by M.P. Pellicer | Stranger Than Fiction Stories Could you be a hitman with a sense of humor? Apparently there was one who worked for mobsters in Las Vegas. Rumors are that he would take snitches or those "who knew too much" on a one way trip to the desert, and give them a final resting place next to Spot and Kitty.
by M.P. Pellicer | Stranger Than Fiction Stories
In 1894, William Edmund Scott Hall sued the Earl of Abingdon over the purchase of property purported to be haunted by Amy Robsart, this supposedly being the place where she died.
by M.P. Pellicer | Stranger Than Fiction Stories
The battered nude body of a young woman was found by two teenage boys in Illinois Beach State Park, 45 miles north of Chicago. She lay in a ditch along the Chicago and North Western railroad tracks about 40 feet from the park's south entrance.
by M.P. Pellicer | Stranger Than Fiction Stories
Built in 1619, and located 15 miles south of Albuquerque, the adobe church of San Agustín is one of the two oldest surviving mission churches in New Mexico. However it's not the historical significance, but the identity of a priest buried in the 1700s under the church floor that has drawn visitors for hundreds of years.
by M.P. Pellicer | Stranger Than Fiction Stories
In Kalkajaka National Park 16 miles southwest of Cooktown (Queensland, Australia), black granite boulders create a maze that lead inside Black Mountain. Throughout the years it has developed a reputation for strange sightings and the disappearance of people without a trace.
by M.P. Pellicer | Stranger Than Fiction Stories
Long forgotten, mostly hidden in corners of old cemeteries are memorials to the most beloved of companions. No doubt by now, these pets have been reunited with those who grieved over their tiny graves so many years ago.
by M.P. Pellicer | Stranger Than Fiction Stories
For nearly a year, from December, 1969 to November, 1970, nine unsolved murders were attributed to one perpetrator by northern California police.
by M.P. Pellicer | Stranger Than Fiction Stories
From July to August 1975, over 25 patients at the Veterans Administration hospital in Ann Arbor, Michigan were inexplicably stricken with respiratory crisis events. Some were saved, but 11 died before the doctors realized there was something unnatural about their deaths.
by M.P. Pellicer | Stranger Than Fiction Stories
Between 1971 and 1973 three young girls were taken, raped and killed. It was theorized the murderer specifically chose them based on their names so that their first name and surname started with the same letter, and the girls' bodies were dumped in parks that started with the same letter as their name.
by M.P. Pellicer | Stranger Than Fiction Stories
Adam Wenger Oberlin moved to Miami from Ohio in 1919. He invested in real estate and things went well, that is until 1921.
by M.P. Pellicer | Stranger Than Fiction Stories
It all started when George Pereira was directed by a Tibetan shepherd to the cave of a holy man. Pereira had left in March, 1920 on a marathon walk from Shanghai across Tibet, China and then to the Caspian Sea. He was traversing where none had gone before, and by himself. Several months passed until he arrived at the Tibetan holy man's cave.
by M.P. Pellicer | Stranger Than Fiction Stories
Is there any truth to the unwritten law that any business built on consecrated grounds is bound to fail? There was one establishment that violated this belief more than any other which were theaters. These are stories where misfortune haunted these places.
by M.P. Pellicer | Stranger Than Fiction Stories
Skeletons discovered in long-forgotten graveyards provide proof of not only gruesome deaths but the poor quality of life they led.
by M.P. Pellicer | Stranger Than Fiction Stories
Earl Wiseman, 25, and George Shanks, 44, were serving prison terms at the Missouri State Penitentiary. They were convicted of killing Arthur Robinson in 1934. The only thing left of Arthur was a small pile of human bones and teeth found in the ashes of a huge log fire on the banks of Mingo Ditch, about eight miles southwest of Puxico, just outside his cabin. by M.P. Pellicer | Stranger Than Fiction Stories It was the winter of 1894, and in Waltham, Massachusetts many men were unemployed and eager to accept any job, however if the work was to be performed on the Walker estate there were no volunteers. One man said, "I would not undertake it again if they would give me the Walker Estate."
by M.P. Pellicer | Stranger Than Fiction Stories
A life-size hooded statue walks with a bent head, towards an unknown destination. Some call it a guardian, others the Grim Reaper, however there is a cautionary tale about looking at the shadowed face.
by M.P. Pellicer | Stranger Than Fiction Stories
The vampire feeds on blood, the Raven Mocker (Kâ'lanû Ahkyeli'sk) feeds on life. The Cherokee feared these witches greatly. by M.P. Pellicer | Stranger Than Fiction Stories March 2009, Harold Crowder, died at age 83. He was the last one left alive of the foursome and fearsome Los Angeles Police Department’s "Hat Squad", assigned to the Robbery Detail during the late 1940s into the 60s. They were distinguished by the trademark white fedoras, and tailored suits they all wore. The only exemption was changing the hats to straw ones for the summer months. |
Stranger Than Fiction StoriesM.P. PellicerAuthor, Narrator and Producer StrangerThanFiction.NewsArchives
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