Victims In Psychic-Inspired Hoax Sue Police
Victims In Psychic-Inspired Hoax Sue Police
A Texas couple who own a ranch that police searched following false information that was provided by a psychic are suing the police and several major news organizations for defamation.
The case began June 6, 2011, when a psychic called police and described a horrific scene of mass murder: dozens of dismembered bodies near a ranch house about an hour outside of Houston, Texas. There were rotting limbs, headless corpses, and, chillingly, many were children in this mass grave they described.
Deputies from the Liberty County Sheriff's office went to investigate but didnt see anything amiss. After a second call the following day, dozens of officials from the Texas Department of Public Safety, the FBI, and the Texas Rangers were on the scene -- not to mention cadaver dogs, news helicopters, and gawkers. It all turned out to be a false alarm. There were no dead bodies; the psychic was wrong (or lying).
Though the incident became a national embarrassment, the police refused to apologize, saying that procedures were followed and that the severity of the claims warranted an investigation: Whether a tip comes from an ordinary citizen, an anonymous informant, or a self-proclaimed psychic, information about mass murders cannot be ignored.
<snip>
Bankson and Charlton accuse The New York Times, CNN, Thompson Reuters, ABC News, and other news media of publishing false statements claiming that bodies had been found on their property.
More:
http://news.discovery.com/human/psychic-hoax-mass-grave-120612.html
drm604
(16,230 posts)This shows that this kind of woo woo nonsense actually can cause harm.
I wonder if the so-called psychic has been charged with anything for making a false report.
TheWraith
(24,331 posts)It might finally start to cut down on these people trying to leech their way into serious matters of law enforcement if they're held accountable for that shit.
muriel_volestrangler
(102,485 posts)but, if it did, I fear you couldn't get a conviction. Some jurors would either buy any BS about how it was 'real' in some sense, with a detail (time? place?) just 'mistaken', or how they 'psychic' made the accusation 'in good faith' - which they'd try to show with BS about how spiritual they are, therefore they could never hurt anyone.
SwissTony
(2,560 posts)Dear policepersons
psychics don't provide information. They just make shit up.
Yours sincerely
A. Skeptic.