Details
Nothing to say, yet
Nothing to say, yet
The transcription discusses two stories that provide proof of the afterlife. The first story is about a woman driving on Highway 50 who sees a person gesturing for help. She calls the police and they find a crashed car with a baby inside and the mother deceased. The second story takes place in Utah where first responders hear a woman's voice calling for help from a car submerged in a river. They rescue a baby from the car and all four responders confirm hearing the voice. These stories provide convincing evidence of communication with ghosts. Proof of Afterlife, the convincer series from Sceario.com. You will believe. The Highway 50 Ghost Mom is an amazing story with terrific proof of afterlife because it's good enough to have made the news and the baby survived three days alone in a crashed car. This happened in the mid-1990s and Jenna St. Clair and I saw it together on the evening news. We were into ghost hunting and pretty active with learning about the afterlife, but we didn't take any notes at the time. Jenna's going to tell us this story the best we remember it. If you know more about the Highway 50 Ghost Mom, please email Jenna, J-E-N-N-A, jenna at sceario.com. I was driving east, which is up the mountain towards Lake Tahoe from Sacramento on Highway 50. This is a treacherous trip in winter because it's a narrow mountain road and the surface changes along with the elevation. It's only wet as you pass Cameron Park and Placerville, getting slushy as you get higher up into the mountains. Then you start to encounter wet ice, which forces you to slow down quite a bit. It was snowing nice and steady, big pretty flakes that would be charming if not for the stressful driving conditions. I was approaching the top, where the road has steep drop-offs in places, and the road was still slick. I was looking forward to the top where I'd be driving on packed snow, which is still often slippery, but once it's cold enough, you actually get a little more traction. Driving slowly, my wipers want intermittent delay, so enough snow hit my window to wet it so they didn't squeal. I was peering into the darkness when my headlights illuminated a human shape. I lifted my foot from the throttle, not hitting brakes, just slowing down a bit more so I could see them better. I couldn't tell if it was a man or a lady. They were gesturing wildly, waving their hands in the air to get me to notice them, to get me to stop, and they kept pointing down the road's edge, down a steep drop-off, but I didn't want to stop. I couldn't tell if it was a man or a lady, and the idea of me getting out of the car with an unknown person really scared me. As soon as I had gone a couple more turns, I had cell signal coming from Tahoe. I decided to stop and call 911 from there and report it. That way I wouldn't be alone, but I could still also help. When police arrive, I take them back to the sharp curve where I saw the person. There was no one there to be found. We walk along the road's edge, and down the side is a crashed car. Then I think the person I saw must have gone back down to their car to seek shelter from the storm. The police descend carefully to the car, where I expect they'll find an adult, perhaps injured, but they don't. What they do find is a baby still in her car seat, alive, and her mom in the driver's seat, deceased. Ma'am, we did find some people in that car. There's a little baby. We're bringing her up now. It looks like the driver may be her mom. She's deceased. When the police come back and tell me what they found, cold chills run through me. The baby was alone in the car for nearly three days and only suffered some dehydration. They brought her alive and alert to the ambulance, while police asked me to describe the person I saw. Ma'am, can you tell us anything about the person you thought you saw? I can't recall any features, only the gesturing and desperate signal for help. Finally, I just say, I think it must have been an angel. River Angel Mom. This story is about a crash that happened in American Fork, Utah, about 50 miles south of Salt Lake City. There were a lot of police officers, some firemen, and these witnesses all spoke on the record with numerous different media outlets, such as CNN, The Guardian, Daily Mail, newspapers, Deseret News Tribune, L.A. Times had a story on this one. And here's what happened. It was Saturday, March 7, 2015, when a fisherman called 911 to report a car upside down in the Spanish Fork River. The car had crashed the night before. The police believe it was in the water 14 hours from the time of the crash to the emergency call for help. Two Spanish Fork policemen, Tyler Bettos and Jared Warner, along with two firemen, Lee Mecham and Paul Tomodakis, were the first responders to the call. Others are mentioned in different articles. There's an officer, Brian DeWitt, and other unnamed officers in various news articles. What they found was a red SUV partially submerged in the river. As the men approached, they heard a voice. Help me. Help us. We're in here. It was a woman's voice, and when the men heard the voice, they moved with more urgency toward the car. Normally, they'd wait for a tow truck to pull the car upright and out of the river, but with people yelling for help, they had to hurry, and they had to try to turn it. Looking into the car, they could see that the driver was submerged in the water. There is no way she could have been yelling for help. In the rear seat, they saw 18-month-old Lily Grosbeck upside down and just inches above the icy water. A fireman cut the seatbelts to get Lily from the back seat, then they created a human chain and passed the little girl hand over hand out of the river to the shore. She needed CPR, but showed promise, and later at Intermountain Health Primary Children's Hospital, she would have a complete recovery. Later, the men got together just to talk about what had happened and what they heard. Tyler Beddoe said, When we all talked together, I said, Was I the only one that was hearing this? Thinking I was hearing things. When I talked to the other officers, we all heard the same thing. A voice. Help us. Help me. Jared Warner, another officer, said, We've gotten together, and we just talked about it, and all four of us can swear that we heard somebody inside the car saying help. Four of these first responders have been interviewed on camera and in uniform. There is nothing to gain in a highly responsible job like firemen or policemen to say you're hearing voices, yet all four of these first responders have been interviewed on camera in uniform. It's on the record, and it's a story with convincing evidence of communication with a ghost. We hope you've enjoyed this podcast from Scario.com.