Notes by Joe Nickell
‘Psychics’ Fail to Foresee Their Own Fortunes
Joe
Nickell
According to the Philadelphia Inquirer of April 27, 2007
(O’Reilly and Vitez 2007), Philadelphia’s fortune tellers failed to foresee the
forced closure of their shops. Citing a state law that had been on the books for
decades and that banned fortunetelling for profit, city inspectors began to
force astrologers, psychics, and tarot-card readers to shut down. Having been
alerted by police to the law, which makes fortunetelling “for gain or lucre” a
misdemeanor, an official of the city’s Department of Licenses and Inspections
said no arrests had been made or fines issued. However, he promised that
inspectors would do so “if these people try to return to work” (O’Reilly and
Vitez 2007).
A week later, however, the ban was rescinded after one psychic’s attorney
filed a request for a preliminary injunction, claiming the anti-fortunetelling
statute could only be invoked in instances of fraud. The City Solicitor’s Office
agreed. A deputy solicitor stated, “we felt it was hard to say what kind of
evidence might be needed to prove someone was pretending to tell fortunes”
(O’Reilly 2007). Once again, the alleged psychics failed to foresee the turn of
events.
Their ineptitude seemed—well, predictable: In May 1995, I helped
Philadelphia’s WCAU-TV launch a “sting” against various “psychic” readers and
advisors as well as 900-number clairvoyants. After consulting with me to devise
a suitable strategy, Herb Denenberg and other members of his “Newscenter 10”
unit went undercover to set up a test of the soothsayers’ abilities. The sting
was inspired by Jody Himebaugh whose eleven-year-old son Mark had disappeared
November 25, 1991. Himebaugh said more than one hundred self-claimed psychics
had since offered their visions, typically seeing a “dark car,” “the number 5,”
or similar “clues.” These were never any help, but they could later be matched
to actual evidence once it became known—a clever technique called “retrofitting”
(Nickell 2001).
To Read More of This Column Visit: http://www.csicop.org/specialarticles/fortunes.html
Joe Nickell, Ph.D., is author of Looking For A Miracle
and dozens of other books exploring the paranormal world. His Web site is
at www.joenickell.com.
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