RE: [TSCM-L] God's frequency is 39.17 MHz
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Date: Sat, 20 Jan 2007 23:54:26 -0500
To: TSCM-L
From: "James M. Atkinson"
Subject: God's frequency is 39.17 MHz
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God's frequency is 39.17 MHz
The investigation of Peter Popoff
By Al Seckel
Originally published in Science and the Paranormal, 1987
For centuries, religious people have claimed that they have engaged
in direct communications with God. Wouldn't it be interesting just
once to tap into those private and personal conversations? It happens
that a group of researchers, sponsored by the Committee for the
Scientific Examination of Religion (CSER), a new offshoot of the
Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the
Paranormal (CSICOP) lead by special investigator and magician James
Randi, has managed to actually capture on tape some of those "divine"
conversations between God and well-known television evangelist and
faith healer Reverend Peter Popoff!
The first words were captured by a secret team of researchers as the
Reverend Peter Popoff of Upland, California, stepped onto a stage at
San Francisco's Civic Auditorium, where he was about to start a faith
healing service that would be videotaped for his weekly national
broadcast. The team heard (and captured on tape) an affectionate
feminine voice from above: "Hello, Petey. I love you! I'm talking to
you. Can you hear me? If you can't you're in trouble, 'cause I'm
talking as well as I can!" (Her voice suddenly becomes businesslike.)
"I'm looking up names right now."
This secret team of two was located in a hidden section of the
auditorium complex. It consisted of Alec Jason, an electronics
expert, and his assistant Bob Steiner. Jason was giving the thumbs-up
sign to Steiner as they began a number of surreptitious recordings
designed to expose how Reverend Peter Popoff was able to "divinely"
recite personal details about audience members and their afflictions
during his popular faith-healing services.
Peter Popoff, like many faith healers, calls out the names,
illnesses, and sometimes addresses of people at his crusades, then
"lays hands" on them and prays for their healing. The impression
given at such services is that the information comes directly from
God; indeed, a magazine distributed by Popoff's organization
described an audience member being "called out by the Spirit for
healing." Those in the audience are so impressed by Popoff's "Gift of
Knowledge" that they break into applause. The subjects picked are so
overwhelmed that they often break into tears. One woman who was
"healed" at one of the meetings and later interviewed by CSER stated:
"I know he is real from the way he talked. He actually knew my
address and had no notes to look at! he is real, all right!"
Evangelist/healer Peter Popoff has headquarters in Upland,
California, whence he sends out slick fund-raising literature that is
generated and printed by computer to appear as if it were personally
typed and signed. Those on Popoff's mailing list have received
Russian currency, handkerchiefs, and red felt hearts to be carried or
worn, then each to be sent back with a check attached. Special
envelopes and endless appeals for the emergency needs of his ministry
arrive every week. Each is personalized by the computer, which drops
the recipient's first name into the text occasionally after the
salutation "Brother." Sometimes the letters start off typed, and in
an ensuing page turn into what appears to be a handwritten request
for money from Reverend Popoff himself. This "handwriting" is printed as well.
A man preparing to enter the Popoff crusade in San Francisco in
February was approached by a TV interviewer, "Why are you coming to
see Reverend Popoff?" he was asked. "Peter wrote to me," replied the
man, "and wanted me to come here today for a special message God has
for me." He was blissfully unaware that thousands of persons in the
Bay area received identical letters - identical, that is, except for
the personalized effect generated by Popoff's computer.
These slick mail campaigns have paid off. Popoff is seen nationwide
on 51 television outlets and heard on 40 radio stations, and has an
average monthly budget of $550,000, according to his business manager.
Popoff's effect on his followers is so great that on several
occasions he has asked his audience to "break free of the Devil" by
throwing their medications up onto the stage. Dozens of people have
come forward and tossed their medicine bottles onto the platform.
Prescriptions for digitalis, nitroglycerine tablets, oral diabetes
medication, and many unidentified pills were discarded by people who
might have needed such substances to stay alive.
When world-famous magician and psychic investigator James Randi and
his close magician friend Steve Shaw first attended a Popoff healing,
they noticed that Popoff "called out" people from the audience fast
and accurately. He gave their ailments, named relatives, and even
threw in an occasional street address for good measure. After Randi
and Shaw had observed Popoff dealing with twenty or so people, it was
obvious to them that Popoff was not using some mnemonic device. Shaw
told Randi, "He's got something else going for him, and I think I
know what I have to do. Randi agreed and sent Steve to get a closer
look at Popoff. Steve noticed that Popoff was wearing a hearing aid
in his left ear. (That device is somewhat unusual for someone who
claims to be able to perform miraculous healings.) "You can see the
shiny plastic in there, clear as can be, " Shaw told Randi.
Since Popoff had a tiny receiver of some sort in his left ear, Randi
needed an electronic surveillance expert. He enlisted the help of San
Francisco based Alec Jason, who had extensive experience in police,
detective, and intelligence work. A few weeks later, Popoff came to
San Francisco. The day before his show, Jason visited the Auditorium
with a twenty thousand dollar computerized scanning system, which
Jason left turned on for a couple of hours.
Jason's electronic scanner is useful to locate anything new that is
being broadcast. It works by going through all the radio frequencies,
and memorizes essentially everything that is on the air. The scanner
would be brought back when Popoff was performing, and it would
automatically compare the different broadcast signals. Everything
that it had heard before, it would ignore - so it would just look for
new signals. The idea was to save time.
Alec Jason and his assistant, Bob Steiner, had hardly set up the tape
recorder and turned on the scanner before the scanner zeroed in on
frequency 39.17 Megahertz (MHz). The feminine voice boomed loud and
clear over their private earphones, "Hello, Petey. I love you! I'm
talking to you. Can you hear me? If you can't, you're in trouble,
'cause I'm talking as well as I can!" (Her voice suddenly becomes
business like.) "I'm looking up names right now." Jason and Steiner
knew that they had struck pay dirt! The funny thing about it was that
it turned out that God was a woman; God spoke on frequency 39.17 MHz
(in a band width normally used only by police and fire departments);
and God sounded exactly like Popoff's wife Elizabeth!
With the help of the scanner, Jason and Steiner were able to hear and
record the entire conversation.
Elizabeth: "Way over to the other side on the other balcony is
Josephine Parino. Run all the way over to the right side now.
Josephine Parino. Josephine Parino."
Popoff asks the assembled worshipers: "Who's Josephine?"
Elizabeth: "Parino."
Popoff: "Parino."
Josephine Parino identifies herself.
Elizabeth: "She's got cancer of the stomach."
Transcribing the tape later on, Randi, Jason, and Steiner heard such
comments as: "I have a hot one for you. Robert Kaywood. He's got a
chest condition that needs surgery. Robert Kaywood. Kaywood. Kaywood.
He needs surgery. His veins aren't formed. He prays that God will
heal him today." Later on, they heard: "Dear, she...no, she should be
there on your right side. Right side. No, that's not her! No, that's
not her! In the blue... Oh! That might be here. Okay. She lives at
4267 Masterson, and she's praying for her daughter Joy, who's
allergic to food." This was followed by laughter from Elizabeth and
Pam, the wife of Reeford Shirrell (Popoff's number two man).
Elizabeth Popoff was out of the audience's view but apparently able
to see her husband via TV monitors.
Elizabeth Popoff speaks: "Reeford's got a hot one!" (Laughter.)
"Reeford's so excited! He came running in back here and scared us
half to death! You ready for a hot one? Okay! Want a hot one? Hot
one! Hot off the press! Ruby Lee Harris. Ruby Lee. She is standing in
the far back where there's no chairs. (Long pause) "...Ruby Lee
Harris. She's against the back wall. She's got lumps in her breast.
You might want to whisper it - have her walk down! Have her run up
there. Run! Oh! Look at her run! (Loud laughter) "she's got knots in
her breast." (Laughter and giggles.) "A home run! A home run!" (Then,
later on, giggles are heard, and Pam speaks.) "At any rate, she
should kick him in the face!" (giggles) (Elizabeth speaks.) "Pam says
to make her - Pam thinks that you should should have her kick him in
the face (Giggles.)
The team recorded hours of conversations in which Elizabeth Popoff
radioed to her husband personal details that she and other aides
gathered from the audience in conversations before the service and
from prayer request cards filled out there. Elizabeth Popoff and
several aides would scout the audience looking for "hot" ones. They
would ask them, "Is Jesus going to heal you? And what's your name,
and where do you live? Have you had this condition long?" They would
write all this information down on cards, which later on Elizabeth
would recite during the service via her concealed transmitter. She
carried the power source in a large handbag, and the transmitter and
microphone were hidden under her blouse.
Randi, however, needed incontrovertible evidence that this was the
way the information was conveyed. Randi enlisted the help of many
volunteers in several cities to adopt false names and diseases and
act like "hot" ones. That plan worked beautifully. Randi's stooges
were approached and questioned by Elizabeth Popoff. During the show,
Popoff called out the false names and diseases in exactly the order
that Elizabeth Popoff had approached them. She didn't even bother to
shuffle the cards!
One stooge, Don Henvick, was exceptional. Don dressed in various
disguises, going even so far as to shave his beard and head.He was
able to present a convincing and tempting target for the faith
healers by his fine acting. In San Francisco, the Reverend Popoff
call him out as a bearded man under the assumed name "Tom Hendry,"
and"cured" him of a "broken home and that bondage to alcohol." In
Anaheim, Don (this time bald and clean-shaven scored again when
Popoff fell for another of his aliases, this time calling him out as
"Vergil Jorgenson," and attempting to heal a bogus "serious arthritic
condition." Subsequently, Popoff, apparently enthralled by Henvick's
powerful performance as a "man possessed by the Holy Spirit,"
broadcast both of these healings on his shows!
Randi next instructed Don to be cured of a disease that he couldn't
possibly have. They settled on uterine cancer! To have uterine cancer
you need a uterus. To have a uterus you need to be a woman. Don went
around to various thrift stores looking for dresses. Friends helped
him with the makeup. The last stop was to obtain a wheelchair so that
Popoff could call him (her?) out as "Bernice Manicoff." Scott Morris,
an editor at Omni, went along as "her son."
After they entered the auditorium for the show, they situated
themselves in the aisle close to Elizabeth Popoff. There were told
that the chair was blocking the aisle and so they moved around to a
couple of other places before they were directed to the orchestra
pit, where two empty wheelchairs were parked. Two women with canes
walked into the pit and sat in the empty wheelchairs (the chairs were
rented by Popoff). One of the women remarked, "I guess this is where
they want us to sit." Later both women were called out, and a big
deal was made out of the fact that they can walk, which is how they
got into the rented wheelchairs in the first place. Praise the
miracles of Peter Popoff!
Don - or should we say - "Bernice"? - sent her "son" to speak to
Elizabeth to give her a story that "mom" would sure like to say "Hi!"
but can't walk that far from her wheelchair without getting tired.
Elizabeth made a note of it and sent Brother Reeford over. Aside from
pleasantries, he asked two questions: "How long have you been in that
wheelchair?" and "Can you walk at all?" People who can't walk are
given short shrift, but when "Bernice" told him that she'd been in
the wheelchair for a couple of years "off and on," and "Oh, yes, I
can walk a little," Reeford obtained her name and the fact that her
doctors think that "Beatrice" might have uterine cancer and that she
feels much better whenever she watches Rev. Popoff on TV.
The suspense grew during the show as the healing progressed until
finally Popoff stood five feet in front of Don and called his alias,
"Bernice Manicoff." He promised to burn the cancer out of her body.
He laid hands on "Bernice" and Don gave his most ladylike shriek as
he was shocked by the power of the Holy Ghost. Popoff then commanded
"Bernice" to rise out of the wheelchair and walk! Don staggered to
his feet and walked back and forth across the stage to the loud
cheers of the crowd. Don's performance was perfect - almost.
It was only later that Don learned what had been said about him on
the secret transmission.
Elizabeth: "Bernice. Bernice Manicoff. Manicoff. The woman with hair
on her face. She's in a wheelchair and can walk..."
After Don rose from the wheelchair and started to walk, Elizabeth
started screaming to Popoff via the secret transmitter: "That's the
guy from Anaheim! He's a stooge! It's a man - a man! Get away from
him! That's the guy from Anaheim! Drop him fast!"
Upon hearing this, Randi and the other investigators felt that it was
time to wrap things up. They had already hours and hours of taped
conversations and lots of other damning evidence. The investigation
had already lasted six months, involved over sixty volunteers, and
had sent teams of investigators into faith-healing meetings in such
far-flung cities as Rochester, Brooklyn, Houston, Stockton, Anaheim,
Sacramento, San Francisco, Philadelphia, Detroit, St. Louis, and Ft.
Lauderdale - teams that have uncovered a shocking tale of trickery
and deceit on the part of several popular faith healers who have used
their religious authority and media coverage to mislead millions of people.
Randi was scheduled to do an appearance on Johny Carson's Tonight
Show. Randi reasoned that this would be a wonderful place to break
the news. The Tonight Show had an audience in the millions, and Randi
knew that Carson was sympathetic to Randi's work. The show was a
success, and Carson and the audience loved it. Randi received a
tremendous ovation from the studio audience, and in the ensuing weeks
Carson received a tremendous amount of postive mail, including an
improving letter from Jerry Falwell. Randi profited too. Seven
thousand orders for his book Flim -Flam came in during the next few
days. It all goes to show that some people want to hear what's going on.
There were a a few people, who, the day after the Carson broadcast,
were not so pleased. The press had latched onto Randi's revelation
and had started deluging the Popoff ministry with phone calls. Popoff
issued a formal, prepared statement from his headquarters:
"Everything Amazing Randi has said is not true. We were already
considering legal action because we knew he was faking miracles at
the crusades for his own purposes. Peter Popoff Evangelistic
Association is being attacked, but we are not alone. This group has
also targeted Jerry Falwell, Oral Roberts, Jimmy Swaggart, and Pat
Robertson, in addition to Reverend Popoff. We would like to ask
Christians to pray concerning this attack on all these Christian
organizations. This man is a magician and is using these tactics to
get publicity for a book that he is writing to discredit God's work.
We believe that God will not allow this attack on his ministry to continue."
When the Popoff ministry was asked whether Popoff used a secret
receiver in his ear, Janice Gleason, a public relations consultant
for the Popoff organization, said that the electronic receiver in
Popoff's ear was used only to keep in touch with the television crew.
(In the hours of taped transmissions, there was not one communication
with the television crew.) Gleason said she believed that the woman's
voice heard on the Tonight Show was faked. But Popoff later admitted
that it was his wife who was communicating with him. Popoff compared
his ministry to a TV game show. "It's just like The Price is Right;
they expect to be called down," he said. "This is a very effective
format for television." Popoff, however, perhaps because of the
notoriety, decided to abandon this "game show" format, a least
temporarily: his last few television broadcasts have contained no
displays of his "Gift of Knowledge."
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