S.C.P.R (Southern Colorado Paranormal Researchers) say that they have found strange audio and video anomalies in the old Runyon Theater.
You can visit their website to see the evidence they have collected.
I was not able to make anything out of the video evidence. Nothing conclusive anyways.
Full source: Chieftain.com
1 commentBy AMY MATTHEW
THE PUEBLO CHIEFTAINFor those people – and there are quite a few – who think they have ghosts in their houses or office buildings, ghost hunter Roger White has a message: Chances are extremely good that you don’t.
In fact, there’s probably no more than a 10 percent chance that the odd noises people hear are from anything other than heating systems, wayward squirrels or some other earthly source.
“Paranormal activity is rare. The human mind is capable of making things up,” said White, the lead investigator for Southern Colorado Paranormal Researchers.
White and a partner, who is no longer with the group, started SCPR in 2006. White is a software developer and says he has been a lifelong skeptic about anything ghost-related. However, a personal experience he had in 2003 got him interested in the possibility of paranormal activity – that is, phenomena that lack a scientific explanation. He remains very much a “show me” type of investigator. “We say ‘facts, not feelings,’ ” he said. “You’ve got to be honest with yourself because you may get excited. It takes a lot to convince me something is legit.”
That said, SCPR has done enough investigations for White to be convinced of something: that paranormal energies do occupy this world, although proving their existence requires days, sometimes months, of research.
“There’s no real science behind this,” he said. “It’s a very personal thing for people.”
The team
White and the other members of the team – Joe Musso, Tammy Medsker, Duane Vigil and Rhonnie Musso – perform their investigations free of charge. All information is kept confidential unless a client allows them to talk about it, and investigation results are posted on the group’s Web site, www.coloparanormal.org.
Medsker owns the La Veta Inn with her husband, Scott. She and Rhonnie Musso are sensitives – that means they’re highly attuned to the paranormal sights, scents and feelings that can emerge in an investigation. Medsker can tell if an energy is male, female or something else.
“There are all kinds of energies out there,” she said.
Joe Musso is a former Pueblo County sheriff’s deputy and investigator. He puts the audio and video information collected during investigations through multiple levels of verification.
“We’re always looking to disprove,” said Musso. “The human mind wants to make sense of things. It hates disorder.
“My EVP (electronic voice phenomena) recordings go to everyone in the group. It goes through at least three layers before we call it evidence. I would consider us skeptical believers – but 90 percent of what comes our way is not paranormal.”
Read more at Chieftain.com