The Dead Files (2011) s08e13 Episode Script

Paradise Lost

1 There's a lot of people running around in here, like, mad.
We've had people run out of here screaming.
I think they might feel trapped and like they can't breathe.
I've seen an apparition of a little girl.
All these dead people, they're feeding off of living energy.
This whole area is a battlefield.
STEVE: What's going on? I felt like he was gonna choke me to death.
This guy, he's not good.
There's a dark presence.
My name is Amy Allan.
These things, they're freaking out.
They're from hell.
I see dead people.
They were being hunted.
I speak to dead people.
They were setting people on fire, burning them alive.
And they speak to me.
Her neck got broken.
But there's only one way to know if my findings are real.
I hear a gunshot.
- I rely on my partner.
- I'm Steve Di Schiavi.
I'm a retired New York City homicide detective.
Something's not right here.
And I know every person, every house has secrets.
It's not safe here.
It's my job to reveal them.
Are any of them buried on the property? They're all buried here.
But Steve and I never speak We never communicate during an investigation.
Until the very end I can't do it no more.
When we uncover if it's safe for you to stay Holy [bleep.]
Look at this.
Or time to get out.
It does not have a happy ending.
Something kills people here.
I'm in Waipahu, Hawaii, just northwest of Honolulu.
I got a call from a guy named Jeff, who says he's got trouble in paradise.
Now, he runs a museum on an old sugar plantation.
But business was so slow, he agreed to open up a haunted house attraction.
Since then, all hell's broken loose.
He says, if we can't find a solution, he's gonna have to shut the place down before somebody gets seriously hurt.
MATTHEW: This is a museum with more than a dozen buildings.
I've got to clear all of them of any artwork, photographs or religious symbols so Amy is not influenced by anything she sees.
When I'm done, the location will be ready for tonight's walk.
AMY: I'm feeling a lot of stress here.
It feels like these dead people are very stressed out.
I'm seeing, like, a tall, glass enclosure.
And all these dead people were in it.
It said, "Do not let them out.
They are my pets.
" Then, I hear, "The earth here is as alive as a human, more so.
Listen to its heartbeat.
" And then, I hear, "The earth has been asleep for 1,000 years, and it's waking up.
" Hey, Jeff.
This place is amazing.
This is like a small city out here.
How many buildings altogether do you have? Do you know? - Uh, about 22.
- 22? - Yeah.
- Wow.
We've never done an investigation like this.
I can tell you that.
Tell me, what's the story? What's going on? We've had numerous incidents with my volunteers, with my staff, with the general public.
And we're starting to get a reputation for being really a hotbed of paranormal activity.
Now, Jeff, you mentioned on the phone you allowed a haunted attraction to come in.
That's correct.
I partnered with one of my friends, Noa.
So why would you do that? Well, because we wanted to get younger people here, get them interested in their own history.
So obviously, we're here.
So something backfired.
We've had a lot more activity.
We have school children here.
We have seniors.
It's becoming a real problem.
Okay, so tell me about some of the experiences people are having.
People have been seeing apparitions.
They've been seeing spirits.
Some people have been touched.
We've had workers who have volunteered for a night and never come back.
People run out of here screaming.
I feel very, very bad about it.
I feel like perhaps it's been my fault partnering with Noa.
I'm ultimately responsible for that.
So what if Amy turned around and said you need to shut down this attraction? Honestly, if we had to shut down the whole thing, I'm not sure that we would survive that.
Okay.
AMY: Oh, boy.
There are two types of dead here the ones who stay inside and the ones who stay outside.
The outside ones are the problem.
Yeah.
They're mad.
And they've got issues.
They don't want us here.
No, no, no, no, no, no.
They don't want us here.
They are mostly out here, these people.
They stay pretty much outside all the Pretty much all the time.
I don't think they like the people.
So they stay outside.
One of the things that they do to the living here is, obviously, they take their energy.
It's got to be difficult, I think, for many people to be here because I think you would feel immediately drained.
So, now, what about your own experiences? Well, I have had an experience right in this house, right here.
I was speaking to a tour group in front of the kitchen.
And a couple of pots banged together.
Okay.
Were the windows open, wind going through there? No.
All right.
Anything else? Yeah.
One night, I was here with a friend.
And we were walking along the sidewalk.
And I looked down, and I noticed that there were three shadows instead of two.
And I knew which shadow was his 'cause he was wearing a baseball hat.
So I started to move to figure out which shadow was mine.
And in between us, there was another shadow.
A man, woman? Do you have any idea? You know, in that area, we've we've had other shadow activity.
And people always seem to think it's a male.
Now, you said other people have seen this shadow.
Is that common? Yes, other people have seen the shadow running and felt somebody brush past them.
Let me ask you a question as far as what you're hoping to get out of this investigation.
I've been running this thing for nine years.
But now, we're at a point where we've had so many problems that I don't know what to do.
I want to be sure that the public, that my volunteers, that my staff is safe.
Okay.
There's a man.
And he doesn't want us here.
I'm definitely feeling, like, a push, like, "Ahhhh.
" He's, like, this drunk guy, wasted.
I think that people would have, possibly, experiences with this man.
He's very solid.
I think they might feel trapped and like they can't breathe.
The wasted guy's in the tunnel.
And what he's doing is just bouncing back and forth, all along in there.
I think that people would probably see him like a shadow, but in human form.
So, Noa, I was talking to Jeff.
And he was explaining to me about how bad the activity's gotten here.
And he seems to think that it started when you guys started doing the Halloween-type tours.
You agree with that? I'm starting to believe there's something.
A few actors working for me actually quit because of - What's happened? - Something, yeah.
Have you had any experiences at all that you can't explain? Yeah.
I've had a few.
Okay.
Tell me about them.
I would see the curtain go up and down.
It looked like the curtain actually, like, was lifted up and dropped, you know? And you're positive nobody was in the house at the time? No.
Nobody's in the house.
The doors are locked usually.
That's why.
Okay.
Anything else? I've seen an apparition of a little girl, maybe, like, around 4 or 5 years old.
Did you get a color hair description? No, no.
Maybe, like, black.
- It was a darker color? - Yeah.
My partner says, when people do these kind of attractions, they're antagonizing the spirits and the dead that are here.
Yeah.
I thought about that.
But, you know, pretty much the whole state of Oahu is, like, a believer in this kind of superstition.
What if she turned around and said you guys need to shut this down, or people are gonna get hurt? Wouldn't really care.
I wouldn't listen to her.
I mean, we'd still be doing it.
I would still continue.
Yeah.
I don't think these, you know, many of these dead people really want to be here.
There's an indication that, somehow, they were trapped here by someone.
People would have a really hard time with the dead out here.
They're very [bleep.]
present and pretty powerful.
And then, the ones outside, they hate everybody else, like, passionately.
And they would really like to kick the other deads' asses out of here.
They want to get rid of the living.
They were here first.
They want this back.
STEVE: So, Moira, talking to Jeff, he seems to feel guilty about what he started with this ghost tour thing, that it was a bad idea.
Do you agree with that at all? I agree.
I didn't think they should have done it, energize more spirits in different houses and got them to be really active.
Can I assume you've had experiences or not? Yes.
We seen a shadow by the Portuguese House of a man, and you could fully see him.
And he just, poof, vanished.
Okay.
Anything else? So, we walked over to the Social Club, and we were standing outside after a tour ended.
And a door was latched open, and it Someone unlatched it, and it just slammed shut.
And some people started running.
Okay.
What was the weather like? Still, no wind.
- Like it is now? - Yes.
Okay.
Is there anything else? There's a doll case that's in here.
And every morning, they would come back in to make sure everything's clean, presentable for the next tours during the day.
The doll would be out on the ground.
This case is enclosed.
So it got to the point where you'd come in every morning, and the thing would be open, the doll would be out? Yes.
Now, are you sure nobody was playing a prank? Yes.
How do we know that? 'Cause they always close the windows and lock everything up.
One day, someone thought they saw a little girl that was in here.
So we think that she's been playing with the doll.
Okay, so you think the spirit of a young child might have been taking the doll out to play with it - when everybody went home? - Yes.
That's kind of sad, actually, when you think about it.
Yes, it is.
Moira, with all the stuff that's going on here, I've got to ask you, why are you so interested in working here? It's kind of important to my side of the family.
My grandmother, she worked on the plantation.
- This plantation? - Yes.
Okay.
So you're telling family history.
Yes.
Okay.
AMY: There's a lot of people here who didn't get along when they were alive.
And now, it's even worse because they're dead.
All these dead people, they're feeding off of living energy.
And all this combined energy is creating poltergeist-type of phenomenon, things ending up in places where they weren't left, things flying across the room, doors opening and closing, and objects moving.
They're prepping for something.
Something's gonna happen something really bad.
All right, so now, it seems like everybody's having experiences here.
But what about yourself? I've had some experiences here, too.
Okay.
Explain some of them to me.
Um, I'm pretty exhausted when I leave here, nauseated, dizzy.
Why do you think it's paranormal? I'm really healthy.
So are you the only one having these physical experiences here? Oh, there's other actors, too, that have either injuries or illnesses.
Okay.
Anything else? There were a few times when I came home with bruises on my body, unexplained.
Looks like a hand print, like little fingerprints.
Having bruising could be a million-and-one things.
But you're saying it was the shape of a hand? Mm-hmm.
Did you feel it? No.
Oh, no.
That's why I was surprised when I got home and I had that bruise.
Anything else? Yeah, there was an experience that sticks in my mind.
I got home from work, and I had a choking sensation out of nowhere.
And it was pretty scary.
And I started to pray.
And what happened? It eventually went away, after my prayers.
Oh, geez.
MATTHEW: You okay? What's going on? Um, I got attacked.
I'm, like, freaked out.
There's a guy, um, and he doesn't want me here.
He's, like, really aggressive.
Like, first, I didn't know I didn't understand what was happening.
But he got really mad.
And so he was like, grabbing me like this really hard.
And I got scared because I felt like he was gonna choke me to death.
I think that he can physically harm people, choke them out or scare the [bleep.]
out of me.
Like, I'm still scared.
STEVE: Jeffrey's property is on an old sugar plantation.
And you know what? It doesn't take a homicide detective to figure out where to start this investigation.
I'm on my way back to the property to meet a local historian, who said the conditions there were absolutely brutal.
What do you know about the history of this place? It was built in 1897, and it stayed open for almost 100 years.
Wow.
It was about 10,000 acres, extended all the way down to Pearl Harbor, which is that way.
There are close to 1,000 people that worked here.
All right.
So do me a favor.
Paint the picture.
What's their work day like? So, you leave before sunrise.
You spend the entire day working on the plantation.
Back-breaking work.
Now, the people who worked here, did they live here, as well? Lived and died.
What were living conditions like? Well, can you imagine coming home to a house that has a corrugated tin roof and your floor is dirt? The health conditions are just unbelievably just filthy.
You were lucky if your baby lived to see a year.
Geez.
Are these native Hawaiians that are in this picture? Native Hawaiians were decimated by sicknesses.
And so plantation bosses, the chief laborers, had to go elsewhere to find other people to bring here to work the plantation, like the Japanese, the Chinese, the Filipinos, the Puerto Ricans, Portuguese and even the Koreans.
Okay, so now, with all these different cultures and ethnicities here, did they all live together? What was the story? According to this map, everybody was separated by ethnicity.
Now, is that by the people that worked here's choice or by the people that owned the place? People that owned the place.
They wanted to make sure that these different ethnicities didn't get together and unionize and demand better living conditions and better pay.
So they thought it was a better thing to keep them segregated, even to the point where they began to pay people a different rate according to the ethnicity.
So, what was the purpose of paying people differently? To make sure that they resented each other and they didn't get along.
Okay.
AMY: These dead people who are lined up outside, they were, like, neglected or mistreated or something when they were alive.
I think that they were kind of starving at some point.
They don't seem like they had good clothing, either.
Doesn't seem like they had good shelter, either.
They were outside a lot.
They're pretty old.
I don't know from when.
There's a lot of people here who didn't get along when they were alive.
And now, it's even worse because they're dead and they're all [bleep.]
jumbled together.
Yeah.
They're really mad.
Look, when you got that many people packed together under bad conditions, there's definitely gonna be violence.
I had a retired detective look into it for me.
Says she found at least 10 homicides right on the plantation.
Chris, I don't think I've ever handled an investigation where I had at least 10 homicides in one location.
Here's some of them.
Okay.
Did any of these stand out to you? Yes.
April 5th of 1905.
A captain in the police department, a lieutenant and four officers are asked to assist a sheriff in raiding a gambling game on the plantation.
They arrested 11 Chinese laborers.
Okay.
All of a sudden, all hell breaks loose.
Police and the prisoners get surrounded by the rest of the laborers that are at the gambling game.
Okay.
Now they are being attacked with clubs and sticks.
Shots are fired.
In the chaos, a laborer named Chong Chi Fat was shot six times and was killed.
Do we know who shoots him? There was never a determination of who actually shot the man.
Okay.
I'm just hearing people yelling numbers or something, some numbers.
But it's, like, you know, "Eight, nine, two, zero, four, five, six! Ah! Three, nine, eight!" You know, like, somebody's [bleep.]
yelling all this These numbers.
I'm hearing, um, a man screaming and crying.
It feels like his back is broken.
Like, he is, like, on his forearms.
He's looking at the ground.
And there's something on his back and his neck.
He's just [bleep.]
screaming.
Okay, so what was the other homicide you were talking about? Well, in May 1985, we have a man that was killed at a cock fight, which was across from the plantation housing.
And his name is Henry Cuba.
All right, so what's this guy get killed for? What happened? Mr.
Cuba had gotten into altercations with the guy that was running the chicken fight.
And he also got into another altercation and was acting belligerent and out of control with Jaime Fernandez.
Who's this Fernandez guy? Just someone watching the fights? Yes.
By the way you're telling the story to me, it sounds like this guy showed up already a little bit inebriated.
So what's the circumstances of this guy getting killed? Well, Fernandez went back to his house, got his gun, came back to the chicken fight and shot him four times in the chest.
Okay.
Is he D.
O.
A.
right there? And he died right there on the scene.
Okay.
That drunk dude is, like, wasted.
And he's, like, running around, like, just acting like a fool.
Hmm.
He's a big guy.
He's not that old.
I'd say, like, you know, between 30 and 40 years of age.
And he died This was fairly recently, I would say within the last 20 years.
But he's yelling about the animals.
Like, all the animals died? There's a lot of confusion.
Like, if you try to ask him certain questions, he gets very confused.
I really don't think that, right now, he doesn't understand that he's dead.
If you need us to investigate unexplained activity in your home, go to the "Dead Files" page at travelchannel.
com.
Click on, "Help me, Dead Files," to submit your story, and we'll help if we can.
STEVE: So far, I know a deadly riot and at least 10 homicides took place on my client's property.
But I need to see if there's anything else.
Searching through old records, I find the plantation shared a border with Pearl Harbor and that two people on Jeff's property were actually killed during the attack.
I'm heading over to the Naval base to meet with one of the world's foremost authorities on Pearl Harbor.
And he says Jeffrey's plantation played an important role in that dark day in American history.
DANIEL: Right here, this is where it all started.
So, during the attack, what am I seeing from my client's property? You are seeing aircraft buzzing about you like bees.
You are seeing, in the distance, the Pacific fleet being destroyed.
This whole area's a battlefield.
So where your clients were was part of the battlefield.
There's indication that Japanese aircrafts strafed that camp.
And probably from a Japanese pilot's point of view, it looked like a military camp.
The two killed on my property during the day of the attack, Is that from the Japanese fire? It's not.
The indication is, it was friendly fire that was raining down all over the island of Oahu from the anti-aircraft guns firing at the Japanese planes.
Now, what can you tell me about the victims? There's a report that I have here.
It indicates a Hawaiian girl, 3 years of age, was hit by shrapnel.
She died within 10 minutes of being admitted to the hospital.
And then, a 19-year-old man, Tomaso Kimura, suffered a shrapnel wound that penetrated his brain.
He lost his life at about 5:00 that afternoon, December 7, 1941.
Oh, geez.
I'm, like, hearing yelling, [bleep.]
screaming.
There's dirt and debris hitting my eyes, blinding so many people, like, so many people having this happen.
Like, this dirt and all this [bleep.]
is hitting their face.
I can't breathe.
Awful breathing problems, asphyxiation, incredibly dizzy and nauseous.
And I feel, like, lots of sticks piercing my body on my right jaw, my neck, my left eye, my right side.
[Bleep.]
So, Daniel, I'm aware that Japanese immigrants, as well as Japanese Americans, worked on the plantation.
Were they ever put in internment camps? Yes.
After the attack, there was a suspicion that the local Japanese population was somehow involved with it.
There was arrests made, and they were interned.
The camp was established on your property that you're investigating.
It was known as Honouliuli.
And this is what it looked like.
It was over 160 acres, barbed-wire fences nearly eight feet tall, eight guard towers.
It almost looks like a base.
What was the population like this place? Well, there was two populations.
Initially, 322 Japanese Americans were interned.
Later on, as the months progressed into the war, there'll be a population of Italian Americans and German Americans, Koreans, were brought here because they were considered possibilities of disloyalty.
And here's some of their dossiers.
So, what were the conditions like for these people? Let's put it this way.
They called it Hell's Canyon.
They lived in tents.
They had latrines they went to.
It was hot, dusty, uncomfortable.
It would be over 90 to 100 degrees in that canyon.
So, it starts out as a plantation And then a battlefield, and then an internment and prisoner-of-war camp.
Something about a camp.
I don't know.
A bunch of people talking all at the same time.
I can't understand any of it.
Somebody's freaking out about the camp.
Camp Stop the camp? I don't know.
Something like this.
You're just overhearing random snippets? Yeah.
They're having, like, meetings, like, "Should we talk about these things or not?" Oh.
I feel a lot of anxiousness, stress, illness immediately.
It's like a [bleep.]
tidal wave of it.
There's a lot of people running around in here like mad, like mad, prepping for something.
Something's gonna happen.
They need to talk.
They need to take care of the situation promptly.
Something big, big, big is happening, and they're freaking the [bleep.]
out about it.
Whoo, so [bleep.]
stressful.
Holy [bleep.]
My god, it's like whoosh.
Like, crazy, crazy, crazy.
I encountered many dead people during my walk.
But the angry group outside had me the most concerned.
I saw these people.
They were all lined up, side by side.
They were very upset.
Basically, they want to destroy the living here.
They don't want anything to live here.
Is this what you saw? Yes.
STEVE: Now that Amy and I have completed our investigations, we're ready to reveal our findings to each other and our clients for the first time.
So, Amy, I'm sure this walk must have been a little disorienting for you because the property here is so big.
Mm-hmm.
I don't want to give away too much, but this place used to be a major sugar plantation.
And now, it's a museum.
Now, this is Jeff.
He's been running the place for almost 10 years.
This is Laura and Moira.
They both work here.
Activity is bad and getting worse.
And Jeff is concerned that, if they can't stop it, this important part of Hawaii's history may not survive.
So with that, Amy knows a little bit about the location.
I'll ask her to describe her walk for us.
When I first arrived, I got a lot of information.
I was feeling the emotions from the dead.
And they seemed very stressed out.
Then, I was seeing this kind of glass dome structure.
And inside of it was all of the dead.
And I heard someone say, "Don't let them out.
These are my pets.
" Well, might as well get right into this.
When Jeff took over the museum, business was slow.
So a friend of his came with an idea to turn this museum into a haunted attraction for 10 nights during the month of October.
And that's when activity went nuts.
Okay.
So that's why they called us in.
Now, tell Amy why you thought you had to do this.
Young people aren't exactly that interested in history sometimes.
So we thought a haunted attraction would appeal to a younger demographic.
Moira, when we spoke originally, you said you weren't crazy about the idea of this haunted attraction.
My parents and my grandparents would tell me that there's strange things that happen here.
My mom would tell me, you know, "Be careful," that the spirits that was here would probably attack a person.
Now, I talked to the guy that runs the attraction.
His name's Noa.
I was thinking about bringing him to the reveal, but, honestly, it was a waste of time.
He told me he didn't really care what you would have to say, and nothing would convince him that what he's doing is a bad thing.
Jeff, on the other hand, thinks he's opened a door.
And he thinks that they can't close it.
I'm really concerned about the increase in activity.
And it's more confrontational now.
It's kind of in-your-face and very direct.
Yeah, there's a lot of different things going on as far as how the dead are interpreting what you're doing.
So some are irritated and some are frightened and some are confused.
I looked in the tunnel, and I saw this man.
He was kind of a mess.
He had a special attachment to this property.
He used to be here a lot.
I got that he was probably in his 30s or 40s.
And he died fairly recently, within the last 20 years.
And he was drunk when he died.
And what I got that the living might encounter there is hearing him bang into the walls and things like that.
And I believe that they would see him as a very, very dark, large shadow.
Tell Amy that story.
One day, I was walking with a friend.
And we were just walking down the path.
And then, I looked down, and I noticed there's only the two of us, but there's three shadows on the ground.
And I just kept looking at that as we walked down the path.
I was so surprised.
What I found shocking about the property during my investigation is the amount of homicides and strange deaths that occurred on the property.
One of the most recent deaths may be of interest to you.
Now, back in '85, a group of plantation employees used to hold illegal cock fights on the land here.
Now, there was a guy named Henry Cuba who used to come here all the time.
May of 1985, he came here, but he got into a fight with the guy running the cock fight and a couple of the patrons.
It sounded like he was pretty belligerent, and he was drunk.
He gets into a fight with this guy, Jaime Fernandez.
This guy gets mad.
He goes back to his house, grabs a gun, comes back and plants four in this guy's chest.
Wow.
And he kills him right here.
Now, you said the man was between 30 and 40.
Cuba was 40 when he got gunned down.
I actually managed to track down a photo from the family.
This is him, here.
This guy look familiar to you? Yeah, totally.
Yeah.
All right.
So that's interesting.
At least you know who the shadow might be.
Okay.
So what else? I was standing on the porch, and I got attacked.
This person came up from behind and to my side and grabbed my neck.
Like, I was being choked and was squeezing so hard.
And it was excruciating pain.
Then, he was standing in the doorway, and he was, like, a dark, tall, you know, shadow figure.
And I got that he, obviously, doesn't want me here, doesn't want anybody here.
He's aggressive.
I think that the living would have experiences with him and could possibly get physically hurt.
One night that I went home after doing the attraction, I had a choking sensation.
I just started praying, and I just said, "Rebuke Satan in the name of Jesus.
" - And it just went away.
- Mm-hmm.
And then, I also, another night, had a bruise on my arms, like somebody was grabbing me.
Now, does that sound like something that this guy might do? Yeah.
And he is not good.
Anything else? There's a lot of issues here between the dead people.
The dead who stay outside, they spent a lot of time outside when they were alive.
And they still like to be outside even though they're deceased.
They were telling me that they were mistreated when they were alive.
They didn't have good clothing.
They didn't have a lot of food.
And their shelter was not so great.
They didn't get along that well with each other when they were alive.
They're very unsettled.
They're very mad.
They're very angry.
And I heard, "The camp, the camp.
Stop the camp.
" Okay, well, the history of this place is pretty incredible.
There's two possibilities of what you might have been seeing.
As I mentioned before, the museum sits on the land that used to be the Oahu Sugar Plantation.
Right.
Now, the plantation ran for almost 100 years, from 1897 to 1995.
In the beginning, there weren't enough local workers.
So the plantation owners brought people in from around the world.
Now, the conditions these workers lived in was horrible.
They lived in tin-roofed houses with this heat and, basically, dirt floors.
Now, you mentioned that the different groups didn't like each other.
Well, the plantation owners were worried they may unionize.
So they made segregated camps.
And they would pay each ethnic group a different wage so that they would resent each other.
Now, there is one other possibility.
When this place was a plantation, it actually touched the shores of Pearl Harbor.
Now, when Pearl Harbor was bombed in '41, the Americans fired at the Japanese planes.
And you had two fatalities right on the property from friendly fire.
The day after the attack, martial law is imposed, and the military rounded up Japanese immigrants and Japanese Americans, and they placed them in an internment camp right on this property.
Oh.
And I got photos of that.
The conditions were so bad at this camp, they called it Hell's Canyon.
As the war waged on, not only did they bring Japanese P.
O.
W.
s here.
They brought in German, Italian, and kept them separated in the same camp.
So based on the information that I provided, who do you think you might have ran into? I think that they're probably from both camps.
And I think they're from different time periods.
Now, Moira, your grandparents worked on this plantation.
Yes.
How's that make you feel, hearing all this? It's, like, sad.
We didn't even realize how many of them were here.
It's sad to see them, you know, get caught in here.
I wouldn't want to be caught here.
So now, the dead people on the outside, do they interact with the living in any way? They feed off the energy of the living.
So I think that, when people would leave here, they would feel excessively drained.
Like, also, people would feel stressed and anxious because they are so angry.
The other thing that I got is that they've become able to interact with their environment.
And so they can make doors open and close.
They're able to move objects from one location to another and also move objects, like, in front of you.
Well, now you're hitting on pretty much everything these guys are experiencing.
Moira, tell Amy about the doll.
We have a doll.
It's in a Japanese case.
How they built it was with glass on both sides of the wood.
Every morning, when we came to make sure everything was clean, nothing was messed, the doll would be outside.
Tell her about the story right in this room.
We were standing outside on the porch.
So the door's really heavy, and it was latched.
And all of a sudden, the door just slammed really hard.
Everybody else jumped.
We saw some people run the other way.
Laura, tell Amy about co-workers getting sick.
Getting dizzy, nauseated, kind of a streak of the flu.
I'm pretty exhausted when I leave here.
So does that make sense? Yes.
I did do a sketch of some of the outside people that I encountered and how they are draining the living.
Take a look at this.
Oh, God.
Oh, my gosh.
Uh-huh.
That explains why I feel the way I do sometimes.
STEVE: What do these people want? The majority of them feel that they were here first and this was their land.
So their common goal, the people who live outside, is to drive out everyone here.
They want the dead gone, and they want the living gone.
Wow.
Oh, my God.
How's that make you feel, hearing all this? Just really freaks me out.
I'm just stunned.
I can understand why all this is happening, to know how many spirits are here.
It's like they have no rest.
I don't know if I'd feel comfortable coming back here to work.
One thing I've learned this week is that Hawaiians have a very different attitude about the paranormal.
You believe in spirits, and you believe in respecting the dead.
So I know you want to make sure this place is safe for both the living and the dead.
To find out how you can do that, I'm gonna turn it over to Amy.
I think that, if you do a few things, it'll help a great deal.
The first thing that I would have you do, because you have such an eclectic group here, is to find various religious leaders.
And then, those individuals would proceed to do funeral rites from their faith.
This would assist the dead that are here from that particular religion to go ahead and move on.
Then, what I would have you do is bring in maybe three or four different mediums to do a walk and see if they find any dead people that couldn't move on because they don't have a particular faith that they follow.
The mediums will help those dead move on.
Okay, so, what about the guy that's choking people? I think that he probably would prefer to move on.
But if you have any more incidents, then you're going to need to bring in an exorcist.
Now, as far as the haunted tours go, maybe toning it down just a smidge.
How can we tone it down? You know, maybe only having, like, one or two of the locations open.
Yeah, that would be nice.
I mean, it wasn't as bad when you first started.
The years pass on, and it got more spooky.
It really got worse.
How's your boy, Noa, gonna take this toning down stuff? Well, I think we can work it out.
What are you shaking your head for? I mean, I don't want to disappoint, but I don't think he's gonna like it.
You gonna talk to him, or you just gonna, you know? Of course I'm gonna talk to him.
I mean, he needs us, you know? Now, Laura, if Jeff follows Amy's advice, will you come back? Yeah.
It's encouraging to know that we can help the dead that are here.
And that's, I think, what our hope was to begin with.
It's been a real education.
I'll ask you first.
You gonna take Amy's advice? Yeah, definitely.
I mean, to do nothing would just make it worse.
Whatever will make this place better.
I'm gonna make sure he's gonna do what he's supposed to do.
It's very important.
I really hope Jeff follows my advice, or the dead will continue to put all those who visit in harm's way.
But I believe, if he performs funeral rites, brings in mediums and tones down the haunted tour, the dead will move on, and this important piece of Hawaii's history can stay open for years to come.

Previous EpisodeNext Episode