1 00:00:00,200 --> 00:00:05,200 Speaker 1: Hello, it's Richard maclin Smith here, not the impostor you've 2 00:00:05,200 --> 00:00:09,440 Speaker 1: been listening to on the podcasts, the real one. Join 3 00:00:09,520 --> 00:00:14,920 Speaker 1: me for Unexplained TV beginning Tuesday, December third at YouTube 4 00:00:14,960 --> 00:00:30,639 Speaker 1: dot com Forward Slash Unexplained pod. For almost as long 5 00:00:30,720 --> 00:00:34,240 Speaker 1: as the written word has been around, at least, humanity's 6 00:00:34,320 --> 00:00:39,120 Speaker 1: predilection for inflicting curses on others has been well documented, 7 00:00:39,920 --> 00:00:44,280 Speaker 1: from ancient Egyptian inscriptions written on the entrances to tombs 8 00:00:44,520 --> 00:00:48,280 Speaker 1: with the intention of protecting sacred property, to the well 9 00:00:48,320 --> 00:00:52,400 Speaker 1: known mark of Cain placed upon the eponymous biblical figure 10 00:00:52,600 --> 00:00:56,120 Speaker 1: from the Book of Genesis. Curses have played a vital 11 00:00:56,200 --> 00:01:00,959 Speaker 1: role in setting moral boundaries for millennia. It should come 12 00:01:01,000 --> 00:01:06,280 Speaker 1: as no surprise that, given our inherently superstitious nature, curses, 13 00:01:06,400 --> 00:01:10,160 Speaker 1: as well as blessings, have become a fundamental aspect of 14 00:01:10,240 --> 00:01:15,199 Speaker 1: our most cherished belief systems. Curses have filtered into every 15 00:01:15,280 --> 00:01:18,800 Speaker 1: day speech in the form of taboo words and phrases. 16 00:01:19,640 --> 00:01:23,920 Speaker 1: They are still invoked as powerful psychological tropes to be 17 00:01:24,000 --> 00:01:28,959 Speaker 1: deployed in movies and popular stories associated with the horror genre. 18 00:01:29,840 --> 00:01:33,759 Speaker 1: Despite the archaic nature of curses. In other words, the 19 00:01:33,800 --> 00:01:37,520 Speaker 1: idea of another person wishing us ill still has the 20 00:01:37,640 --> 00:01:42,920 Speaker 1: power to generate fear. We see omens in magpies and 21 00:01:43,120 --> 00:01:47,400 Speaker 1: void breaking mirrors. We cross the street to avoid walking 22 00:01:47,480 --> 00:01:52,440 Speaker 1: under ladders. We change our path when we encounter black cats, 23 00:01:52,480 --> 00:01:58,000 Speaker 1: and carry religious medals, crucifixes, and sage to ward off evil. 24 00:01:59,320 --> 00:02:03,000 Speaker 1: Perhaps because of our need to give narrative to our existence, 25 00:02:03,400 --> 00:02:08,480 Speaker 1: we are predisposed to find connections between seemingly unrelated events. 26 00:02:09,800 --> 00:02:13,919 Speaker 1: In his nineteen fifty eight publication The Onset of Schizophrenia, 27 00:02:14,160 --> 00:02:18,480 Speaker 1: An Attempt to form an Analysis of Delusion, German psychiatrist 28 00:02:18,639 --> 00:02:24,200 Speaker 1: Klaus Conrad coined the term apophenia to describe this exact phenomena. 29 00:02:25,080 --> 00:02:29,120 Speaker 1: He described it as being an unmotivated seeing of connections 30 00:02:29,440 --> 00:02:35,840 Speaker 1: accompanied by a specific feeling of abnormal meaningfulness. Comrade's formulation 31 00:02:36,160 --> 00:02:40,280 Speaker 1: has been used to pathologize magical thinking in everything from 32 00:02:40,320 --> 00:02:45,040 Speaker 1: gambling to the promotion of conspiracy theories. But what about 33 00:02:45,120 --> 00:02:49,320 Speaker 1: in cases where the connection between cause and effect isn't 34 00:02:49,440 --> 00:02:53,239 Speaker 1: quite so random? What do we do when we learn 35 00:02:53,320 --> 00:02:56,840 Speaker 1: that someone wishes us ill and we are suddenly stricken 36 00:02:57,040 --> 00:03:01,080 Speaker 1: with an inconvenience or tragedy. It's fair to say that 37 00:03:01,160 --> 00:03:04,600 Speaker 1: even the most rational among us would probably be spooked 38 00:03:05,040 --> 00:03:08,640 Speaker 1: even if we were eventually able to put those thoughts 39 00:03:08,680 --> 00:03:19,320 Speaker 1: to bed. Perhaps you've heard of the Curse of the Kennedys, 40 00:03:19,360 --> 00:03:22,920 Speaker 1: so called because of the strange number of premature deaths 41 00:03:23,240 --> 00:03:28,080 Speaker 1: and tragic events associated with the United States' most famous 42 00:03:28,120 --> 00:03:33,000 Speaker 1: political dynasty. Since rising to prominence under the stewardship of 43 00:03:33,040 --> 00:03:37,680 Speaker 1: the family's patriarch, Joe Kennedy, two of his sons, President 44 00:03:37,840 --> 00:03:42,040 Speaker 1: John F. Kennedy in nineteen sixty three and presidential candidate 45 00:03:42,360 --> 00:03:48,360 Speaker 1: Senator Robert Kennedy in nineteen sixty eight were assassinated. His 46 00:03:48,520 --> 00:03:52,200 Speaker 1: eldest son Joseph, was killed on active duty during the 47 00:03:52,280 --> 00:03:56,760 Speaker 1: Second World War, while his eldest daughter Rosemary, received a 48 00:03:56,840 --> 00:04:01,800 Speaker 1: life changing lobotomy in nineteen forty one, leaving her incapacitated 49 00:04:02,080 --> 00:04:06,040 Speaker 1: and catatonic for much of the rest of her life. 50 00:04:06,480 --> 00:04:11,560 Speaker 1: Joe's youngest son, Teddy, had his future presidential aspirations dashed 51 00:04:11,800 --> 00:04:15,040 Speaker 1: when it was revealed that on the night of July eighteenth, 52 00:04:15,280 --> 00:04:21,080 Speaker 1: nineteen sixty nine, he'd been drink driving on chap Equidick Island, Massachusetts, 53 00:04:21,320 --> 00:04:26,400 Speaker 1: with a young woman named Mary Joe Kopecne riding alongside him. 54 00:04:26,920 --> 00:04:31,240 Speaker 1: Not only was Mary Joe eight years Teddy's junior, but 55 00:04:31,320 --> 00:04:34,480 Speaker 1: at the time in question, was rumored to be involved 56 00:04:34,600 --> 00:04:39,839 Speaker 1: in an extramarital affair with Teddy. She drowned in Teddy's 57 00:04:39,880 --> 00:04:45,160 Speaker 1: car after he accidentally flipped it off a bridge. Perhaps 58 00:04:45,360 --> 00:04:48,960 Speaker 1: not so much in keeping with the curse, he received 59 00:04:49,000 --> 00:04:52,359 Speaker 1: only a two month suspended jail sentence for his part 60 00:04:52,440 --> 00:04:56,839 Speaker 1: in the accident, mainly just for leaving the scene. He 61 00:04:56,960 --> 00:05:02,279 Speaker 1: never fully recovered his former clean cut rie reputation. This 62 00:05:02,480 --> 00:05:05,920 Speaker 1: is just one example of a supposed curse which has 63 00:05:06,080 --> 00:05:11,960 Speaker 1: entered public consciousness, and despite having no identifiable cause behind it, 64 00:05:11,960 --> 00:05:15,680 Speaker 1: it's easy to see why so many otherwise rational people 65 00:05:16,200 --> 00:05:20,960 Speaker 1: might think twice about its origin. Perhaps even more alarming 66 00:05:21,400 --> 00:05:25,599 Speaker 1: is when cause and effect seem more closely aligned. When 67 00:05:25,640 --> 00:05:29,880 Speaker 1: a radio DJ from Raleigh, North Carolina, say, moves to 68 00:05:29,960 --> 00:05:33,520 Speaker 1: Seattle to take up work as a music executive for 69 00:05:33,600 --> 00:05:38,760 Speaker 1: an organization called the Musak Holdings Company. Perhaps through his 70 00:05:38,880 --> 00:05:42,599 Speaker 1: work he has afforded the time to travel, and because 71 00:05:42,640 --> 00:05:46,039 Speaker 1: of a niche he's developed in tracking down recordings of 72 00:05:46,160 --> 00:05:50,919 Speaker 1: ancient melodies, he meets a fellow enthusiast who shares its passion. 73 00:05:51,960 --> 00:05:56,680 Speaker 1: Maybe something goes wrong, and the young music executive puts 74 00:05:56,680 --> 00:05:59,920 Speaker 1: its foot in it, and the person he initially thought 75 00:06:00,160 --> 00:06:04,240 Speaker 1: of as a kindred spirit wishes harm and evil on 76 00:06:04,400 --> 00:06:10,040 Speaker 1: his soul. The executive spirals and undergoes a series of 77 00:06:10,120 --> 00:06:14,880 Speaker 1: trials during the next few days, and when the situation concludes, 78 00:06:15,320 --> 00:06:19,760 Speaker 1: friends and relatives are left utterly bewildered by it all. 79 00:06:21,240 --> 00:06:27,080 Speaker 1: This is the story of Christopher Case. You're listening to Unexplained, 80 00:06:27,600 --> 00:06:40,280 Speaker 1: and I'm Richard McLean Smith. It was a crisp spring 81 00:06:40,400 --> 00:06:44,560 Speaker 1: day in northern California, and despite feeling tired from his 82 00:06:44,680 --> 00:06:48,640 Speaker 1: flight that morning, thirty five year old Christopher Case was 83 00:06:48,680 --> 00:06:52,880 Speaker 1: in high spirits. He'd been to San Francisco before and 84 00:06:53,000 --> 00:06:57,200 Speaker 1: always enjoyed his stay, though his visits were invariably short, 85 00:06:57,760 --> 00:07:00,360 Speaker 1: and he'd never quite managed to take in the full 86 00:07:00,480 --> 00:07:03,679 Speaker 1: view of the Golden gate Bridge in all its glory, 87 00:07:04,240 --> 00:07:08,160 Speaker 1: nor experienced the famous fonc that rolls thick across the 88 00:07:08,200 --> 00:07:12,600 Speaker 1: wharf at San Francisco Bay. As he stood by the 89 00:07:12,640 --> 00:07:16,040 Speaker 1: shoreline and sipped at his coffee, he allowed himself a 90 00:07:16,080 --> 00:07:20,240 Speaker 1: smile at the thought that he was experiencing both that morning. 91 00:07:21,320 --> 00:07:25,960 Speaker 1: It was Thursday, April eleventh, nineteen ninety one, and Chris 92 00:07:26,000 --> 00:07:29,040 Speaker 1: still had work to do in preparation for a meeting 93 00:07:29,280 --> 00:07:33,400 Speaker 1: later that afternoon. He'd come to the city on behalf 94 00:07:33,440 --> 00:07:37,880 Speaker 1: of the Musac Holdings Company based in Seattle, regarding the 95 00:07:37,920 --> 00:07:41,840 Speaker 1: procurement of rights to some melodies sourced from the Middle East. 96 00:07:42,920 --> 00:07:46,520 Speaker 1: He was particularly interested in music that dated back to 97 00:07:46,600 --> 00:07:50,400 Speaker 1: ancient Egypt, and thought that the addition of ood music 98 00:07:50,480 --> 00:07:53,720 Speaker 1: to his roster would allow him to ascend even further 99 00:07:53,880 --> 00:07:58,120 Speaker 1: in the company. Thankfully, the meeting went well, and he 100 00:07:58,200 --> 00:08:01,360 Speaker 1: was treated to lunch by some local executives at a 101 00:08:01,360 --> 00:08:05,880 Speaker 1: well known sushi restaurant. As the group assembled and sat 102 00:08:05,920 --> 00:08:08,960 Speaker 1: down with their chopsticks, they were joined by a woman 103 00:08:09,360 --> 00:08:13,960 Speaker 1: whom Chris had never met before. She made her apologies 104 00:08:14,080 --> 00:08:17,680 Speaker 1: for not being present at the meeting. When Chris was 105 00:08:17,760 --> 00:08:20,720 Speaker 1: introduced to her, he was given to understand that she 106 00:08:20,800 --> 00:08:25,040 Speaker 1: was some kind of consultant with expertise in exactly the 107 00:08:25,160 --> 00:08:28,600 Speaker 1: kind of music he was looking for. The woman was 108 00:08:28,600 --> 00:08:32,240 Speaker 1: in her fifties and had long, dark hair, and seemed 109 00:08:32,320 --> 00:08:36,480 Speaker 1: possessed of a strange magnetism that drew the group around her. 110 00:08:37,559 --> 00:08:41,000 Speaker 1: Chris also couldn't help but be attracted to her. And 111 00:08:41,080 --> 00:08:45,120 Speaker 1: the longer the meal continued, he found himself getting deeper 112 00:08:45,160 --> 00:08:50,320 Speaker 1: and deeper in conversation with her, specifically about the inherent 113 00:08:50,400 --> 00:08:55,080 Speaker 1: sophistication of ancient Egyptian burial rites and the influence the 114 00:08:55,160 --> 00:08:59,120 Speaker 1: culture had had on parts of the Mediterranean, as well 115 00:08:59,160 --> 00:09:02,480 Speaker 1: as the development of the dulcimer and the lyre in 116 00:09:02,600 --> 00:09:07,240 Speaker 1: Greek and Roman barred traditions. As the night went on 117 00:09:07,880 --> 00:09:11,040 Speaker 1: and more wine and beer was drunk, the woman with 118 00:09:11,080 --> 00:09:15,640 Speaker 1: whom he was speaking made a startling proposition. She wanted 119 00:09:15,640 --> 00:09:18,840 Speaker 1: to go dancing at a club she knew, and after 120 00:09:18,880 --> 00:09:22,360 Speaker 1: that she wanted Chris to escort her back to his 121 00:09:22,800 --> 00:09:27,600 Speaker 1: or her hotel room. Startled by her frankness and a 122 00:09:27,600 --> 00:09:31,880 Speaker 1: little self conscious about the age gap, Chris politely turned 123 00:09:31,880 --> 00:09:35,920 Speaker 1: her down. There was no denying the woman's appeal, but 124 00:09:36,080 --> 00:09:40,040 Speaker 1: something about the intensity of her manner, coupled with what 125 00:09:40,160 --> 00:09:42,959 Speaker 1: he took to be a strange dark flash in her 126 00:09:43,000 --> 00:09:59,199 Speaker 1: eyes when she spoke, unnerved him. At first, Chris attempted 127 00:09:59,240 --> 00:10:02,920 Speaker 1: to be polite. He insisted that he hadn't early flight 128 00:10:03,000 --> 00:10:06,439 Speaker 1: the following morning, but the woman just laughed him off, 129 00:10:06,800 --> 00:10:10,719 Speaker 1: then became a little more tactile. The two were now 130 00:10:10,800 --> 00:10:14,000 Speaker 1: drinking in a bar beside the restaurant, and with most 131 00:10:14,040 --> 00:10:17,760 Speaker 1: of the party gone, the woman seemed more emboldened than ever, 132 00:10:18,880 --> 00:10:23,040 Speaker 1: But Chris finally had enough. He told the woman that 133 00:10:23,120 --> 00:10:26,400 Speaker 1: he didn't feel comfortable going home with her. That wasn't 134 00:10:26,400 --> 00:10:30,000 Speaker 1: the sort of person he was, he said. Eventually, the 135 00:10:30,040 --> 00:10:34,240 Speaker 1: woman seemed to accept the situation, but then her demeanor 136 00:10:34,320 --> 00:10:38,640 Speaker 1: shifted and a scowl came over her face. You're going 137 00:10:38,679 --> 00:10:43,840 Speaker 1: to regret this, the woman apparently told Chris. Never reject 138 00:10:43,840 --> 00:10:47,800 Speaker 1: a woman who practices witchcraft, for she might just put 139 00:10:47,840 --> 00:10:53,920 Speaker 1: a curse on you. Chris laughed this off orbit somewhat tactlessly, 140 00:10:54,440 --> 00:10:57,439 Speaker 1: but when he looked in her eyes again, he found 141 00:10:57,480 --> 00:11:01,040 Speaker 1: that the stair she fixed him with made him feel sick. 142 00:11:02,160 --> 00:11:07,240 Speaker 1: You will be dead within one week, she said, According 143 00:11:07,280 --> 00:11:12,080 Speaker 1: to Chris's friend and spiritual adviser, Sammy Suda, when Chris 144 00:11:12,160 --> 00:11:16,600 Speaker 1: returned to Seattle, he seemed unfazed by the exchange. He'd 145 00:11:16,640 --> 00:11:19,480 Speaker 1: met a host of eccentric people in his role as 146 00:11:19,480 --> 00:11:23,280 Speaker 1: a music executive, and chalked his encounter with the self 147 00:11:23,320 --> 00:11:27,800 Speaker 1: proclaimed witch in San Francisco down as just another quirk 148 00:11:27,840 --> 00:11:32,400 Speaker 1: of the jomb He otherwise loved It was three days later, 149 00:11:32,800 --> 00:11:37,920 Speaker 1: on Sunday, April fourteenth, when Sammy noticed a change in Chris. 150 00:11:39,200 --> 00:11:42,680 Speaker 1: She'd known him since his early years back in North Carolina. 151 00:11:43,440 --> 00:11:46,320 Speaker 1: When he moved out west, the two friends kept in 152 00:11:46,400 --> 00:11:51,280 Speaker 1: regular phone contact, both sharing their deepest thoughts on everything 153 00:11:51,600 --> 00:11:56,000 Speaker 1: from struggles with mental health issues to their respective successes 154 00:11:56,040 --> 00:12:00,480 Speaker 1: and failures when it came to romantic issues. On that 155 00:12:00,640 --> 00:12:04,800 Speaker 1: Sunday night in April, Sammy received another call from Chris, 156 00:12:05,400 --> 00:12:09,960 Speaker 1: but this wasn't the Chris she knew. Clearly rattled, he 157 00:12:10,040 --> 00:12:13,040 Speaker 1: told her that he'd been up all night, kept awake 158 00:12:13,200 --> 00:12:18,160 Speaker 1: by strange, disembodied voices whispering in his apartment with no 159 00:12:18,440 --> 00:12:23,640 Speaker 1: identifiable source. He was seeing shadows too, moving out of 160 00:12:23,720 --> 00:12:27,000 Speaker 1: the corner of his eye, and no matter where he 161 00:12:27,080 --> 00:12:30,400 Speaker 1: went in the limited space of his flat, he couldn't 162 00:12:30,440 --> 00:12:35,440 Speaker 1: shake the feeling that somebody or something was watching him. 163 00:12:36,880 --> 00:12:40,599 Speaker 1: The following day, the phone rang once more in Sammy's 164 00:12:40,600 --> 00:12:46,160 Speaker 1: home in Lafayette, North Carolina. It was Chris again, in 165 00:12:46,200 --> 00:12:50,880 Speaker 1: an even more agitated state than before, as he explained 166 00:12:50,880 --> 00:12:53,760 Speaker 1: to Sammy not long after he got off the call 167 00:12:53,800 --> 00:12:58,040 Speaker 1: from her the day before, Though shadows seen previously out 168 00:12:58,040 --> 00:13:00,760 Speaker 1: of the corner of his eye had now taken on 169 00:13:00,960 --> 00:13:08,719 Speaker 1: tangible shape, and the whispering voices had gotten considerably louder. Somehow, 170 00:13:08,760 --> 00:13:11,920 Speaker 1: he'd managed to get himself to sleep, only to wake 171 00:13:12,040 --> 00:13:15,360 Speaker 1: up in a state of paralysis. It was then he 172 00:13:15,440 --> 00:13:20,880 Speaker 1: felt his neck being throttled by an unseen presence. As 173 00:13:20,960 --> 00:13:24,440 Speaker 1: Chris went on to explain, the attack was apparently so 174 00:13:24,679 --> 00:13:28,640 Speaker 1: violent that at several points he felt himself being lifted 175 00:13:28,679 --> 00:13:32,520 Speaker 1: off its mattress and thrown back down again. He had 176 00:13:32,600 --> 00:13:36,160 Speaker 1: cuts all over his hands and arms. To prove it. 177 00:13:36,200 --> 00:13:39,680 Speaker 1: His bed sheets were streaked brown with his own blood. 178 00:13:41,080 --> 00:13:44,440 Speaker 1: Whatever this thing was, he said, it was quite clearly 179 00:13:44,559 --> 00:13:49,400 Speaker 1: malevolent in nature. For Sammy, it was heart wrenching to 180 00:13:49,440 --> 00:13:52,840 Speaker 1: hear the fear in Chris's voice, and being powerless to 181 00:13:52,920 --> 00:13:57,439 Speaker 1: help from so far away in North Carolina, the only 182 00:13:57,480 --> 00:14:02,080 Speaker 1: advice she could offer was to find spiritual help immediately. 183 00:14:09,120 --> 00:14:12,640 Speaker 1: About two minutes walk from Chris's apartment on North one 184 00:14:12,760 --> 00:14:17,439 Speaker 1: hundred and forty second Street was a store called Evangel Incorporated, 185 00:14:18,040 --> 00:14:22,360 Speaker 1: a religious bookshop specializing mainly in books to help guide 186 00:14:22,440 --> 00:14:26,160 Speaker 1: people in their faith. It had been a quiet morning 187 00:14:26,480 --> 00:14:31,680 Speaker 1: on Tuesday, April sixteenth, when store manager Rodney Haguci noticed 188 00:14:31,680 --> 00:14:35,000 Speaker 1: a man enter the shop looking a little worse for wear. 189 00:14:36,200 --> 00:14:39,880 Speaker 1: Rodney watched as the man, who was deathly pale and 190 00:14:39,960 --> 00:14:43,240 Speaker 1: seemed a little wired, browsed the shells for a moment 191 00:14:43,560 --> 00:14:46,520 Speaker 1: before heading to a small section of books they kept 192 00:14:46,640 --> 00:14:51,960 Speaker 1: about demonology. A short time later, the man approached Rodney 193 00:14:51,960 --> 00:14:57,000 Speaker 1: at the till, carrying a handful of crucifixes. It was Chris, 194 00:14:57,080 --> 00:15:00,680 Speaker 1: of course, Is there anything I can and help you with? 195 00:15:01,080 --> 00:15:06,320 Speaker 1: Rodney asked, with a matter of factness that Rodney found disturbing. 196 00:15:06,960 --> 00:15:10,640 Speaker 1: Chris looked him straight in the eye and said, please, 197 00:15:11,160 --> 00:15:14,320 Speaker 1: I need something to help protect me from malevolent forces. 198 00:15:15,120 --> 00:15:19,200 Speaker 1: My apartment is being disturbed by something violent and supernatural, 199 00:15:19,720 --> 00:15:22,440 Speaker 1: and I'm worried that if I don't fight it, I'll 200 00:15:22,480 --> 00:15:27,760 Speaker 1: just continue being harmed. Rodney had never seen such genuine 201 00:15:27,800 --> 00:15:32,520 Speaker 1: fear from someone in his shop before. As it happened, however, 202 00:15:33,000 --> 00:15:36,000 Speaker 1: he was something of an amateur authority on the subject 203 00:15:36,120 --> 00:15:40,400 Speaker 1: of demonology. He was well aware that such things often 204 00:15:40,520 --> 00:15:44,480 Speaker 1: had rational explanations, and that the mind could be as 205 00:15:44,520 --> 00:15:50,720 Speaker 1: destructive as the supposed supernatural forces assailing it. He did 206 00:15:50,760 --> 00:15:54,880 Speaker 1: what he could to allay Chris's fears, recommending some books 207 00:15:54,920 --> 00:15:58,960 Speaker 1: on psychology and the occult. He gave Chris a potted 208 00:15:59,080 --> 00:16:03,680 Speaker 1: lecture on how the problem of supposed demonic infestation was 209 00:16:03,720 --> 00:16:07,160 Speaker 1: handled by different cultures, and sent him away with a 210 00:16:07,240 --> 00:16:11,040 Speaker 1: sense of reassurance that if he needed anything else, to 211 00:16:11,120 --> 00:16:15,640 Speaker 1: call back at any time. Chris thanked him for his help, 212 00:16:16,280 --> 00:16:22,840 Speaker 1: purchased the crucifixes, then left Back in Lafayette, North Carolina, 213 00:16:23,400 --> 00:16:27,560 Speaker 1: Sammy couldn't stop worrying about her friend. She couldn't believe 214 00:16:27,920 --> 00:16:30,720 Speaker 1: just how much he'd changed in the week since meeting 215 00:16:30,760 --> 00:16:35,480 Speaker 1: the mysterious woman in San Francisco. Chris had always been 216 00:16:35,520 --> 00:16:38,560 Speaker 1: a skeptic when it came to the paranormal, and had 217 00:16:38,640 --> 00:16:42,760 Speaker 1: valued his solitude as a necessary component for living a 218 00:16:42,800 --> 00:16:46,840 Speaker 1: peaceful and happy life. Now it was as though he'd 219 00:16:46,840 --> 00:16:50,920 Speaker 1: become obsessive to the point of mania. He'd lost all 220 00:16:51,000 --> 00:16:55,520 Speaker 1: his usual self confidence and seemed to need constant reassurance. 221 00:16:56,600 --> 00:17:00,320 Speaker 1: But what she couldn't shake was just how terrified he 222 00:17:00,400 --> 00:17:03,680 Speaker 1: sounded when he spoke to her. It was clear that 223 00:17:03,840 --> 00:17:07,880 Speaker 1: at the very least, he believed wholeheartedly in the deadly 224 00:17:08,080 --> 00:17:12,239 Speaker 1: power of whatever it was that was affecting him. It 225 00:17:12,320 --> 00:17:15,840 Speaker 1: wasn't only Sammy who was worried either. For the past 226 00:17:15,880 --> 00:17:19,080 Speaker 1: few days, Chris had failed to show up for work. 227 00:17:20,240 --> 00:17:23,520 Speaker 1: Chris was a workaholic above all else, and in all 228 00:17:23,560 --> 00:17:26,800 Speaker 1: the time he'd been working for the Musac Holdings Company, 229 00:17:27,320 --> 00:17:30,840 Speaker 1: he'd never missed a meeting, let alone called in sick, 230 00:17:38,240 --> 00:17:42,320 Speaker 1: unable to contain her concern for Chris. Later that evening 231 00:17:42,400 --> 00:17:45,320 Speaker 1: on Tuesday, Sammy tried to get hold of him at 232 00:17:45,320 --> 00:17:50,240 Speaker 1: his apartment, but her cause just rang out. The following morning, 233 00:17:50,720 --> 00:17:55,320 Speaker 1: feeling that something was terribly wrong, she contacted the police 234 00:17:55,600 --> 00:17:58,840 Speaker 1: and asked them to do a welfare check at Chris's property. 235 00:18:00,280 --> 00:18:03,159 Speaker 1: It was some time later when the police called back 236 00:18:03,400 --> 00:18:06,280 Speaker 1: to let her know that although they hadn't been able 237 00:18:06,320 --> 00:18:09,359 Speaker 1: to gain access to the property, there was no reason 238 00:18:09,480 --> 00:18:12,840 Speaker 1: for her to worry. There were no signs to suggest 239 00:18:12,920 --> 00:18:15,560 Speaker 1: that any one had tried to force their way into 240 00:18:15,560 --> 00:18:19,800 Speaker 1: the apartment, and no signs of a struggle. Having peered 241 00:18:19,800 --> 00:18:23,080 Speaker 1: through the windows, they were also able to see that 242 00:18:23,200 --> 00:18:27,960 Speaker 1: none of Chris's furniture or possessions had been disturbed. But 243 00:18:28,080 --> 00:18:33,680 Speaker 1: Sammy wasn't convinced. After a long and fretful day wondering 244 00:18:33,680 --> 00:18:38,080 Speaker 1: about Chris's whereabouts. She returned home from work and poured 245 00:18:38,080 --> 00:18:41,720 Speaker 1: herself a large glass of wine. She had just taken 246 00:18:41,720 --> 00:18:44,880 Speaker 1: off her coat and was about to sit down when 247 00:18:44,920 --> 00:18:48,240 Speaker 1: she noticed the light on her ant'swer machine was pulsing. 248 00:18:49,359 --> 00:18:54,680 Speaker 1: Sammy hit play. It was a message from Chris. She 249 00:18:54,760 --> 00:18:58,439 Speaker 1: listened with concern as his voice played out in the 250 00:18:58,520 --> 00:19:03,879 Speaker 1: silence of her apartment. He seemed eerily calm and resigned, 251 00:19:04,000 --> 00:19:07,560 Speaker 1: she thought, as he detailed a series of strange events 252 00:19:07,640 --> 00:19:12,040 Speaker 1: from the night before. It was a garbled story about 253 00:19:12,240 --> 00:19:16,600 Speaker 1: how an unspecified they had almost got to him, forcing 254 00:19:16,680 --> 00:19:20,119 Speaker 1: him to flee his home in terror, Although he was 255 00:19:20,160 --> 00:19:23,160 Speaker 1: feeling better now he'd been forced to spend the night 256 00:19:23,240 --> 00:19:27,359 Speaker 1: in a hotel. Then he ended his message with a 257 00:19:27,480 --> 00:19:32,399 Speaker 1: line that chilled Sammy to her core. This is my 258 00:19:32,560 --> 00:19:38,320 Speaker 1: last evening on earth, he said, before hanging up. Sammy 259 00:19:38,400 --> 00:19:41,879 Speaker 1: grabbed the receiver and immediately tried to call Chris back, 260 00:19:42,200 --> 00:19:46,479 Speaker 1: but once again he failed to answer. When Chris failed 261 00:19:46,480 --> 00:19:50,040 Speaker 1: to pick up again the following morning, Sammy called the 262 00:19:50,080 --> 00:19:54,320 Speaker 1: police once more, and so it was on the morning 263 00:19:54,359 --> 00:19:59,119 Speaker 1: of Thursday, April eighteenth, that two officers were despatched back 264 00:19:59,200 --> 00:20:03,000 Speaker 1: to Chris's apartarpment in the thirteen hundred block of North 265 00:20:03,240 --> 00:20:08,320 Speaker 1: one hundred and fifty second Avenue. When they arrived, everything 266 00:20:08,400 --> 00:20:11,760 Speaker 1: looked just as it did before. There were no signs 267 00:20:11,800 --> 00:20:15,479 Speaker 1: of forced entry, no signs of a struggle, and all 268 00:20:15,560 --> 00:20:20,920 Speaker 1: his furniture remained unmoved. But then one of the officers 269 00:20:21,000 --> 00:20:26,560 Speaker 1: spotted something. A single door lying ajar with light flooding 270 00:20:26,600 --> 00:20:31,200 Speaker 1: out of it. Nothing especially strange in and of itself, 271 00:20:31,520 --> 00:20:34,600 Speaker 1: but when the officers failed to get a response after 272 00:20:34,680 --> 00:20:38,439 Speaker 1: repeatedly knocking at the front door, it was enough to 273 00:20:38,520 --> 00:20:44,080 Speaker 1: alert their suspicions. Together they forced the door open and 274 00:20:44,240 --> 00:20:58,840 Speaker 1: made their way into the apartment. Once inside chris Is Flat, 275 00:20:59,200 --> 00:21:04,560 Speaker 1: the officers discovered a strange and unnerving scene. The dark 276 00:21:04,600 --> 00:21:10,960 Speaker 1: apartment was adorned throughout with crucifixes, bibles, and fotive candles, 277 00:21:11,480 --> 00:21:16,920 Speaker 1: some still flickering in the darkness. Feeling something underfoot, they 278 00:21:16,920 --> 00:21:20,200 Speaker 1: looked down to see that a line of salt ran 279 00:21:20,280 --> 00:21:25,000 Speaker 1: across the floor, clearly poured out deliberately, as if attempting 280 00:21:25,080 --> 00:21:29,360 Speaker 1: to seal off the doorway in some a colt way. 281 00:21:29,600 --> 00:21:33,240 Speaker 1: Looking about, they noticed the same lines of salt had 282 00:21:33,280 --> 00:21:36,879 Speaker 1: been placed at the threshold of every door in the apartment. 283 00:21:38,080 --> 00:21:42,359 Speaker 1: There was music playing too, coming from another room, a 284 00:21:42,440 --> 00:21:47,560 Speaker 1: plaintive religious piece. They followed it into Chris's bedroom, where 285 00:21:47,600 --> 00:21:50,919 Speaker 1: they found it playing from a stereo, but no sign 286 00:21:50,960 --> 00:21:55,199 Speaker 1: of Chris. One of the officers switched off the music, 287 00:21:55,720 --> 00:22:00,760 Speaker 1: plunging them into a stark, eerie silence. Back in the 288 00:22:00,800 --> 00:22:04,480 Speaker 1: main room, a quick search revealed a host of strange 289 00:22:04,520 --> 00:22:07,600 Speaker 1: books on the occult, as well as a series of 290 00:22:07,680 --> 00:22:12,520 Speaker 1: bizarre notes Chris had written to himself about fighting off demons. 291 00:22:14,280 --> 00:22:17,600 Speaker 1: The last room to check was the bathroom, where the 292 00:22:17,720 --> 00:22:23,600 Speaker 1: light was emanating from Sir, They called out as they 293 00:22:23,640 --> 00:22:29,600 Speaker 1: tiptoed quietly through the space. Sensing something was off, both 294 00:22:29,680 --> 00:22:33,640 Speaker 1: officers unholstered their guns as they crept a little closer 295 00:22:33,640 --> 00:22:38,040 Speaker 1: to the door, until finally they were close enough to 296 00:22:38,040 --> 00:22:44,600 Speaker 1: push it open. There inside, fully clothed, his face turned 297 00:22:44,600 --> 00:22:48,240 Speaker 1: away from them, kneeling in the bath with his head 298 00:22:48,560 --> 00:22:55,560 Speaker 1: resting against the wall was Chris, Sir, the officers said again. 299 00:22:55,960 --> 00:22:59,840 Speaker 1: As they approached him, one of them nudged him in 300 00:22:59,840 --> 00:23:05,840 Speaker 1: the back, but Chris didn't move. Reaching round to feel 301 00:23:05,920 --> 00:23:09,919 Speaker 1: for a pulse, they found his neck icily cold and 302 00:23:10,000 --> 00:23:14,240 Speaker 1: there was no sign of life, with his body stiff 303 00:23:14,280 --> 00:23:18,160 Speaker 1: from rigor mortis. It'd clearly been dead for some time. 304 00:23:19,240 --> 00:23:25,399 Speaker 1: He was thirty five years old. Chris, it was determined 305 00:23:25,440 --> 00:23:28,919 Speaker 1: by the coroner, had died of acute heart failure or 306 00:23:28,960 --> 00:23:34,480 Speaker 1: what is more commonly known within the medical community as myocarditis. 307 00:23:35,560 --> 00:23:39,040 Speaker 1: It's a disease thought to effect roughly one in every 308 00:23:39,119 --> 00:23:42,720 Speaker 1: one hundred thousand people, and though it is not genetic, 309 00:23:43,040 --> 00:23:46,760 Speaker 1: there is little consensus either as to what the causes are. 310 00:23:48,280 --> 00:23:52,720 Speaker 1: The h profile of those affected by myocarditis is generally 311 00:23:52,800 --> 00:23:56,320 Speaker 1: thought to be between twenty and forty, and experts have 312 00:23:56,440 --> 00:24:00,440 Speaker 1: noted a link between the disease's prevalence among athas, fleets, 313 00:24:00,440 --> 00:24:04,399 Speaker 1: and health enthusiasts, in particular, perhaps owing to the strain 314 00:24:04,800 --> 00:24:09,640 Speaker 1: that intensive exercising can place on the heart. It's been 315 00:24:09,680 --> 00:24:13,040 Speaker 1: noted by his friend Sammy that Christopher Case was a 316 00:24:13,119 --> 00:24:17,040 Speaker 1: gym fanatic. He liked to keep healthy and was serious 317 00:24:17,080 --> 00:24:20,159 Speaker 1: about his diet and exercise seemed to give him a 318 00:24:20,240 --> 00:24:24,919 Speaker 1: sense of purpose away from his otherwise solitary life. It 319 00:24:25,040 --> 00:24:29,560 Speaker 1: is possible, therefore, that Chris's myocarditis was triggered by a 320 00:24:29,600 --> 00:24:33,399 Speaker 1: combination of the physical strain he placed on his body 321 00:24:33,600 --> 00:24:38,480 Speaker 1: over the years, coupled with the severe psychological stress he'd 322 00:24:38,480 --> 00:24:42,200 Speaker 1: evidently been under in the last few days of his life, 323 00:24:42,760 --> 00:24:46,960 Speaker 1: but it doesn't explain what was behind the psychological distress 324 00:24:47,320 --> 00:24:58,280 Speaker 1: in the first place. In nineteen forty two, then chairman 325 00:24:58,320 --> 00:25:02,679 Speaker 1: of the Department of Physiology at Harvard Medical School, Professor 326 00:25:02,760 --> 00:25:08,000 Speaker 1: Walter Cannon diagnosed what he called voodoo death to explain 327 00:25:08,119 --> 00:25:12,439 Speaker 1: the phenomenon of sudden death brought about by emotional shock 328 00:25:12,640 --> 00:25:16,680 Speaker 1: or fear. The anomaly, he said, was often caused by 329 00:25:16,800 --> 00:25:20,680 Speaker 1: suggestion in the subject, which, if it provoked a strong 330 00:25:20,800 --> 00:25:24,880 Speaker 1: enough reaction to an outside force or trauma, could lead 331 00:25:24,920 --> 00:25:30,080 Speaker 1: to psychosomatic death without the build up of symptoms. Cannon 332 00:25:30,119 --> 00:25:34,400 Speaker 1: had observed this in evidence obtained from concentration and prisoner 333 00:25:34,440 --> 00:25:39,080 Speaker 1: of war camps, but also observed that, depending on the culture, 334 00:25:39,520 --> 00:25:44,960 Speaker 1: superstitious conditioning could also play a part. The most famous 335 00:25:45,000 --> 00:25:48,600 Speaker 1: example of this phenomenon is perhaps the wave of sudden 336 00:25:48,640 --> 00:25:53,040 Speaker 1: deaths which affected the Laotian humue community who emigrated to 337 00:25:53,080 --> 00:25:58,240 Speaker 1: the United States between nineteen seventy seven and nineteen eighty one. 338 00:25:58,520 --> 00:26:03,480 Speaker 1: According to reports, Laotian males aged between twenty and forty 339 00:26:03,800 --> 00:26:07,640 Speaker 1: who fled from the fallout of the Cambodian genocide were 340 00:26:07,680 --> 00:26:10,639 Speaker 1: found to be ten times more likely than their white 341 00:26:10,720 --> 00:26:14,600 Speaker 1: American counterparts to pass away in their sleep as a 342 00:26:14,640 --> 00:26:19,440 Speaker 1: result of sudden death. As previously mentioned on the show, 343 00:26:19,960 --> 00:26:24,879 Speaker 1: director Wehres Craven used this strange trend as the basis 344 00:26:24,920 --> 00:26:28,600 Speaker 1: for his nineteen eighty four horror masterpiece A Nightmare on 345 00:26:28,680 --> 00:26:33,680 Speaker 1: Elm Street, recounting a story he'd heard about a refugee 346 00:26:33,760 --> 00:26:38,520 Speaker 1: child who was afraid to fall asleep, he told Vulture Magazine. 347 00:26:38,760 --> 00:26:42,679 Speaker 1: When he finally fell asleep, his parents thought this crisis 348 00:26:42,760 --> 00:26:46,119 Speaker 1: was over. Then they heard him screaming in the middle 349 00:26:46,160 --> 00:26:49,240 Speaker 1: of the night. By the time they got to him, 350 00:26:49,560 --> 00:26:53,480 Speaker 1: he was dead. It was as though he died in 351 00:26:53,560 --> 00:26:58,560 Speaker 1: the middle of a nightmare. Perhaps Chris too, succumbed to 352 00:26:58,640 --> 00:27:03,399 Speaker 1: something similar. Could it be that simply by believing it 353 00:27:03,560 --> 00:27:08,480 Speaker 1: enough himself, Chris had brought the curse to fruition. And 354 00:27:08,520 --> 00:27:12,520 Speaker 1: if that being possible, wouldn't that power be a kind 355 00:27:12,560 --> 00:27:19,440 Speaker 1: of curse in itself, perhaps the greatest curse that haunts humankind. 356 00:27:20,320 --> 00:27:24,280 Speaker 1: Whatever you believe, it seems, the full tragic truth of 357 00:27:24,359 --> 00:27:28,600 Speaker 1: what exactly caused the death of Christopher Case will forever 358 00:27:28,800 --> 00:27:38,359 Speaker 1: remain Unexplained. This episode was written by James Connor Patterson 359 00:27:38,800 --> 00:27:42,960 Speaker 1: and produced by me Richard McLean Smith. James is a 360 00:27:42,960 --> 00:27:47,200 Speaker 1: brilliant writer and poet. His debut collection of poems, titled 361 00:27:47,240 --> 00:27:51,160 Speaker 1: Bandit Country, Exploring the Hinterland between the North of Ireland 362 00:27:51,200 --> 00:27:54,800 Speaker 1: and Republic, was shortlisted for the twenty twenty two T S. 363 00:27:54,880 --> 00:27:58,040 Speaker 1: Eliot Prize and is out now to buy. Do check 364 00:27:58,080 --> 00:28:01,040 Speaker 1: it out. Thank you, Thank you as ever for listening 365 00:28:01,119 --> 00:28:03,760 Speaker 1: to the show. Please subscribe and rate it if you 366 00:28:03,840 --> 00:28:07,640 Speaker 1: haven't already done so. Unexplained will be coming to YouTube 367 00:28:07,760 --> 00:28:10,800 Speaker 1: very shortly in video form, so please watch out for 368 00:28:10,880 --> 00:28:14,160 Speaker 1: future developments there. You can subscribe to the channel at 369 00:28:14,200 --> 00:28:18,159 Speaker 1: YouTube dot com. Forward slash at Unexplained Pod. You can 370 00:28:18,200 --> 00:28:21,240 Speaker 1: also now find us on TikTok at TikTok dot com. 371 00:28:21,240 --> 00:28:26,680 Speaker 1: Forward slash at Unexplained Podcast. Unexplained is an AV Club 372 00:28:26,720 --> 00:28:31,880 Speaker 1: Productions podcast created by Richard McClain smith. All other elements 373 00:28:31,880 --> 00:28:35,280 Speaker 1: of the podcast, including the music, are also produced by 374 00:28:35,320 --> 00:28:40,160 Speaker 1: me Richard McClain smith. Unexplained. The book and audiobook is 375 00:28:40,200 --> 00:28:44,160 Speaker 1: now available to buy worldwide. You can purchase from Amazon, 376 00:28:44,440 --> 00:28:49,240 Speaker 1: Barnes and Noble, Waterstones and other bookstores. Please subscribe to 377 00:28:49,360 --> 00:28:52,520 Speaker 1: and rate the show wherever you get your podcasts, and 378 00:28:52,600 --> 00:28:54,880 Speaker 1: feel free to get in touch with any thoughts or 379 00:28:54,920 --> 00:28:58,720 Speaker 1: ideas regarding the stories you've heard on the show. Perhaps 380 00:28:58,720 --> 00:29:01,200 Speaker 1: you have an explanation of your own you'd like to share. 381 00:29:01,880 --> 00:29:05,360 Speaker 1: You can find out more at Unexplained podcast dot com 382 00:29:05,400 --> 00:29:09,080 Speaker 1: and reach us online through Twitter at Unexplained Pod and 383 00:29:09,280 --> 00:30:04,200 Speaker 1: Facebook at Facebook dot com. Forward Slash Unexplained Podcast, Hombo