices and newsrooms across the East Coast with many in Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, and even Canada reporting the meteor.

A camera at the University of Toronto Scarborough Observatory captured the fire ball on video.

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TODAY'S TOP LINKS

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The creepy clown crisis: White House defers to FBI. Stephen King hits ‘hysteria.’

Why Blind People Are Better at Math

North America Used to Have its Very Own Hyena


Physics of the Impossible: A Scientific Exploration into the World of Phasers, Force Fields, Teleportation, and Time Travel

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Biocentrism: How Life and Consciousness are the Keys to Understanding the True Nature of the Universe

The Hidden Reality: Parallel Universes and the Deep Laws of the Cosmos


This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now
Posted: 05 Oct 2016 12:26 PM PDT

On 18 April, 1943, four teenage boys from nearby Stourbridge, Robert Hart, Thomas Willetts, Bob Farmer and Fred Payne, were in the woods poaching. It was a chilly spring day in the rural Midlands area of England. They came upon an old hollow elm tree and decided it would be an ideal place to search for birds’ nests. Bob Farmer attempted to clamber up into the tree, but as he glanced down inside the hollow trunk he suddenly saw the empty eye-sockets of a whitened skull, staring up at him from among the twisted branches.

At first he didn’t realise what he was looking at and thought it must belong to an animal, possibly a oppossum. But as he pulled the skull out from the gnarled branches and saw a small patch of rotting flesh on the forehead, the remains of some hair, and metal fillings in the teeth he realized what he’d found. The boys panicked...they were on the land illegally, after all, and were afraid of being punished for trespassing. They vowed to forget their grisly find and tell no one.

After hours of hand-wringing the youngest boy, Tommy Willetts, felt uncomfortable about keeping such a secret and decided to tell his father what they’d found. Naturally his father then told the Worcestershire County Police, who went to the site the following morning. Inside and around the old tree they found not only the human skull, but an almost complete skeleton, a crêpe-soled shoe and some fragments of rotted clothing. During a careful search of the surrounding undergrowth a severed hand from the body was also discovered buried nearby.

The task of examining the body fell to Prof James Webster, then head of the Home Office Forensic Science Laboratory in the West Midlands. After a detailed examination at the lab at Birmingham, Professor Webster ascertained that the woman was probably about 35 years old and five feet tall. She had mousy brown hair and a malformed lower jaw. There was a cheap gold wedding ring, no more than four years old, and she had given birth at least once. He estimated that she had been dead for at least 18 months before she was found.

There were no marks of disease or violence on the body, but her mouth had been stuffed with taffeta and one hand had been severed and buried at the foot of the tree. The coroner declared cause of death asphyxiation and estimated the time of death to be around October of 1941, a year and a half before her body’s discovery. He stated that the woman was probably murdered and then pushed into the hole while still warm, as the body would not have fitted into the hollow trunk after rigor mortis had set in.

Professor Webster was able to reconstruct almost exactly what the woman had been wearing at the time of her murder, and it was then possible for the police to issue a description which must have been very close to the actual appearance of the mystery woman.

Most of the investigators thought it would only be a matter of time before she was identified. But the most unusual detail was that despite exhaustive searches through dental records, no trace of the woman was found. Even after a description of the woman and the specific irregularities of her lower jaw were published in dentists’ journals, and despite the fact that she’d had a tooth taken out from the right side of her lower jaw within a year of her death, there was no response. The only thing that the police were fairly certain of was that the woman was a stranger to the area. There were no local missing persons whose description matched that of the victim. As well, only one clue came from anyone in vicinity of Hagley.

This clue was in the form of a report from the executive of an industrial company. In July, 1941, he had been walking to his lodgings in Hagley Green, when he heard a woman’s screams coming from Hagley Wood. A couple of minutes later he met a schoolteacher walking in the opposite direction who had also heard the screams. The men phoned the police who arrived and searched Hagley Wood, but nothing was found. This incident was exactly 20 months before the body was discovered, and, considering the pathologist’s estimate that the woman had been dead for at least 18 months before she was found, seemed extremely promising. However, as with many clues in what the press were now calling the “Tree Murder Riddle, it was to lead nowhere.

Around Christmas 1943, graffiti began to appear on the walls of empty buildings in various parts of the West Midlands area.

The first message, written in large blocky letters in white chalk, said WHO PUT LUEBELLA DOWN THE WYCH-ELM? In the following weeks, the graffiti changed into WHO PUT BELLA IN THE WYCH ELM?...and so it has remained for over six decades.

Though the graffiti seemed to be the work of a hoaxer, there was the slim possibility suggested by the slogans that somebody knew something about the crime. Appeals for the mysterious graffitist to contact the police proved futile, though the messages continued to appear, and have so, intermittently up until the present time. However, the immediate result at the beginning of 1944 was that the unknown woman was given a nickname that even the police adopted.

There were and still are many theories as to the identity of ‘Bella’ and the mystery of her murder. But perhaps the most controversial was put forward at the time by Professor Margaret Murray, of University College, London. She was a respected anthropologist, archaeologist and Egyptologist, but her theories on the origins and organization of witchcraft, with her suggestion that it pre-dated Christianity, were controversial, and not taken seriously by many of her colleagues. Today some of her books have become cult titles including The Witch-cult in Western Europe: A Study in Anthropology(1921), The God of the Witches(1933) and the The Divine King in England(1954).

Professor Murray drew attention to the fact that the hand was missing from the skeleton when found, and suggested it was the sign of a black magic execution. She linked it with ‘The Hand of Glory’, traditionally obtained at the dead of night when it would be cut from the body of an executed criminal hanging from the gibbet or gallows. The hand was supposed to possess powerful magic, and was used to protect its owner from evil spirits, to reveal where treasure was buried or even to put people to sleep. She also drew attention to the ‘ancient tradition’ that the spirit of a dead witch could be prevented from causing any more harm by being imprisoned in the hollow of a tree. Inevitably no evidence was ever found to back this up and some people believed that an animal could have been responsible for removing the hand from the skeleton.

Another major theory, somewhat less extreme than the witchcraft explanation, and with a little more evidence to support it, emerged ten years after the discovery of the body and came in the form of a letter to the Midlands newspaper The Wolverhampton Express and Star. The letter was sent to the columnist Lt. Col. Wilfred Byford-Jones, who in November, 1953, had written a series of articles on the Hagley Wood murder. The mysterious person who sent the letter claimed to have information about the murder and signed herself ‘ANNA, Claverley’. According to this “Anna”, Bella was actually a foreign spy who had been part of a ring scouting out munitions factories in the area and reporting back to the Luftwaffe. The murder victim, ‘Anna’ claimed, was a Dutch woman who had arrived in England illegally about 1941 and had become involved in these activities. She had accidentally learned too much about a British officer who was a mole involved in the spy ring. In order to guarantee her silence, the officer and another spy killed Bella before dumping her body in the woods. The letter named the British officer involved, but he was discovered to have died insane in 1942.

Eventually when Byford-Jones and the police met ‘Anna’ they learned that the officer involved had been a close relative connected to a spy-ring selling secrets to Germany. According to Byford–Jones, some of Anna’s facts were subsequently verified, and apparently both MI5 and the police investigated her claims. Richard Deacon in his book, Murder by witchcraft: A study of the Lower Quinton and Hagley Wood murders mentions that there was contact with an ex-Nazi called Herr Franz Rathgeb, who had spent time in the English Midlands during the war, and knew a German agent named Lehrer who had a girlfriend also working a German spy. She was a Dutchwoman possibly called Clarabella Dronkers, who had lived in Birmingham, was about 30, and had irregular teeth. It is a known fact that a Dutchman named Johannes Marinus Dronkers was executed for spying by the British in December 1942, but whether there was ever a Clarabella Dronkers has never been proven.

Rumors that two German parachutists had landed and vanished in the Hagley area early in 1941 seemed to add more weight to the ‘spy’ theory. It all sounded somewhat promising when all of this came to light. The public became convinced that Bella had either been a spy or mixed up with spies. And when it emerged that her skeleton had disappeared from the Birmingham University Medical School, an outcry of conspiracy and cover-up began...though no prove was ever presented. Certainly if she was discovered spying for Germany by the British she would have been arrested and questioned and not executed and stuffed in a tree.

There were other theories, of course...that Bella was a prostitute who had picked up the wrong 'john' - that she had been a refugee fleeing the Blitz and had met a rapist in the woods - that she was a gypsy murdered by her tribe for some horrible misdeed. But for the people around Hagley Woods, the first two theories still held the most weight.

However, if Bella was a local woman sheltering from the blitz, then some clues should have turned up to her identity by now, either from relatives attempting to locate her or from relevant dental records, but nothing has ever been found, and it seems no-one knew anything about her.

The case is still open, though it has long since gone cold. With the body missing and over six decades between the murder and today, the only thing that is clear is that the chances of anyone uncovering Bella’s true identity and that of her murderer are so slim as to be impossible. Just as we may never be sure of Jack the Ripper’s identity, so too will Bella become a figure of myth and folklore.

But the mystery of Bella will not rest so lightly it seems. On August 18, 1999, a 200 year-old stone obelisk on the Hagley Hall estate was found one morning covered in graffiti in tall white letters, ‘WHO PUT BELLA IN THE WITCH ELM?'

Sources:
brian-haughton.com
criminalelement.com
mysteriousbritain.co.uk
paranormaldatabase.com
forteantimes.com
mysteriouspeople.com
BBC - Murder mystery returns to haunt village 
independent.co.ukMystery. Murder. And half a century of suspense
Bella: An Unsolved Murder



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