Feb
17
2009

Women and their extraordinary mental power

psychic-free1

Although this is the most recognized Isabel Ávila psychic today, many women were similar and even greater successes years ago. Such was the case with Greta Alexander, who during the eighties of last century was a remarkable acknowledgment.

At that time, the “medium of Illinois” worked in a whopping 200 cases annually. The most famous was the discovery of the body of Mary Cousett, a young woman who was kidnapped and murdered. To the amazement of the officers assigned to the case, the medium and closed his eyes after a few minutes of trance, he began to speak and gave a series of impressions that, initially, seemed to be meaningless.

The detective in charge of the case, one Fitzgerald, noted that Alexander explained everything: the body of the missing woman was found in an embankment near the water, his head was separated from the body and a missing foot or leg. In addition, the seer had the impression that there was a school nearby. Subsequently made a sketch of the area in which it was found, although the place had been unsuccessfully recorded by the police on several occasions.

The body of the girl was found in the exact spot he had pointed out Alexander. His remains were scattered over an embankment of the river. His bones had been torn by wild animals, so that the skull and one of the feet were separated from the body, which was near an old abandoned school.

Furthermore, the first agent found Steve Trew was injured three weeks before in several fingers with a drill press. All the impressions were accurate medium of Illinois … The capabilities of another visionary, Nella Jones, though the question of his colleague had little to envy to those of Alexander.

In 1975, a series of horrible crimes terrorized the citizens of the English town of Yorkshire. The criminal known as the “Yorkshire Ripper” by the similarity of the killings with the famous of Jack the Ripper was brutally ended the lives of thirteen women.

In a series of predictions that Jones said to reporters between October 1979 and January 1980 – noted that the Ripper was the name of Peter, who worked as a truck driver for a company whose name begins with the letter C, and living in the fourth floor of the six numbers of a street located in Bradford, in Yorkshire.

Although a 1979 study published by the Journal of Police Science and Administration found that the mediums did not provide additional relevant information for solving major crimes, when the Yorkshire Ripper was cornered in 1980 was that the tracks made by Nella Jones had been correct: the murderer was known as Peter Sutcliffe, was working as a truck driver for the Clark Transport Company and lived at number six in the street Garden Lane, Bradford.

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