Read Paranormal State: My Journey into the Unknown Online
Authors: Stefan Petrucha,Ryan Buell
It’s possible the spirits of the children were present in addition to the demon, but after the exorcism, all the activity and the attacks stopped. As time passed, Jodi’s relationship with her boyfriend ended, but she was getting along better with Nate.
The text at the end of the episode mentions Jodi miraculously surviving an accident in a fire. Months after our investigation, she had a barbecue and there was a flash fire. Her hair, eyelashes, and eyebrows were suddenly burning. She felt as if she might die. After having been so angry with God, now she prayed. “Please, help me. I don’t want Nate to go through life without a mom.”
Scary as the fire was, she was saved. She believed it was because of the protective energy that the exorcism had evoked. She’d found her faith again, and a sense of peace.
Looking back, even if in some crazy way it had
still
been production setting me up, at least it led to some good. Had that not happened, I might’ve left that case thinking it was a simple haunting. Had I not freaked out, maybe Jodi wouldn’t have opened up.
Happy as I was for Jodi and Nate, though, I was not at peace when we left. As we made the drive back to State College, shame hit me. Even if it was for a short time, I’d lost my defenses and allowed my rational thinking to be replaced with fear and hysteria. I started thinking about the warning I was given two years ago. Why did the demonic show itself but not deliver an attack when we lost our footing? It didn’t make any sense. I couldn’t believe that the demonic popped in to Jodi’s case just because of Syracuse. Jodi, I believe, was suffering from a mild demonic attack for a year or so. Were we chosen then, set up by some intangible intelligence, to pick two demonic cases back-to-back? No longer fearing I’d been manipulated by production, I began to fear that I was being manipulated by an unseen, malevolent force.
If that were true, it meant this consciousness had superior intelligence and cunning. I felt like I was a pawn on a chess board, maneuvered without even realizing it. Where was I going, and what would happen next week in Syracuse? For those who’ve never been in a truly demonic scenario, I know it sounds crazy. Trust me, there’ve been many nights when I think it is crazy. But ask yourself, what if it’s true? What if there are two opposing forces out there,
in
this world but not
of
this world, one of pure good and light, the other of hate and destruction, both conscious, both always watching? Despite thousands of years of theological study from every different form of religion, the duality of nature, light and dark, remains unfathomable.
I decided I needed a break from the two cases, to get my bearings. If Syracuse was truly going to be a worse situation, then we needed to be ready.
W
HAT’S IN A
N
AME
?
Two years prior to the start of shooting
Paranormal State
, I’d been contacted by a Roman Catholic diocese to help on a demonic case. During that case, through intuition and other methods, a name came to us, M—. That name appears in the Old Testament and is associated with a pagan god that requires a costly sacrifice, often a child, involving fire.
Within a few days, three of our investigators encountered that name in odd places: dreams, radio, newspapers, and television. It was then we started referring to demons as “bunnies,” to undermine their power by making fun of them.
Once the name B— from the Syracuse case began popping up, it reminded me of that initial encounter. From what I could research, B— has an older history, translating as “without worth” or ”never to rise,” which could be a reference to a fallen angel. Interestingly, Edgar Cayce, a famed trance channeler from the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, claimed this demon was worshipped in Atlantis.
In “The Name,” a jumble of letters appears as a montage in which the name is fairly easy to pick out. I want to make it clear that I was against that. I felt it was inappropriate and disrespectful, but from a documentary standpoint, I understood. I respected the fact that they were trying to document things.
My own concerns about the name at that time, at that moment, are captured on film. Things have changed for me since. The significance has lost all value to me. It doesn’t frighten me. If the names come up in other contexts, I say them freely and don’t believe that doing so will conjure them.
At the same time, I’m not going to say demon names just to make fun of them. There are those who disrespect the power behind the names, and use them in a taunting fashion, daring themselves to say the names out loud. Because of that, whenever I’m discussing these cases, I do not use the full names.
T
HE
K
REIDER
F
AMILY
M
URDERS
*
On July 7, 1893, Daniel Kreider and five members of his family were killed in what may have been North Dakota’s first recorded serial killing. The murderer was Albert F. Bromberger, a twenty-two-year-old farmhand. During a card game the night before, Bromberger had told Kreider of his interest in his elder daughter, Annie. In response, Kreider made it clear his advances were unwanted and told Bromberger he should leave the farm.
The next morning Bromberger used a rifle and possibly a knife to kill Kreider, his wife, and four of their children: Bernice 15, Melby 12, Mary 9, and David 7. The other children, Aaron 13, Eva 5, and Henry 3, hid while Bromberger forced Annie to make him lunch. He stole what money he could find at the property, fifty dollars, raped the girl, and ran. Annie then had to walk into town for help.
Bromberger was captured, sentenced, and executed. The surviving Kreider children were brought to the former family home in Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania, where the victims were buried.
At the time the murders hit a big chord in the country. There was a lot of press, sort of a media circus. I just have to mention a weird part of the headline in the article I was handed about the murders, since it seems so out of keeping with the tragedy: 15,000 AT BIGGEST FUNERAL ATE 400 PIES. Go figure.
This thing really was here, wasn’t it?
After leaving “The Name” unfinished, I was convinced Syracuse would be the big one, the return demonic attack promised two years ago. Back then, I’d felt personally at risk, that my team was at risk, and I’d always known that if I kept working, something similar would happen. The resulting depression slowed me down and made me question whether I should continue my investigations, but it ultimately didn’t stop me.
But thinking something
might
happen and being convinced it was
about
to happen are two different things. I hoped I’d grown and that I was more confident, maybe even wiser, but I had no way of being sure.
The episode documenting this case, “The Devil in Syracuse,” opens with a shot of me praying in church. I’d gone to mass on campus, but only from time to time. It was very crowded there, and, to me, impersonal. The church here is one I’d found about a mile from my new house. Anxious, I decided to go, register, and give confession. Afterward I met with a priest.
“I know you might think I’m crazy,” I told him. “You may not believe in the personification of evil, but I do.” I described what I’d been going through.
He listened, but didn’t say whether or not he believed in the demonic. You might think all Catholic priests believe in demons, but I’d read an anonymous survey saying that more than 50 percent of American priests don’t believe in the devil, let alone demons. Many think it’s entirely a metaphor. Regardless, the father didn’t reject or judge me; he respected me. When the producers asked to film in the church, he agreed, as long as we didn’t disturb the other parishioners.
Before making a final decision about shooting this case, I also spoke with our client Teena’s husband, Raymond. His responses were short, and from the beginning, he seemed to be concealing something. At that point, though, I decided to take the risk.
As we prepared, weird things happened to the production team. They heard knocking and rapping in their hotel rooms. As she researched the case, Autumn, the segment producer, had odd bouts of depression that were very unusual for her. When a production assistant looked up B— and said it aloud, she started having nightmares. She was told to let me know, but was afraid of looking unprofessional, so before we left I met with them all.
“If anything happens, I need to know,” I said. “It could be part of what’s going on in this case. If you’re having experiences, don’t just tell each other and not tell me.” I gave them all blessed medals.
As for the team, Heather asked to stay behind, but Katrina wanted to go. I agreed with the understanding that she wouldn’t be allowed in the home without supervision and couldn’t take part in Dead Time. I also asked Ryan Heiser along, because of his religious background. Eilfie and Serg came, too, but don’t appear much on-camera. It was a trailer home, so there wasn’t much to do in terms of tech and research. Serg was trying to find his voice at this point, and tended to hang back.
In the briefing, as usual, I rattled off the details, some of which I’ve already mentioned. Jodi and Raymond claimed they heard growling and scratching. They saw black shadows. Objects moved. Teena said she felt cold presences and regularly saw a dark red figure in her doorway. She also believed that Raymond’s personality had changed, and that whatever this thing was had made him darker, more distant.
Teena, Raymond, and Katie all claimed something had attacked them. Raymond, a three-hundred-pound man, said an unseen presence had thrashed and thrown him around. They’d provided a photo of scratches on his body, though these didn’t seem as dramatic as the clawing they’d described.
In the episode, as we prepared to leave, you’ll see me pack an antique box. I used to bring it on any demonic cases, but these days I usually leave it in the office as a memento. It was a gift from a former investigator. By some coincidence, it happened to have my initials on it, RB, so they bought it and refitted it to hold a crucifix, Bible, holy medals, and holy water. Eilfie became a kind of “keeper” of that box. She hangs on to it until I need it, makes sure it’s taken care of, packed properly. So I feel her energy from it.
The eight-hour drive to Syracuse, New York, was long, and colder and colder as we headed north. By the time we’d arrived at the trailer park, there’d been a huge snowstorm.
Teena and Raymond’s home wasn’t particularly small, but it definitely wasn’t cared for. Raymond had been laid off from a factory some time ago and Teena was working at McDonald’s to pay the bills. Apparently, Raymond would sit around all day as the house fell apart around him.
Teena said they’d tried cleaning before our arrival. I can’t imagine what it was like before she cleaned. In some locations, you can sense a presence or heaviness in the air, but this was such a mess, it wasn’t possible to sense anything. The smell was pretty overpowering, too.
The front door led to a living room. To the left was a kitchen, a bathroom, a side section with washer and dryer, and then the master bedroom. To the right were two smaller bedrooms belonging to the children, Katie and Charlie, and a second bathroom. Debris was everywhere. In the master bedroom, where Teena claimed the bed had been lifted and dropped, there were so many clothes piled all over you couldn’t get to the dresser without crawling across the bed.
Convinced the presence was demonic, Teena and Raymond had hung crosses all over, some of which were just two pieces of wood screwed together. These had been blessed, but the family wasn’t sure what denomination the pastor was. It may seem odd, but I’ve met a number of people who identify themselves as Christian, but don’t know the denomination of their church.
As part of the walk-through, Teena took us to Katie’s bedroom, where she said the activity started. Apparently it had begun around the time of Charlie’s birth, intensifying after Ray lost his job. The hormones of childbirth can play havoc with the mother, which meant there were psychological concerns. To be clear, as things progressed, I thought there was hysteria, but couldn’t write it all off that way.