How Psychic Scams Work: Don't Get Conned!
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Is Your Clairvoyant a Fraud?
Do you believe? According to CBS news 57% of Americans believe in Extra Sensory Perception. Similarly, in England, the BBC reports that more than half of Britons believe in psychic powers such as psychic readings and telepathy. Whether a true believer in psychic phenomenon or a die hard skeptic, everyone can agree on this one universal truth: There are a great many psychic con artists running money scams, seperating the uninitiated from their hard earned cash.
There are no national figures for how many people fall victim to psychic scam artists. For one thing, many people never come forward out of embarrassment. Police do their best to reign in these con artist mediums, but the numbers are staggering and there aren't enough bunko squads to go around. Googling "How many psychics arrested" returns 1,560.000 hits, which should give you some idea of the scope of the problem.
Many people go to a psychic reader out of actual need. Perhaps they have lost someone very dear and are emotionally distraught. Perhaps their marriage is failing and they are seeking answers -- about career, relationships, love, sex, inner pain -- some divine communication from the spirit world that answers their desperate cries and eliminates their problems or concerns.. They don't know where else to turn and so seek out the mystic. God forbid they should choose a common thief.
This is where my friend comes in. His name is...well...let's call him Mr. Gullible. Mr Very Gullible. While I will relate his tale with tongue planted firmly in cheek, there is nevertheless much we can learn from his experience, and by understanding how these crystal ball blackguards operate, we can avoid falling prey to psychic scam artists ourselves. If we should laugh at our human foibles along the way, so be it.
Welcome To My World
Mr. Gullible had been feeling very depressed - something about his dead gold fish, Moby - and decided to seek the council of a genuine, authentic, got-a-neon-sign-in-the-window, psychic. So down to Madam Ruth's he goes for a psychic reading, and enters her storefront parlor. The light was low, but scented candles burned everywhere. Airy, gauzy fabric flowed along the walls and beads separated the front room from the darkness beyond. He stood nervously at the front door. Mysterious voices seemed to come from the walls. He could barely make out what the voices were trying to communicate. "Why can I not go to the base with you, Master?", came a woman's voice. A man replied, "We've been all through this, Jeannie. Now back in your bottle." "Oh...Master!", and then a swooshing noise. It was creepy.
Suddenly a gypsy woman appeared from nowhere. The hanging beads rattled, heralding the mystics presence. The woman held one hand open to the sky while the other clutched her throat, her weathered face turned toward the heavens with eyes closed. Suddenly, in dramatic fashion, the old woman announced, "You have come for a reading!". "Holy cow," thought my friend, "she's doing it already!"
My friend has entered the psychic's world. Everything - the scented candles, the fabrics, the look of the woman - has been carefully calculated to draw him in, to make him more susceptible to what is to come. Of course there IS the television noise in the background, but even psychics can watch I Dream Of Jeannie re-runs. Ray Hyman, professor of psychology at the University of Oregon and on the executive council of the national Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal, states in the September/October issue of The Skeptical Inquirer, "Anyone who's been to a reading knows that it's quite a powerful experience. A psychic has the upper hand right from the start. You're entering their world, using their language, following their rules." For this interview, as well as a fine example of a true-life new-age psychic reading in the modern world, go to jdlasica.com. Same game, different playing field.
Let's Play 20 Questions
They take a seat at a small table with a crystal ball between them. The gypsy makes mysterious movements with her hands along the outside of the glass ball. She begins to ask simple, seemingly innocuous questions. "You have lost someone very near to you," she intones. Why, yes. Poor old Moby! "This has hurt you in a meaningful way." Yes! I loved that little fish. "I am seeing the letter B." No acknowledgment from my friend. "It could be a first name...or a last name...or a city...or a place.." Yes! Yes! Mr. Moby lived in a BOWL! She continues in this fashion until she makes a pronouncement: "You are a sincere and deeply feeling individual, but people don't understand you. You are intelligent and highly motivated, but you sometimes let other people's problems consume your thoughts. You always try to do good, even at your own expense. Women are attracted to you, but they fear your intelligence and depth. There is trouble ahead, but you will overcome it." "Holy smokes," thinks my friend, "she MUST be psychic."
They call this a "cold reading". This is nothing more than a cheap parlor trick and the psychic con artist is very good at it. My pal Gully wants to believe, no...needs to believe so badly, that he fails to realize that he has given her all the information she needs, and that her final proclamation is just a newspaper horoscope. My friend doesn't know it, but he has now become her "mark". In the Monday, March 5, 2001 edition of Time magazine, Leon Jaroff writes, " "It is a sophisticated form of the game 20 Questions, during which the subject, anxious to hear from the dead, seldom realizes that he, not the medium or the departed, is supplying the answers." For an example of cold readings and how they work, go to skepdic.com. You could do it yourself. Hey, there's some free career advice. I hear the money's good.
Set The Hook
The psychic's face takes a serious turn. She is hearing voices or seeing something, but what? Finally, she reveals the mystery. "I see a darkness over you. It is evil. It is a very powerful curse! Very powerful!" Mr. Gullible is very worried now. He has already been sucked into the Psychic's world and he believes what he is hearing. Ah, well. He needn't worry. The psychic can remove the curse. She will only have to burn a special candle and purchase a prayer card, and she can get them both for only $300.00. My friend hesitates, but the gypsy woman is having none of that, so she badgers him. "Don't you want to remove the darkness? This curse can kill you! You could die! The curse must be removed!" Hesitantly, he hands over the money as the psychic tells him to return the next day to find out if the darkness has been removed...and to bring an egg with him. As in chicken. Over easy.
As soon as the old woman began speaking of the darkness and curses and death, he should have run away. Far, far away. Adios. Arrivederci. Goodbye. Threatening a person who is emotionally vulnerable is not only unprofessional, but immoral and criminal. There are no special candles and no prayer cards. Find out in advance what the cost of the reading is and don't give them one dime more, regardless of what they tell you or threaten you with.
Those Eggs Look Yummy
My friend returns to Madam Ruth the following day. Bad news. It is much worse than she thought. There is not one curse, but SEVEN, and that requires more special candles, prayer cards, and some crystals this time. Once again, my friend hears that nagging voice in the back of his head telling him get out. She asks for the egg he brought with him. He hands it to her. She places a bowl in front of him, cracks open the egg and, TA DA!...the egg is full of blood! Or maybe there is a live slug writhing in the raw yolk. "You see!," exclaims Madam Ruth. "This is the poison...the evil that infects your soul!" My goodness, can it get any worse? My friend is shook up. He hands over the cash and promises to return in 3 days.
Any beginning magician worth his weight in rabbits can pull this stunt. The Large, Grade A egg Gully brought has been switched with a pre-doctored egg in which red dye has been injected. The writhing slug trick is even easier. The psychic has simply palmed the slug and released it into the bowl as she cracks the raw egg. Isn't that a French dish? Snail in egg? Very simple illusions, but they can have enormous impact on the believer, even causing fear. When you hear that little voice in your head, listen to it. That's real ESP and everyone has it.
Psychic Sylvia Browne Big Fake?
Onward and Downward
The readings continue. The curses are difficult ones, Madam Ruth informs him. She has never seen anything like them. He begins to have readings at her home. At one point, the psychic instructs Mr. Gullible to place a $100 dollar bill into a sealed envelope for every year he has lived and to carry it with him at all times. For Gully, that's $3500.00 bucks. She asks him to see the envelope on several occasions but she never opens it and always gives it back. He trusts her even more for her honesty and does as he is told.
I meet my friend for lunch. I order the eggs. He tells me all about Madam Ruth and all the money he has "invested" in removing the dreadful curses. "Gully, Gully, Gully," I say to him", "the only thing you have "invested" in is the psychic's retirement plan." I show him incontrovertible evidence that it is all a scam, a con, a rip off. I produce documents that prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that she is a con artist and he is her mark. Does he believe me? No, he does not. He is suffering from True Believer's Syndrome, a real affliction where someone continues to believe in spite of proof to the contrary. "I've been to her house," he says, "and she's not rich. How could she be stealing money?" I show him an article about a family of con artists in Chicago that owned multiple houses and several psychic parlors. Many of their houses looked like the Taj Mahal on the inside. He is pissed at me and exits the restaurant in a huff. I ask the waiter to bring me a side of escargot and I finish my eggs.
It's An Ending, But It Isn't Happy
Gully continued to see the psychic. Eventually, she declares that the $100.00 bills have absorbed the evil and must be destroyed. She appeared to tear up the money before his very eyes. Or did she have to burn it in a secret midnight ceremony? I forget. I've had a little fun with Gully's story, but this is, in fact, a serious issue. Many people - educated, intelligent, savvy - fall prey to psychic scam artists every day. They can truly feel despair due to the psychic's chicanery, and there have been many documented cases of victims committing suicide. Remember what you have learned here, and never give a psychic your full name, address or telephone number: With a little knowledge you can avoid becoming the next big payday for a psychic scam artist. At least Gully no longer sees the psychic. He's broke.
CBS News Undercover - Psychic Scam in Action
Photo Credits
From top, all on flickr: Gypsy with crystal ball/misfitgirl; Neon sign/SeraphimC; Storefront B&W/ectarama; Fortune machine/Willy Volk; Everystockphoto: Snail/tristrambrelstaff
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Great hub, thanks! I used to read palms for fun. I'd take the person's hand, look into it, and say whatever popped into my head. I had no clue how to read a palm but no one knew that. I never read a single person's palm that the the person didn't freak out about how accurate and amazing the whole experience was. Many of the people who said this were self-professed skeptics and thought it was all hooey until submitting to the reading. I quit doing it finally because of this. I never charged any money, but I can see how you could net a tidy sum if you had no conscience.
Often I just said really obvious things about the person, interspersing it with vague stuff along the lines of what you talk about in this hub.
I used to read tarot cards and still do. I will not read for other people anymore unless they insist, and then I give them a whole rehearsed speech explaining 1) why it isn't magic, 2) why it feels real, and 3) how it all works. To this date, not one person who has requested a reading believes my up front explanation and disclaimer.
I have come to believe that there is something about this process that fills a need in people that is much more powerful than the need to have factual explanations. I think reading does serve a purpose, a real purpose, but there are so many charlatans and unscrupulous hucksters out there it never goes anywhere but down. I've tried to write about what I think the process actually does that is a legitimate sort of thing, but no one cares. Seriously, people want to take the whole thing at face value, it doesn't matter what I say or think.
Thanks for a well-written, accurate, and humorous look at an old, old game.
Christoph! I have a feeling that we 'at-the-edge-believers' are nosey wanting to know what the future will bring before it actually happens. Which is all a big bunch of cowcakes I know... but my friends and I have gone to several of these fortune tellers just for fun. Only old Mrs. Nethelton (she looked to be in her nineties) 35+ years ago, two weeks before my wedding, came close to predicting the disaster my marriage would be and that I would have three fantastic children etc. I know just lucky guesses, yet after all this time I can still hear her weird crackly voice and recite the words she used... she charged as 2 bucks for a lousy cup of tea not for the predictions. As I said before all just a bunch of cowpies...
Loved the hub regards Zsuzsy
People want to be cared about and valued for their special individual characteristics and these fakers know it. Through a combo of vagueness and info provided by the mark as well as reading body language and gestures, the "psychics" do sort of form a picture of the person and they reflect it back, usually in flattering terms, because people always like to think that other people think they are cool, smart, good looking, sexy, whatever. People need to feel cared about and validated and these psychics and palmists etc. fill that need. I need to be cared about too but I KNOW that those hucksters care only about my wallet so they wouldn't fool me, but once you've had the feeling of being cared about it's beyond intellectual. And to their credit, sometimes they do just about as much good as a bona fide shrink, who (let's face it!) only cares about your wallet as well.
Hi Christoph,
A friend of mine and I got into a discussion about the John Edwards show. I got turned on to him several years ago, and always enjoyed watching his shows.
Anyway, my friend told me it's fake. All of it. I, of course, said no way, he's for real. Then my friend explained how there are microphones planted all over the location, which picks up many conversations going on in the audience. For example, if I were attending one of his shows, and turned to my friend and said, oh, I hope he gets a message for me from long lost grandma, or, I hope he can tell me if my aunt was murdered, then that message is relayed to John. He'll then be saying, over there, 4th row on the left, did someone there just lose a grandma? or, over there, 10th row in the back, there was a murder investigation,,,
To tell you the truth, I don't know how true what my friend told me is, but after hearing the explanation, it makes sense. Yes? No? I'm still out on whether I believe or not.
Thanks for a very interesting hub,
Trish
Wow, there's a lot to think about in all this, Christoph. I've read palms and tarot cards for fun in the past, and been either eerily accurate, or just plain lucky, depending how you look at it. I do neither now, partly because I hope to be taken more seriously these days, and partly, because i wasn't always comfortable with people's neediness. I also flirted with becoming a healer, and got half way through the course before walking away from it. I believe that we all have an inner guidance that we should train ourselves to listen to, and my inner guidance told me that this was not the right path for me.
There are some terrible scammers and crooks out there preying on the lonely, the desparate, the needy, but there are also those who provide genuine solace and comfort and charge little or nothing for doing so. If people need this kind of support they should use their own good commonsense and go by reccommendation just as you would when choosing a builder or a dentist, Sometimes help can be found in the most unlikely places, whereas I would tend to be suspicious of the mystic music and joss sticks brigade!
Hi Christoph,
I read the Larry King interviews. It left me with more questions than answers. They all, of course, were defending their positions, and nay-saying anything they didn't agree with.
Actually, the points you brought up as far as other trickery, such as plants in the waiting room and the information that can be gathered from people knocking on doors or from the actual show tickets themselves, leads me to believe it's all a hoax. These, I believe, are absolutely ways to get enough information so that when a show is being done, the psychic can appear to the uneducated to be very credible.
On the other side of my coin, however, I do wonder about the connection between the psychic and crime. There is a show I watch, which you probably have seen as well, Psychic Detectives. I am leaning on the side of believing that in those instances, there is some credibility to what a psychic can supposedly do. I'm finding it hard to think of how a psychic can manipulate information regarding a crime, other than to have read a news article about it.
In summation, I do believe that some people are more perceptive or intuitive than others, or are more in tune, say, with a person known to them, and in those instances, what they may say may very well be true.
To say the least, this is a wonderful, thought provoking hub, and I thank you for it,
Your fan,
Trish
Great hub. I had two eggs with tomato sauce for breakfast and six garlic snails for dinner. Does that count? Oh and I have dark side I like Darth Vader and Hannibal Lecter.
BTW the greatest hoax buster, on the fake medium issue, was Harry Houdini. His last challenge before he died was to challenge all mediums to contact him after his death . They tried ever year on the same day (his birthday I think) for some 50 years but no one was successful so go figure
In addition mediums are not reported as winning on lotto or horse races or making huge amounts on the stock exchange.
They always say they will lose their powers if they use them for making those sorts of predictions.
As a person blessed/cursed with intermittent ESP, I agree that people need to be wary about who they choose to trust. I do believe that there is true talent out there...I just don't believe that truly gifted people would prostitute their ability. Therefore, I'm extremely skeptical of anyone in the public eye...whether it's a neon sign or a national broadcast.
There was a time in my life when the rug was pulled completely from beneath my feet and...well, I stood there, figuratively speaking, in stunned amazement for about a year trying to figure out where it all went and where to go from there. Some well-intentioned people were concerned and thought perhaps I was suicidal...which was the furthest thing from my mind. They insisted that I seek therapy. Instead, I freaked them all out by going to a psychic counselor recommended by my hair dresser. LOL! They were so upset...asking over and over again, "WHY??"
I told them simply, "Because I just need to hear somebody talk about tomorrow as if they really believe it's going to happen."
Richard Greene, was an amazing psychic counselor. I didn't go alone...I went with a trusted friend. He knew who I was the minute I walked in the door...not because he was THAT psychic, but because my picture had been in all the local newspapers. His first words were..."oh my god, don't even ask me that question."
I smiled at that...because it didn't take a psychic to figure out what kind of question a woman in my circumstances would ask a psychic. "And if I did?" I asked him. He said, "If you did...I'd say...you already know the answer to your own question, you just aren't ready to believe the truth yet."
It wasn't a psychic's answer...it was the type of answer an honest friend would have given me. He talked about tomorrow as if it was going to happen...and he never charged me a dime. I felt better for having gone to him.
Yes I am afraid it works like a broken telephone. Many years ago i was on holiday at the coast when I had this creepy feeling that we were going to be involved in a car wreck. The feeling was so strong and persistent that I cut the holiday short and packed everyone into the the car to go home and "get it over with" so to speak. We arrived home safely! Only to find that our house had been broken into and as no one knew where we where, the local police had posted a police guard to look after the house (which had already had the valuables taken)!
Spryte methinks your Danny prologue is the start of your story?
Sixty - You would be right. My reply to Christoph's hub was just another example of story "leakage" and was what finally pushed me over the edge. Can you find the others? :)
I myself saw an episode of Chris Angel in which he busted "psychic powers" But having said that I do believe that there are people who posses such abilities but they are very few in number and rarely if ever advertise their powers. Good Hub :-)
Also when you mentioned 'I dream of jeanie' show it reminded me so much of her and her master(Major Nelson). I sometimes wish I had those powers at the blink of an eye to set things right around me. We all wish there was a genie may be not as beautiful as Barbara Eden but still some one who would make things happen for us and end up being another Mr/Ms Gullible.
Wow, controversial subject on a huge scale.
Firstly I too believe in John Edward, as anyone who has watched as many of his shows as I have will know that he frequently comes up with facts (later proven), that even the people he is reading didn't know and were unresearchable. e.g. the time he told a women he had a small white, virtually hairless dog, blind, that had a name similar to a breakfast cereal. She had no clue what he was on about, but later in a follow up she had called her Mum, who then told her that her Grandmother had previously had a dog perfectly fitting the entire description and called "Popsicle". This could not possibly have been found out by addresses or hidden microphones. You only have to read John Edward books to be inspired by how his gift was discovered by him, and to see him do a "blind" reading, (someone behind a screen that he has no idea who they are) to be convinced.
Now I know there are many "fakes" out there, in fact on at least one occasion I demanded my money back and threatened to go to the local papers if she wouldn't comply. My reason for this was that not only did the medium in question ask me numerous leading questions, but she also separately gave my friend virtually exactly the same reading, and on tape in both cases. We got our money back, but had to relinquish the tapes.
The secret of being convinced by a medium is to give them no information other than your first name. This way, if they come up with any information that is specific you can have confidence in their abilities.
I have been to a number of excellent mediums, as has my older sister, and we are always very careful not to give any information about ourselves, our surnames etc. To give a few examples of how brilliant a good medium can be:
I spoke to one on the phone after my Husband died of Cancer, and she gave me various very specific information only knowing my first name and not why I was booked in with her or who I had lost. Some of this info included the fact that my Husband had a limp on his right leg, (true as he had previously had a bad car accident that broke his ankle a year earlier). She also told me he had a large bi-coloured dog with him, which was really impressive, as about 18 months before my Husband died we had lost our black and tan Doberman, and I had said to my Husband, "If ever you die before me, please let me know you are okay and "Odin" (our dog) is with you".
She also went on to come up with some names such as Edie, (which was a relative of my Mum's and not a common name). Another name she came up with was "Steve", who ended up being the next chap I had a relationship with nearly a year later.
Another Medium saw my Sister on a separate occasion, and although my Sister had gone to visit her for her own personal reasons, this Medium told her that she had my Husband there, and that his Son had treated me very badly after he had died, and that he was ashamed of him. This was amazing, as my Sister had not said she had a Sister, or that this same Sister had been widowed at a very young age. What's more it was so true, as the elder son had stolen a car and a camcorder from me after his Dad had died, and claimed his Dad would have been proud of him for his behaviour, (see my Hub: http://hubpages.com/hub/Bowel-Cancer-Stole-My-Husb )
Another occasion I went to see a medium after my cat had been killed. I didn't get the cat until right at the very end, but she did bring through my Father who had died years earlier, (see my Hub: http://hubpages.com/hub/Getting-a-Second-Chance-at although I was still young enough at the time that my Father being dead was unlikely. She exhibited virtually all of the symptoms of his illness right in front of me, including coughing and spluttering. She even showed physical signs such as his eyes bulging like they used to. What she went on to say was that he was sorry he had been so horrible to my Mum and us in life and that he could now see how awful he had been, and that he knew Mum had now met someone else, and he was really happy for her. He offered her a red rose as a sign he loved her. All of this was 100% accurate, and to be totally honest none of the above Medium's got anything wrong, which dispels the assumption that if they offer enough information they are bound to get a few "hits" and numerous "misses", and that people will only focus on the "Hits" and forget the "Misses".
On yet another occasion I was in a bar in Tenerife chatting to a girl I had only just met. Her boyfriend was at the bar buying a round of drinks in a very noisy environment with live music. I told her I had been widowed, but nothing else. A couple of minutes later her boyfriend returned and immediately asked me, "Whose Dave?". I nearly fell over on the spot, but explained Dave had been my late Husband. He told me Dave knew I had been through a really tough time and that he was around me. The guys girlfriend told me not to be shocked, as this happened to her boyfriend all the time. I was stunned, and they got nothing out of it at all.
Another excellent British Medium is "Lisa Williams", currently based in America. She is mind blowing, and gives a large amount of very specific info, including names. She is enough to convince even the most hardened sceptic, and she is also a very likeable person. Her TV series is rivetting, and I recommend everyone should watch it, especially sceptics.
It is also well worth watching "Psychic Detectives" on Sky, as most of the episodes feature hardened detectives who were initially only using a Medium either as a last resort, or because the families of the deceased requested they do so. Most of the cases when solved were largely because of the information given by the psychics, which was also uncannily accurate and convinced the detectives that perhaps they should be more open to using psychics in the future.
So to summarise, yes, there are loads of fakers out there, but amongst these are a good element of genuine psychics who are tarnished by the fakers repuations. Who can say it is unfair for them to charge for their services, as after all, they have a skill, and need to make a living in much the same way as an artist or sculptor. I have no problem with this, and believe in going to psychics that have been recommended by people I know that have been to them beforehand, and whose opinions I trust.
Hey Christoph, you haven't upset me at all so don't worry. My comment was more aimed at the general people who will read the comments and the hub and jump to conclusions that they should never trust any psychic. You are one of my favourite Hubbers, and I certainly won't be taking you off my recommended list :)
There are many con artists out there, I simply wanted to impart a few good tips about how to avoid being conned, and to sort out the "wheat from the chaff" so to speak. By the way it wasn't my intention to call you a sceptic directly, that comment was aimed a sceptics in general who might be reading the comments.
Anyway, I hope this has put your mind at rest and please don't worry I still rate you big time :)
OOOhhhh I have gone all mushy inside now :)
I think your Wife and my Husband might have something to say about that if it weren't figurative LOL :)
My God, don't tell me I have Ebola please..................
well not for a week or two at least!!!
oh daaaammmmnnnnn!!!!!!
Glad I got the skinny on this scam. I went to a physic once. Funny thing though. When I left I thought she was full of it, come to find out, it all happened and she never asked me for a cent more then we agreed on.
Was it worth my friends 80$. lol, yip cause she told I wouldn't have to pay a cent. hahahaha. Great hub.
I've just stumbled across this site and was interested in your article. I'm a spiritual counselor or "intuitive" and I work to defraud "psychics" who offer spells and tell of curses. I have so many clients who have become psychic "junkies' who cannot make a move without going to a fortune-teller, it amazes me. I work to get them OFF the "junkie psychics" and listen to their own spirit or "psychic ability."
I tend to agree with you on John Edwards and Sylvia Browne, totally cold readers, but they do have some talent. WE are ALL psychics, we all have a sixth sense. BUT people like John Edwards and Browne have been so worried about chasing the "buck" that they have lost a lot of there psychic energy. You gotta be focused and if you are psychic, MONEY can not come first. A true spiritual advisor knows the "universe" God, etc..in some way provides and usually ask for donations. Money cannot take priority or one loses spiritual power.
My two-cents from a professional "mystic"
I'd have to agree with mystic above. I too hear often of jerks out there who tell vulnerable people that they are cursed, and so on.
Ethical readers, like mystic apparently is, and like myself, work to foster INDEPENDENCE not psychic junkies.
This is a good hub methinks... thanks for your work.
IA
That must be that con artist psychic I saw on unsolved mysteries. It was the same type of con, with the egg, the money in the envelope... its sick, and crazy too that ppl fall prey to such a scheme.
Great hub Chris. Tis a shame about Gully. ; )
A lot of effort has been put into your blog, a good read :) I do not feel (as in 100% belief) any psychic or medium that appears on Tv or otherwise has the power or talent to give any of us any answers that we cant find ourselves. It is a scam, probably one of the most accepted scams to this date.
I went to Pamela nine. Nothing she told me every came to pass. Any one is crazy to go to her, got over my craziness. She says she is better than John Edwards. But you can't prove that to me.
The minute you stop paying they become M.I.A!!! Do not return your phone calls, out to lunch, every excuse you can think of when you are trying to avoid a bill collector, that's what they are doing to you!!! I am so glad I was able to gradually look at myself and realize I was making a FOOL out of myself and giving them all my money!!
This was a really, really interesting article, Chris. I mean, really interesting! ... oh, I said that already. Lucky for me, psychics such as those you describe, creep me out. I remember once I Was in NYC and I walked past a small psychic booth in a market. I didn't even SEE the psychic booth but I felt the eeriest 'jump' inside me - like my heart skipped a beat and my stomach lurched at the same time. I quickly turned my head and saw the psychic sign. I can't explain how I felt creeped out before I even saw the psychic sign but it happened to me more than once.
So, in that way, I have my own ESP. hehe. Therefore, I'm not going to any psychic because I can't even stand to be in their presence. I do believe in psychics though. Just not the Madame Ruth type... more of the dream and intuition type. Less magical, more realistic. You know what I mean? Probably not.
Now that I've written an entire novel on your Hub, I gotta apologise. Sorry! Great Hub though!
LOL. You're too much. I'll make sure to stay away from Madam Ruth and her Love Potion #9. Why is it numbered? A different type of love: lust, infatuation, 'true love', crazy-in-love, summer fling, naive love...?
There are many fakes out there though, probably about 9 fakes out of every ten who advertise their services.
I missed this one, could be the time zones - being upside down means you miss a lot! I agree, lots of crack pot scammers out there. They will pay, their next life will see them as the slugs they mix with the egg yokes. ^-^
You always make me laugh!
HA, what a bunch of sensationalism. It's okay though, nice read. What psychics out there actually hard sell a client for a $300 curse removal? I'd suspect they'd be pretty much out of clients very quickly.
I WAS MARRIED TO A PSYCHIC AND BOY-OH-BOY, DID I HAVE IT EASY. SHE MADE MORE MONEY THAN I EVER THOUGHT POSSIBLE AND CONNED MANY OLDER MEN OUT OF THEIR DOUGH SO EASILY. SHE WOULD TELL THEM JUST ABOUT ANYTHING AND THEY BELIEVED EVRY WORD SHE MUTTERED. IT WAS SO EASY FOR HER TO BRING HOME THOUSANDS EVERY WEEK AFTER WEEK. AND A NEW CAR ON ONE OCCASION SHE WS EVEN ABLE TO HUSTLE FROM THIS OLD CODGER WHO THOUGHT HE HAD A CHANCE WITH MY WIFE. SHE WENT OUT TO DINNER WITH THAT ONE OLD FOOL EVERY WEEK AND ALWAYS BROUGHT HOME A GIFT EVERY TIME, USUALLY AN ENVELOPE STUFFED WITH HUNDRED DOLLAR BILLS. I FINALLY GOT A DIVORCE AS ALL THIS SCAMMING OF HERS BOTHERED ME. SO FOLKS, PLEASE BE CAREFUL WHEN YOU START SEEING A PSYCHIC AS THEIR ONLY INTERST IS TO GET AS MUCH MONEY AS THEY CAN. PERIOD!!!!!
Avoid the psychics that hook you with the $5 or $10 reading. They bait you with that one, and then for an extra $1000 they will heal you. There are some reputable psychics out there who don't do this though.
Jeannie can go with Master to the military base if she first gets a new wardrobe, like those really BITCHIN' 60's sleeveless blouses...and loses those gauzy arm and pant things...
Hello readers,
I am a very smart professional evolving in New York City and despite my faith in God, my alertness and my multiple degrees, I got caught in a similar psychic fraud! In a span of 1 week, that repulsive devil in disguise was able to extract a total of $960.00 out of me!! I want to share my story as someone else’s story prevented me from giving her an additional $9,000.00, which I was about to withdraw from my retirement funds!
The scammers name is “Maria” – She hands out pamphlets in the streets of New York and most frequently hangs out on 7th or 8th Avenue in Times Square, and around Grand Central on the East Side. She has an apartment on 41st Street and 2nd Avenue and does readings out of 939 8th Avenue – Suite 200, between 55th and 56th Street and also has another location on 51st and 7th Avenue according to her pamphlet. Her cell phone number for now is 646-643-9149. She is a petite blonde hair gypsy, who seems so innocent but only has evil intentions. I am glad I woke up! Here’s how it all happened.
I went to Church on a Tuesday night and was heading to Port Authority when that scammer stopped me on the street asking me for a quick second of my time. She expressed that she does astrology readings and that she was getting some vibes from me and wanted to share it with me for $10.00 – I was like “$10 dollars!” What do I have to loose. Right on the street, she started telling me about my life and she was unbelievably accurate. I could have sworn she could see right through me. She was sensing that I carried myself in a proud way but felt lonely and empty inside at times. She was sensing that I had great chemistry with a man, whose name had 2 syllables. She was also sensing that I had gone through a hard breakup which changed who I was. She also mentioned that I was a great person and that I only wanted what everyone else wants: love, happiness and peace. In retrospect, I am realizing that all the information she was giving me were so generic that most women must fall into her scam and believe her psychic abilities. We all think we are good people. We all want love, peace and happiness. In my age demographic (25-35), it is most likely that we have gone through a bad breakup or are having difficulties in our relationship. She mentioned that she was picking up negative energy around me and that she would like to dig a little further and find out what’s been holding me back from true happiness.
We parted ways and stupid me gave her a call the next day as she had really shaken my thoughts with the “accuracy” of the information she had given me the previous night. She invited me to her “office” after work, which was located at 939 8th Avenue – Suite 200, between 55th and 56th Street. It is a little space in a dance studio. She sat me down, looked into my eyes and mentioned that she was sensing a very strong negative energy around me. That 2 women from my past took something from me and had done some black magic on me because they were envious and jealous of me and my family. She highlighted that they probably took a piece of my hair from a comb. I am from a Haitian background so let me tell you that I freaked out as I heard these types of stories all my life. I suspected someone from my past to have wanted to hurt me and thought that “Maria” had been sent from heaven as I had met her a few minutes after leaving Church. She told me that she could help me thanks to the powers that “God” had given her. She only bills for a reading but wanted $90.00 per candles to do the work. She claimed that she would need 3 candles to do the work as the negative energy that surrounded me was extremely strong. I was trying to be careful so I asked her if she could provide me with a receipt and gave her $270.00 that day. Before I left, she asked me to buy 1 red rose and take a bath that night with the petals, pour honey, salt and sugar in my water. She claimed that I would instantly feel better, which I did! I guess I truly always take showers and never take a moment to take a bath. I instantly felt relaxed and thought that this woman only had the best intentions for me. She then asked me to collect the rose petals from the bath tub, dry them and place them in an envelope. She instructed me to place the envelope under my pillow every night until our next meeting.
The next day, she gave me a call and mentioned that she “felt” that she needed to give me more instructions to move forward with the process. She asked me to take 1 white egg, 1 white pocket square, which I had to write all the things that I truly desired in life on all four corners, 1 small bottle of water, which I needed to blow 3 times in prior to drinking half of it. Lastly, I needed to gather 9 bills of whichever amount of money (she suggested $50 bills) and place them together, facing the same direction. She highlighted that this money wouldn’t be money to spend or give but only money that would help uncover what was holding me down. She asked me to put everything in a shoe box and wait for her instructions.
The next 4 days, I kept on questioning myself:” Why would someone want to hurt me; I’ve never done anything to anyone!” “Should I trust someone I just met on the street who’s telling me that our meeting was not a coincidence but the will of God” – But then again, she knew so much about me and she knew about my Church! She kept on praising the name of God. How could she praise him and glorify his name if she was evil? That woman became my BFF, called me 3 times a day just to check on me and make sure that I was doing OK. She mentioned that she had started the work and was removing the negative energy from my body, which is why I was feeling better.
After 5 days of constant phone calls, I decided to trust her. Biggest mistake of my life! I put 9 x $20.00 bills in the shoe box, put it under my bed for one night and brought everything to her on day 6. She invited me to her apartment located on the East Side of New York City, more precisely on 41st Street and 2nd Avenue. She met me at the corner and walked me in the building. There was a security guard downstairs. Stupid me thought that a scammer doesn’t live where security is… How dumb am I!? She should live in such a building to keep people who finally wake up away from her. Her apartment was cute and cozy. All the chairs and the cabinets were blue and white, which are the colors of peace and health. We sat on the couch and she light a candle and started praying to God that whatever negative energy that was surrounding my spirit goes away. She then put the egg in the white pocket square that I had brought and started rubbing it on my body. All of a sudden, she cracked the egg on the floor and “blood” poured out. She started yelling, telling me that the egg was a representation of my body and that I had a tumor that was growing in me. The 2 women who had put the spell on me wanted me to suffer for a while and had planted that disease in me where doctors could not see it until it was too late. I was stunned! Blood in the egg I had brought from home?! WTF!!! That’s how she got me to believe in her even more. She mentioned that now that the spirits knew that I was aware of their presence in my body, the disease would spread even faster. The only way we could make this stop would be to make an offering to the spirits and burry all the shit she had asked me to gather with that offering in a cemetery. I was like… What the hell! I’m not going to a cemetery to dig a whole and give money to satan. She started yelling at me, telling me that her life and her family’s life were now in danger because of me and that I needed to help her control the spell. GUILT TRIP! Now, that woman is telling me that I am putting her people in danger. She even went further by telling me that if I would talk about what I just saw, that I would be putting my own family in danger and that my mother, more specifically, would die. I am very close to my mom and that hit me in my soul. So I asked her what I had to do. She mentioned that she needed $9,000.00!! I was like: WHAT? ARE YOU FOR REAL?! I can’t give you $9,000.00!! She said: I know you have it, I can
Stephanie Costella oHouston, Tx is a scam and thief. She tells lots of lie charges 100.00 then ask for more money to buy chrystals and have services at her church. She. Probably has never been to churh, she is a thief with a cel l phone
I want to comment on Maria,Clairvoyant,Universal Medium.
Did a reading for free then requested 69$ for Tarot card reading,all the while telling me of the luck and the millions that are comming my way,no sooner had she read the three tarot cards then she need to do a seven card reading which cost 79usd as soon as that reading was done she need 399usd ti communicate with me via vibrations,also to remove all negativity to open the path for luck.She offers 100% risk free guarantee.So i have asked for all my money back,i don't suppose i will hear from her again.I told her she keeps on requesting money but has done nothing for me.
Thankyou Lynne and Coolgirlfriend. You have just saved me from handing over money to Maria, Clairvoyant, Universal Medium. She had me convinsed that i would make millions. That i had dark negative energy all over me. I would make the money and be free of negative energy... All for $149USD. What dawns on me is how she is able to do this over a computer if she has never met me or any of my family. Thanks again for waking me up.
Physic Allura is a scam. She has a website: http://www.psychicallura.com/index.html; her telephone number is: 786-587-6401. When you call she will give you a reading over the phone she tells you that have to really believe, her work is guaranteed, and you can start seeing results in as little as 24 hours. Then, she tells you to go to the nearest drugstore and purchase a moneypak for $400.00 which is the cost for the cleaning that needs to take place. The money is to purchase some candles from Jerusalem and she has to go to church to start the work. After you send you give her the 14 digit number on the moneypak she tells you that she is going to start working on your behalf and to please call her when you begin to see some changes i your life. You will never hear from her again; therefore, please don't fall for it.
I got conned by person who called herself Angela Carter. She gave me her address as 237 West 18th Street Apartment 1FE New York, NY 10011 and email is/was SpiritualGuidence53@gmail.com and she said she also has a New Jersey office.
She is very convincing. I want to warn others not to be sucked in like I did - I lost thousands of dollars to her because I trusted her and was gullible enough to believe everything she said. I met her on Liveperson and on her profile there, it also said something about her being a hypnotist, so just beware.
I also need to mention, I had to send her a large sum of money once - nearly 3000 dollars and as usual she needed me to send it by Western Union and she never had an ID so this large amount of money was sent to a JOHNIE YONKO (she said it was her father?). She disappeared about a year ago and her cell phone was disconnected and I tried contacting people occupying space in that NY address but they were extremely rude and claimed they did not know her and there was no such business etc.
One day I was bored and decided to order Tarot reading on the phone only for $25 , I didn't expect anything serious from that, just to see what he will say.
So I asked if I will get married again (I wasn't dating or wasn't loking for noone at that time and I was 44 years old and divorced) and he said that I actually will meet my future husband next month and will be married very soon. Of course I didn't believe and was thinking he just trying to make me feel better and to say something nice however I did meet a man next month and
we did get married in a couple of month!
How about that???
He also told me other things which I didn't pay attention like journey ect. however it all really happened. He was very accurate.
I feel so dumb. I'm not even going to tell you how much money i've lost in this stupid scam because it will only make me feel worse. My biggest concern is that she has my full name and telephone number and some of my personal belongings for a ceremony to cleanse the curse - am I in danger in anyway? Have I potentially opened myself up to this woman energetically? If so, how do I protect myself?






























Veronica Bright 3 years ago
Great hub...and sense of humor! Oddly enough, I write on another site as wella snd have a series of Articles on the Paranormal, and some "Psychics"
Back when I was a young girl, about 20, a palm reader told me I had a curse on my heart and wanted $300. I never gave it to her, never went back, but that stays with you.
Anyway, great job!