By KAREN
VOYLES Sun Staff Writer |
"I've worked with police in 28 states and three foreign countries, so lots of it is over the
phone," Renier said. "I usually try to meditate before I start
and I'll burn some incense and have some wine to get in the
mood." |
WILLISTON
- Police had run out of leads in their two-year search for Norman
Lewis. They had done everything they could to locate the 76-year-old
man who disappeared with his truck, but left everything
else, including his
wallet, behind in April 1994.
The lack of leads
was one reason why Investigator Brian Hewitt was willing to listen
to a psychic's opinion on what might have happened. He was attending
a police conference in Orlando when psychic Noreen Renier gave
a demonstration.
Hewitt realized
police had no leads left to follow and mentioned Renier to the
Lewis family. Figuring that police had done about all they could Joe
Lewis paid Renier's $650 fee.
In less than
an hour, Renier - who had never been to Williston and was working
from her Orlando home - told police she had a strong sense that
Lewis would be found a few miles from his home in a water-filled area
near railroad tracks.
That information
led divers to a limerock pit outside Williston, but then-police
Chief Olin Slaughter was puzzled because there were no railroad
tracks visible. While divers were searching in the pit, nearby workers
uncovered something else - an abandoned railroad track.
Hours later,
Lewis' body was found inside his truck at the bottom of the pit.
"I don't think
we ever would have found him (Lewis) without her help," Slaughter
said.
Using psychics
is not something new for police, but it is often used as a last
resort in cases that appear unsolvable, according to Professor Ron Akres,
director of the University of Florida Center for Studies in
Criminology and Law.
"The track record
for psychics is about chance," Akres said. "The stories that come
out about psychics in police work are the successful ones. If you
keep doing something over and over, eventually it will hit and
that is what happens in those cases."
Renier said one
of the frustrating aspects of her work is calculating how often
what she describes as her mental images of a victim or suspect are accurate.
"Most of
the time, the police will take what I give them and then I never
hear anything again unless it's a big case like with Mr.
Lewis," Renier said.
Police are interested
in knowing more about how psychics work. Renier has been invited to
lecture at several departments in Florida, including the Sarasota
Police Department, as well as at the FBI National Academy in Quantico,
Virginia. However, no major research studies have been done on
psychics assisting police.
"That's because
what they do is non-verifiable," Akres said. "You can never prove
something doesn't exist, so then the question is what does it take
to prove that psychic powers do exist? I'm not denying that some
people may be psychic, but I wouldn't use one."
Renier, 60, is
unfazed by skeptics. She anticipated running into lots of them
when she moved to Williston several months ago. Until last fall, Renier
had never been to the Levy County community. The drive into town
from Gainesville along State Road 121 is what convinced her to
relocate.
"It was
just so beautiful and so peaceful," Renier said. Now living
in a small, three-bedroom home off State Road 121 with her cats
and two dogs, Renier has maintained a sense of humor about her
unusual occupation.
"I knew you would
call. That's why I left the answering machine on, Renier's voice says
on her answering machine. Renier has told a few of her close friends
about her occupation but it is not something she uses to open conversations.
"I understand the skeptics and I used to be one - everyone should
have some skepticism," Renier said. "I used to think of
psychics as someone with a big nose and a wart."
The first psychic
Renier met "didn't even have a pimple." Renier was working
at an Orlando hotel 20 years ago when that psychic rented a room
for a demonstration.
From that encounter,
Renier said she began exploring her own mental abilities and discovered
psychometry - picking up information from an
inanimate object. Psychometry, she says, is what she used to determine where
Lewis would be found.
"I do no
more than two police cases in a week because it is so intense,"
Renier said. Most of her work is done over the phone. While Renier
gets the greatest satisfaction from her police work, she also does
some work for individuals.
When Renier accepts
a police case, she tells investigators to send her something that
belonged to the victim. In Lewis' case, she had a piece of his
clothing. She also allowed officers to videotape her as she focused
her mind on determining where Lewis was likely to be found.
With a glass
of wine - to relax her - in one hand, and the clothing in the other
hand, Renier told investigators where to look.
"I've worked with police in 28 states and three foreign countries,
so lots of it is over the phone," Renier said.
"I usually try to meditate before I start and I'll burn some incense
and have some wine to get in the mood."
Renier will be
teaching a non-credit class on Extra-Sensory Perception at Santa Fe
Community College next month. What she would really like to teach
is a specialized course for investigators.
"My goal is to take a select group of officers and work on unsolved cases
while teaching them how to do this," Renier said.
"I think a lot of people have psychic abilities,
but they just never take the time to
develop them. This is really just a part of the mind like the
logical, rationale part of the mind. We really can't
explain how either part works."
Article provided for PSI Files by Noreen Reiner
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