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Synopsis of The Enfield Poltergeist:
In August 1977, single parent Peggy Hodgson called police to her rented home in Enfield after two of her four children claimed that furniture was moving and knocking sounds were heard on walls. The children included Margaret, age 13, Janet, age 11, Johnny, age 10 and Billy, age 7. A police constable saw a chair slide on the floor but couldn't determine if it moved by itself or was pushed by someone. Later claims included allegedly demonic voices, loud noises, thrown rocks and toys, overturned chairs and levitation of children. Reports of further incidents in the house attracted considerable press attention and the story was covered in British newspapers such as the Daily Mail and Daily Mirror, until reports came to an end in 1979.[3][5][6] On Halloween 2011, BBC News featured comments from a radio interview with photographer Graham Morris, who claimed that many of the events were genuine.[7]
I really can't wait for this one. I have seen a few documentaries on this file and read at least a half dozen books. The war of words between a few skeptics and non-skeptics is as entertaining as the events themselves in a few books. I actually did a lot of research and reading into this a few years ago and have become quite knowledgeable of all the goings on here. Bottom line in real life is 50/50 if what took place was actually real or a hoax. After all I have read I would put it at about 70% of it being real and not a hoax. The evidence that the skeptics use to debunk what happened here is all assumption and some outlandish claims of what this little girl was actually capable of doing to make this a hoax. Some skeptics interviewed and that were presented with evidence come off as individuals that would call their own dead grandmother sitting next to them and talking about things only they know some sort of trickery.
http://www.upcominghorrormovies.com/movie/conjuring-2