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Editor's Note: T. Stokes is a writer from the British Isles and writes with a specific English point of view.
Police, Psychics and Abduction
by T Stokes
Posted: 01:14 December 4, 2006
The U.S. police take reported abductions more seriously than here in
Britain.
Some British authorities will not even take notes on missing persons before
48 hours has elapsed, and serious enquiries do not get under way in under
seven days.
Be skeptical of many of the claims made in the press by such like as remote
viewers and psychics who claim they work for the police, as the first thing
the authorities do is to get you to sign the official secrets act, and they
do enforce this with back up threats of harassment an/or prosecution.
One of the most amazing psychics I know who did many years of police work,
was what police call a "finder." The story of how I met this man is many
years old, but began when a distraught husband came to our little
spiritualist church desperate to find his missing wife. He had heard that a
"finder" could possibly help him.
"Tom the finder" was brought in. I was curious to meet a man I had heard so
many rumors about, and admit I was very skeptical of his abilities.
Although this man specialized in missing children from cases such as the
awful Moors child murders. He asked the distraught husband for an article
of clothing and a photograph, and squeezed a silk head scarf in his hands
while concentrating, then rubbed it on his face and smelt it all over, and
put it out on a map of Britain.
He spent some time dowsing with a pendulum over the photograph of the woman
and the map, before saying; "she is alive and in the county of Dorset."
I kept quiet about my skepticism here, because most missing people stay
local, but this was right across Britain. I enquired if she had taken any
belongings, and was suspicious that she had left without her much loved
shoe collection.
Under pressure from the husband, as soon as our "Finder" had finished
making his copious notes, we set off in the husband's car for Dorset. The
drive was tiring and uncomfortable and on arrival at the county borders,
the map and the photo were again dowsed for some time and the head scarf
sniffed. I remember thinking that the crackpot skeptics would have a field
day watching this, when he said; "got it."
He then indicated the way to go and after a couple of false starts, when he
lost his bearings, told us we were near now and the winding road through
the fields would soon reveal the missing woman!
As we then turned a bend in the road we saw a small caravan park of about
fifteen caravans and this is where she was he said. I was still quite
unbelieving, when he, looking confused said: "the green and white one." And
we strode over and banged on the caravan, I was as shocked as the woman who
opened the door, her eyes bulged and she grabbed her mouth in horror as she
saw her husband, "How, how did you find me she gasped."
The husband had not told us they had been arguing and that he had hit her
and that she ran away to make some decisions on the marriage.
The use of the pendulum is very popular just now. It was used extensively
in W.W.II and war documents refer to it as Radiesthesia. The Third Reich
had ship finding experts, whose work was copied by the British and then the
Americans in 1952. Did you know that Winston Churchill was a 33rd Degree
Mason, and a long term druid and occult student. He was well aware of the
possibilities of dowsing, and collected together a team of experts known as
the "Black team" which was used to help win the war.
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