Just a girl who loves to write about paranormal and life stuff. Please enjoy
On January 31st, 1982, Kathleen McCormack, 29, was driven by her husband, Robert Durst, from their home in South Salem, New York, to a train station in Westchester. Kathleen boarded a train to Manhattan, or at least that is what Robert told investigators five days later when he reported her missing.
By Shelby12 months ago in Criminal
Bethlem Royal Hospital was the only institution in Europe that was handling society's mentally or criminally unwell, for the vast majority of European history. The hospital was severely overcrowded and under supported.
By Shelbyabout a year ago in Psyche
Alexander The Great Alexander The Great's body was failing to decompose, six days has passed since his death and the ancient Greek's were in utter awe. His loyal followers believed that this was the confirmation that he was indeed a god. But modern scientists have since said otherwise. According to one theory, the king's body wasn't decomposing because he wasn't dead yet.
By Shelbyabout a year ago in Horror
You may have been dared as a child to summon Bloody Mary. All you had to do was stand in a dimly lit bathroom and stare into the mirror, then chant her name 13 times... And if it went according to plan, a woman should appear in your mirror. Sometimes she wouldn't be alone and would hold a dead baby, other times she would be alone. And as the legend states, she would do nothing but stare. But, on occasion, it is said that she will leap from the glass and scratched or kill the one that summoned her.
Rumors started to circulate around the village of Tencin in present-day Slovakia during the early 17th century. Girls who were looking for servant work in the Csejte Castle were starting to disappear and nobody knew what was happening to them. But, soon many started to speculate Countess Elizabeth Bathroy was the reason for these disappearances.
By Shelbyabout a year ago in Criminal
A fire broke out at 1140 Royal Street in the French Quarter of New Orleans in 1834. Neighbors rushed out to assist, they offered to pour water onto the flames and help the family evacuate. But, when they arrived, they noticed that the woman of the house, Madame LaLaurie, seemed to be alone.
Marcel Petiot was truly a horrible man, he promised safety and freedom to those who were leaving Nazi-occupied France, where he would only rob them of their possessions and murder them.
One-third of all the murders in the United States go unsolved. Murder cases like this will haunt you with the though that the murderer could still be walking among us.
A body was discovered in September 1934. A young man came across it while he took a walk along the shorts of Lake Erie, but it was hardly a body, it was rather just part of one. The remains were of a woman's lower torso, there was a chemical present on the skin that caused it to turn red and leathery.
The idea of hunting humans has capitative the minds of people everywhere, possibly starting with the short story written by Richard Connell named The Most Dangerous Game. In the short story, it describes the story of a wealthy Russian aristocrat that was bored of trapping animals, so he instead lures a big-game hunter to his island and hunts him.
In Japan, during the Meiji Era, which spanned from 1868 to 1912, it was once of the crueler periods for those in prisons, so escaping from prisons was more common.
Bobbi Parker, wife of a prison warden in Oklahoma, was kidnapped by violent murderer, Randolph Dial, and held captivate for almost 11 years. Randolph was a master manipulator and used violent threats, drugs, and brainwashing to keep Bobbi under his thumb while he forced her to pose as his wife on a chicken farm in Texas.