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			by Albert Budden, B.Ed. 
			Extracted from NEXUS Magazine, Volume 4, #1 
			 
			
			(Dec '96 - Jan 1997) 
			from
			
			NexusMagazine Website 
			
			recovered through
			
			WayBackMachine Website 
			
			  
			
				
					
						| 
						 
						Poltergeist effects may be as much the result of electromagnetic 
			anomalies as the workings of mischievous discarnate spirits, as 
			inventor John Hutchison has been able to demonstrate in his 
			laboratory.  
						 
						
						About the Author: 
						
						  
						
						Albert Budden, B.Ed., is an investigator 
						specializing in the 
					scientific study of the paranormal as well as 
					electromagnetics and health. He is the author of several 
					books, including Allergies and Aliens: The Visitation 
					Experience-An Environmental Health Issue (Discovery Times 
					Press, 1994), UFOs: Psychic Close Encounters- The 
					Electromagnetic Indictment (Blandford, 1995), and The 
					Poltergeist Machine: The Hutchison Effect-A Lift and 
					Disruption System (Discovery Times Press, 1996). He is a 
					member of the Environmental Medicine Foundation.  | 
					 
				 
			 
			
			 
			I have always been impressed by the Statement of Purpose published 
			in each and every issue of NEXUS, to make available 'hidden 
			knowledge', otherwise known as 'gnosis', in order to assist people 
			cope with the changes that the planet is going through.  
			
			  
			
			Whilst the 
			paranormal may not have the serious consequences for people as war 
			or environmental concerns, it would be difficult to state with any 
			confidence that 
			psychic phenomena and 
			
			the UFO issue have not engaged 
			public attention on a grand scale. The reasons for this boom are 
			obscure, except that it could be said that people are looking for 
			something that makes their lives meaningful. 
			 
			As for myself, I have been an investigator of anomalies for almost 
			16 years and have certainly found a rich source of fascinating 
			material - and, recently, an inventor who has helped me make sense 
			of one of the prime mysteries of our time: poltergeists. 
			 
			It is the amazing discoveries of this man, one 
			
			John Hutchison, from 
			British Columbia, Canada, that I would like to share with you here. 
  
			
			  
			
			 
			POLTERGEIST 
			ACTIVITY 
			
			 
			The general public has been treated to big-budget, special-effects 
			movies on poltergeist activity and has been led to regard it as 
			consisting of spectacular phenomena involving spirits from other 
			dimensions who enter our domestic world and wreak havoc.  
			
			  
			
			I suspect 
			that few film-goers realize that there is a reality behind this 
			movie mythology, where furniture does move, objects do levitate and 
			sail round the room, fires do start behind locked doors and in 
			impossibly enclosed places, water does mysteriously vanish, objects 
			do appear to arrive from nowhere and seem to vanish just as 
			strangely, iron bars are found twisted and broken, and mirrors 
			shattered. 
			 
			Probably most bemusing, however, are the effects on electronic 
			devices and electrical equipment, causing them to perform strange 
			feats. Television sets switch themselves on and off, repeated 
			telephone connections are made which engineers consider 
			'impossible', and computers show programs that have not been 
			installed by anyone or information that is inaccessible through 
			normal use.  
			
			  
			
			What causes these weird and unnerving effects, and what 
			do they have to do with an inventor in Canada? 
  
			
			  
			
			 
			AN 
			INVESTIGATION 
			
			 
			Cases come my way through contact with people who know of my 
			interest in anomalies (I have had three books published), and each 
			case brings its own surprises. I was certainly not ready for the 
			situation I met when I arrived at the 'haunted' home of a 
			middle-aged couple in Welyn Garden City in Hertfordshire, UK.  
			
			  
			
			I use 
			a small tape recorder for interviews, and as we settled down in 
			their comfortable lounge I was startled by the noise of a loud crack 
			which seemed to come from the wall opposite me. Neither Jane nor 
			David, as I shall call them, reacted with any degree of surprise. 
			 
			
				
				"That happens all the time," they told me casually. 
				 
			 
			
			Somewhat 
			distracted, I fiddled with my tape recorder, setting it down on the 
			low table before me, beside a cup of coffee.  
			
			  
			
			Apparently, unexplained 
			noises were commonplace in this household, including some heavy, 
			plodding footsteps along an upper passage during the small hours of 
			the morning. 
			 
			Jane and David then regaled me with accounts of light bulbs which 
			constantly popped, a video recorder which refused to work on some 
			days, vases of flowers that sailed into the air before dashing 
			themselves on the carpet, matches which caught fire spontaneously 
			inside their box inside a drawer, water taps which turned themselves 
			on and off, the doorbell which chimed as they stood at the open door 
			with nobody pressing the button, dressing-table mirrors which 
			cracked increasingly almost every night, a stone statue on the patio 
			which caught fire and explosively lost its arms, legs and head (all 
			of which were found several yards away down the garden), and most 
			disturbing, considering the amounts of energy involved, a large 
			heavy hardwood table which overturned itself overnight on a regular 
			basis (about twice a week). 
			 
			Barely taking all this in, but knowing that I had it all on tape, I 
			reached for the coffee in front of me on the table - but it was 
			swirling around in the cup like a mini-whirlpool. I looked at Jane 
			and David who just shrugged in unison. The whirlpool effect stopped 
			suddenly, but I had lost interest in drinking my coffee. 
			 
			Readers in the UK, USA and Australia who have read my books may 
			realize that I am no longer puzzled as to the causes of such 
			phenomena, as I feel sure, after 16 years, that I know what they 
			are.  
			 
			One of the instruments that I always take on any investigation is a 
			field meter which measures the levels of electromagnetic pollution 
			at a location. Jane and David allowed me to wander around their home 
			with the meter, and it soon became clear to me as I went from room 
			to room that the place was subject to sudden and powerful power 
			surges.  
			
			  
			
			I could have foreseen this, even if I had not developed the 
			electromagnetic pollution approach (for which I am known) for the 
			understanding of anomalies, as there was a 40-foot-tall radio mast, 
			for transmitting line-of-sight microwave signals, erected just five 
			feet away from the outside wall. Apparently, as the planning and 
			safety authorities do not regard sitting power lines over residential 
			properties as hazardous to health, a microwave tower is thought of 
			as nothing to be concerned about. 
			 
			Jane and David's health problems were typical of people who have 
			spent a prolonged period close to a source of electromagnetic 
			fields. Their problems included masked food allergies, chemical 
			sensitivities, electrical hypersensitivity, and photophobia 
			(hypersensitivity to light) which forced both of them to wear tinted 
			spectacles. Their condition was not helped by their having been 
			radio hams for several years; this only added to their exposure 
			levels.  
			 
			The readings in several rooms exceeded 100 milligauss per meter as a 
			magnetic field density; between 25 to 35 kilovolts electric field; 
			and over 0.5 milliwatts per square centimeter intermittently in the 
			RF scale. None of the fields was constant, but they would suddenly 
			surge through the house. 
			 
			Even before I had taken any readings, I was aware of the typical 
			signs and symptoms that I feel when exposed to a strong field 
			source. I felt a tingling sensation on the backs of my hands, the 
			hairs on my arms stood out, and throughout my visit I battled with a 
			thunderous headache which came on seconds after entering the house 
			and lifted 10 minutes or so after leaving it. I have not found one 
			case of 'poltergeist' activity which did not happen in an 
			electromagnetic hot-spot. 
			 
			It was a deep-in-thought investigator who took the train home to 
			London, and I could not resist listening to the recording I had 
			made. However, not really to my surprise, the tape was blank. 
			 
			
			  
			
			Instead, I thought of the implications of these weird field effects 
			and realized that to anyone with a layman's knowledge of 
			electromagnetic fields they must appear as an extremely unlikely 
			energy source to produce the movement of objects and materials that 
			did not have ferrous content (i.e., ceramics, water, stone, concrete 
			and wood). Anyone who has experimented with magnets soon finds out 
			that only iron is affected.  
			
			  
			
			It was little wonder that
			psychokinesis 
			or PK was thought to be involved, but I regarded this as a 
			distinctly different process from apparent poltergeist activity. 
  
			
			  
			
			 
			ANALYSIS OF 
			'POLTERGEIST' PHENOMENA  
			 
			From a scientific point of view, how could all of the strange 
			effects reported by Jane and David be understood? 
			 
			
			  
			
			Let us take them 
			one at a time: 
			
				
					- 
					
					Light bulbs constantly 'pop'. 
					A power surge will supply power to a circuit through the atmosphere 
			and through the glass of a bulb, subjecting the tungsten filament to 
			increased levels of electricity. These repeated 'boosts' to a 
			filament will create a small movement each time, especially when the 
			filament is hot and more flexible when the bulb is on. It will not 
			be long before this repeated movement induces metal fatigue, and 
			soon, when the light is switched on, the filament will break with 
			that familiar 'ping'.
     
					- 
					
					The video machine malfunctions on some occasions but works on 
			others. A magnetic field can affect the electronic circuitry, causing it to 
			malfunction by inducing what are known as magnetostrictive effects. 
			That is to say, a magnetic field will cause the microscopic ferrite 
			components to deform so that critical contacts are lost - in turn, 
			inducing the circuitry to fail. When the field drops, the ferrite 
			components resume their normal dimensions, contacts are regained and 
			the circuitry functions normally.
     
					- 
					
					Loud snapping 'clicks' and heavy, plodding footsteps are heard.
					 When iron or steel is magnetized by a field which then abruptly 
			drops, an auditory sound wave is produced by a mechanism called 
			magneto-strictive acoustics, also known as the Page Effect. 
			Deep-sounding 'thuds' or high-pitched 'cracks' will be heard 
			depending on the thickness and length of the metal and how it is 
			held in place in a building.  
					  
					
					For example, thick metal girders 
			embedded along a floor will produce a series of progressive 'thuds' 
			as the field moves along them, giving the impression of footsteps, 
			whereas a thin iron conduit carrying wiring embedded in a wall will 
			produce a sharp 'snap'.  
				 
			 
			
			So far, these phenomena can be understood by identifying them in the 
			Handbook of Magnetic Phenomena by Harry E. Burke.1 The fires inside 
			matchboxes which are inside drawers could certainly be ignited by 
			the thermal effects of microwaves, and I have personally seen 
			flash-bulbs blown at a distance by the diathermy effect induced by a 
			microwave field. 
			 
			
			  
			
			The chiming doorbells could easily be induced by 
			power surges activating the circuitry, just as car alarms can be set 
			off in this way. One would not have thought that taps could be 
			turned by magnetic fields because of the levels of mechanical force 
			needed, but it was pointed out to me that a whole range of seemingly 
			mysterious events, including doors locking, windows flying open and 
			taps turning, can be typical indicators of imminent Earth tremors. 
			Such reports are collected by seismologists and are known as 
			"diagnostics". 
			 
			
			  
			
			These revelations have shown me that not everything 
			can be understood from a commonsense, everyday logic point of view 
			and that 'hidden knowledge' can be found through a disciplined 
			tradition of repeated mental exercises, commonly known as education!
			 
			 
			However, as we work our way down the list of 'poltergeist' 
			phenomena, it becomes clear that there is a point where the laws of 
			physics cannot help us and we venture into the realms of the 
			unknown, the unclassified and the purely experimental. How do 
			objects, some of them quite heavy, levitate when they are not made 
			of iron or have any iron content? (The heavy table must have moved 
			for it to have overturned.) 
			 
			
			  
			
			How does stone and/or concrete shatter 
			and/or catch fire? How does mirror-glass crack? And how did 
			electromagnetic fields make my coffee turn into a mini-whirlpool 
			before my eyes? I had a problem.
			 
			
			  
			
			I knew that poltergeist activity 
			took place in electromagnetic hot-spots, but what were the physical 
			mechanisms involved in generating these effects? 
			 
			 
			 
			THE 
			POLTERGEIST MACHINE 
			 
			This is where the experimental findings of John Hutchison, the electromagnetics pioneer in British Columbia, Canada, enter our 
			arena of understanding - up to a point, that is. For what he has 
			fortuitously discovered shows without a doubt that poltergeist 
			activity is electromagnetic in nature. His research opens doors 
			which lead to more questions than answers. 
			 
			So what is it that Hutchison found that made the national television 
			news in three different countries (the USA, Japan and Canada)? 
			 
			Basically, what Hutchison did was cram into a single room a variety 
			of devices which emit electromagnetic fields (such as 
			Tesla coils, 
			van de Graaff generators, RF transmitters, signal generators, etc.). 
			He found that after they had been running for a while, effects began 
			to occur that were identical to what have come to be regarded as 
			poltergeist phenomena. 
			 
			
			  
			
			Objects of any material levitated into the 
			air and hovered there, or moved about and then fell; fires started 
			in unlikely places around the building; a mirror smashed at a 
			distance of 80 feet away; metal distorted and broke; water 
			spontaneously swirled in containers; lights appeared in the air and 
			then vanished; metal became white-hot but did not burn any 
			surrounding materials; and so on. 
			 
			Everything that psychical researchers have been documenting for 
			decades as poltergeist activity - and that priests have been called 
			in to exorcise - eventually turned up in the laboratory where John 
			Hutchison's device operated. 
			 
			
			  
			
			Although it was made up of different 
			parts, it operated as a single entity, and phenomena occurred in the 
			same unpredictable way as reported poltergeists: you could be there 
			for days and nothing would happen, then suddenly coins would flip 
			and fly, water would swirl and a transformer would blow. And this 
			brings me to an unfortunate aspect of the device: it has a tendency 
			to destroy itself. It is worth recalling at this point that 
			psychical researchers have in fact dubbed poltergeist activity as 
			"destructive haunting". 
			 
			Therefore, I was vindicated in that it was clear that classical 
			poltergeist phenomena are generated by EM field effects - but how? 
			 
			
			  
			
			These were not conventional magnetic phenomena or those of ordinary 
			static electricity which can disturb non-ferrous materials. And 
			there were other unusual aspects that had to be taken into account: 
			the effects that occurred were all at low power and at a distance. 
			 
			On one video recording a 19-pound bronze cylinder is seen to rise 
			majestically into the air, at a distance of 80 feet from the centre 
			of the device, but, incredibly, Hutchison tells us: 
			
				
				"The source power was 110 volts AC. One side of the AC line had a 
			power factor capacitor (60 cycles, 250 volts) and a 100-amp current 
			limiter." 
			 
			
			On another occasion, when Hutchison's layout of apparatus and 
			equipment was reproduced by an electrical engineering company 
			interested in this device, he explained: 
			
				
				"All components are powered from a single 15-amp, 110-volt, 60-Hz 
			supply." 
			 
			
			 
			 
			
			ELECTROMAGNETIC POWER TO THE PEOPLE
			 
			 
			Before we examine aspects of Hutchison's device in more detail, let 
			us remember that the aim of this article is to assist people around 
			the world adapt to an accelerating transformation. As we can see 
			from the recent increase in interest in the paranormal, 
			understanding the implications of poltergeist phenomena would 
			certainly qualify as a valuable goal. 
			 
			Until now, the general public has been led to think of poltergeists 
			as spectacular fiction, and, for many decades, status quo psychical 
			researchers have done little better by regarding this phenomenon as 
			the activity of spirits of the dead or intelligences from the astral 
			plane. At this stage of my career as an investigator of the 
			paranormal, and at this stage in our developing awareness, which is 
			an integral part of the generalized transformation, people are 
			hungry for answers. 
			 
			
			  
			
			
			They have had enough of regarding strange 
			phenomena as permanent mysteries and want to move forward. We are at 
			the crossroads. We can continue along the road where mysteries 
			remain unknown and are kept as such by the traditional psychical 
			research establishments (I cannot name them for fear of litigation), 
			or we can seriously examine fresh alternatives which begin new 
			directions that give some real hope for answers and understanding. 
			 
			Many people in the UK and USA already know of my environmental 
			causation approach to the paranormal and anomalies in general, by 
			the movement I have launched in my books. If I were to encapsulate 
			my case in a single general statement, I would say this:  
			 
			
				
				that in the 
			understanding of the paranormal, electromagnetics are as fundamental 
			as genetics are to biology.  
			 
			
			
			However, as we will now see in the 
			exploration of the 
			Hutchison device, this certainly does not mean 
			that if we identify poltergeists as electromagnetic in nature, we 
			can all pack up and go home, mystery solved. In fact, the situation 
			is the reverse as we can now enter realms of real scientific 
			possibilities, although they do begin to sound like science fiction! 
			 
			
			  
			
			
			That is to say, some very strange doors begin to open... 
			 
			For example, part of the Hutchison effect literally rips half-inch 
			square steel bars apart and actually shreds the shattered ends (all 
			at low power and at a distance, remember). Tremendous energies come 
			from somewhere, and in his experiments with the disruption of metal 
			masses in the laboratory, Hutchison has developed his own ideas. He 
			wonders if somehow the fabric of space-time is actually breached. 
			 
			
			  
			
			
			As 
			he puts it: 
			
				
				"The idea is to excite the surface skin of the masses and their 
			atoms to create an unstable space-time situation. This might allow 
			the fields from the Tesla coils and RF-generation equipment to lock 
			up in a local space-time situation. My thought is that now a small 
			amount of energy is released from the vast reservoir in space-time 
			at the sub-atomic level to create a disruptive or movement effect." 
			 
			
			
			Suddenly we are considering the atomic physics of poltergeist 
			activity! 
			 
			
			  
			
			
			There are few things more exciting than to realize 
			connections between areas that were previously thought to be 
			entirely unconnected. We could eventually move on and devise 
			experiments to test the limits of poltergeist activity - and then, 
			the floodgates are open! We are moving through strange landscapes 
			that everyone had previously thought of as only vague possibilities. 
			 
			Modern psychical researchers who regard themselves as insightful and 
			progressive now say, 
			 
			
				
				"You know, in the future, what we now think of 
			as the paranormal will be commonplace, and not only understood but 
			actually used in our everyday lives; for example, to dematerialize 
			objects in one location and rematerialize them in another." 
				 
			 
			
			
			But this 
			"future" has to begin somewhere, and it would appear that 
			the 
			application of electromagnetics to poltergeist activity is in fact 
			this early beginning. 
			 
			However, it is ironic that this discovery was not originated in 
			state-of-the-art government physics laboratories by a highly 
			qualified and experienced scientist, but by someone who is the 
			classic individual experimenter and self-made physicist. John 
			Hutchison began his personalized journey through electromagnetics at 
			an early age and, by accident, discovered the unusual effects 
			described. 
			 
			
			  
			
			
			But let us continue by considering in more detail the 
			phenomena his device can generate. 
			 
			 
			 
			THE 
			HUTCHISON EFFECT - A LIFT, DISRUPTION AND LUMINOUS ENERGY SYSTEM 
			 
			The original way that Hutchison set out his range of apparatus was, 
			by industrial standards, primitive and crowded, with poor 
			connections and hand-wound coils.  
			
			  
			
			But it was with this layout with 
			its erratic standards that he obtained most of the best examples of 
			objects levitating, despite the fact that the maximum power drawn 
			was 1.5 kilowatts, and this from the ordinary power sockets of the 
			house mains. 
			 
			The Hutchison device produces effects which can basically be divided 
			into two categories, propulsive and energetic. It can induce lift in 
			objects made of any material and also propel them laterally. It has 
			been noted that there are four types of trajectory that affect 
			objects weighing a few pounds, and all of these upward movements 
			begin with a twisting spiral movement.  
			
			  
			
			Also, there has to be a 
			particular geometry in relation to the direction of gravity, i.e., 
			downwards of these objects, for them to be affected in this way. 
			Some objects will not take off if you turn them on their sides, but 
			will if you stand them on their ends. It is evident, therefore, that 
			the relationship of their physical forms to the fields which swirl 
			invisibly around them is important. 
			 
			Returning to the four modes of trajectory, 
			
				
					- 
					
					first, there is the 
			looping arc, where objects take off relatively slowly over a period 
			of seconds, loop in the air and fall back to earth  
					- 
					
					then there is 
			the ballistic take-off where objects shoot upwards suddenly, hit the 
			ceiling and fall back down  
					- 
					
					a third type of trajectory is a powered 
			one where there appears to be a continuous lifting force 
					 
					- 
					
					the 
			fourth is where an object moves upwards and just hovers for some 
			time  
				 
			 
			
			As mentioned, these objects can be of any material whatsoever 
			- wood, plastics, copper, zinc, styrofoam, etc. It must be mentioned 
			that 99 per cent of the time the objects do nothing at all, and one 
			can wait for days before anything happens, but it is just this 
			erratic unpredictability that one finds when investigating 
			poltergeist activity. 
			 
			Another major area of activity is the disruptive phenomenon where 
			materials are destroyed. Hutchison has a collection of metal samples 
			which have been broken and/or deformed, indicating that high energy 
			levels are involved, as mentioned before. 
			 
			As one may imagine, this device has attracted intense interest from 
			a variety of professional, academic and industrial sources, not to 
			mention covert military attention. 
			 
			In the USA, a respected and well-qualified electrical engineer, 
			George Hathaway, has taken on the research and development of the 
			device. As explained, although the device has many interrelated 
			parts, it acts as a single entity.  
			
			  
			
			Of the disruptive effects on 
			metals and other materials he relates: 
			
				
				"The disruption part of this... system has produced confirmatory 
			physical samples that include water, aluminum, iron, steel, 
			molybdenum, wood, copper, bronze, etc... We have tested various 
			pieces that have broken apart, for hardness, ductility, etc. We have 
			used optical and electron microscopes.
  "Two samples of aluminum... one of which is twisted up in a 
			left-handed spiral... and another which was blown into little fibres... molybdenum 
			rods which are supposed to withstand temperatures of about 5,000 
			degrees F... We watched these things wiggle back and forth... In 
			general, a collection of pieces of metal shows that they have been 
			blasted apart or twisted..." 
			 
			
			In domestic settings where 'poltergeist' activity is usually 
			observed, metal-bending and deformities take place with less vigor 
			- which is to be expected due to the accidental field configurations 
			produced as electromagnetic pollution from power lines, radio 
			transmitters, civilian radar, etc., interacts with Earth energies - 
			otherwise known as geomagnetic and geoelectric fields - at locations 
			inadvertently built over fault lines. 
			 
			The following example taken from a well-known case in the UK - the 
			Enfield poltergeist - shows a typical instance of metal-bending:
			 
			
				
				"It was 10.15 am on 6 December 1977. Janet was leaning on the 
			kitchen worktop, and her mother was sitting down. Both were out of 
			reach of the stove. Suddenly, they both heard a noise coming from 
			the teapot - the same metal one that Grosse had seen rocking in 
			front of his eyes. Mrs Harper picked up the pot and found that its 
			stout metal lid had arched upwards, just as the spoons had done, 
			bending right out of shape so that it no longer fitted the pot. I 
			took the lid in both hands, and even using considerable force I was 
			unable to bend it back." 
			 
			
			Hathaway, in his descriptions of metal deformity, clearly gives the 
			impression of intense energies at work: 
			
				
				"The largest piece [of metal] is about 12-13 inches long. It's two 
			inches in diameter, of regular mild steel, and a 3/8 of an inch long 
			part was blasted off the end and crumbled like a cookie." 
			 
			
			However, even the domestic 'poltergeist' displays phenomena where 
			extremely high energy levels are involved, although in the following 
			example, also from the Enfield case, we get the impression that more 
			conventional high-magnetic-field densities are involved: 
			
				
				"Mr Playfair... was already on his feet and standing in the doorway 
			of their bedroom, wondering if he was seeing things.
  "The entire iron frame of the gas fire had been wrenched out of the 
			wall, and was standing at an angle on the floor, still attached to 
			the half-inch-diameter brass pipe that connected it to the mains. 
			The pipe had been bent through an angle of thirty-two degrees. This 
			was a major demolition job, for the thing was cemented into the 
			brickwork, and it was out of the question to suggest that one of the 
			children could have wrenched it out. When we finally dismantled the 
			whole apparatus, we found it quite a job even to move. It must have 
			weighed at least fifty pounds." 3 
			 
			
			We may ask ourselves what new directions for investigation into 
			'poltergeists' are open to us in the light of the Hutchison Effect. 
			 
			
			  
			
			Startling as it may seem, an answer is there ready-made for us in 
			the almost matter-of-fact information that Hathaway supplies: 
			
				
				"Fragments have been analyzed and found to have an anomalously high 
			silicon content, although the original material was not silicon 
			steel... a standing piece is 5-6 inches tall, 1 and 1/4 inches in 
			diameter and is a piece of case-hardened steel... The case-hardening 
			has been blown off at the top and about 3/4 of an inch of it 
			vaporized during an experiment... a piece of iron was analyzed for 
			composition which showed anomalously high amounts of copper... wood 
			particles were also found inside a piece of aluminium..." 
			 
			
			Evidently, the energies involved are able to 
			reorganize materials in 
			a way that is virtually impossible by any other means, but we are 
			now provided with a previously unheard-of perspective. From the 
			Hutchison experiments, it is clear that an analysis of the 
			composition of metals at the 'poltergeist' site, in order to detect 
			similar mixture-anomalies, is an essential investigative procedure.
			 
			 
			Although we may shelve theories of psychokinesis and separate them 
			out from 'poltergeist' activity as belonging to dice-throwing 
			experiments or the spoon-bending of Uri Geller, the weird physical 
			antics of the mixing and matching fields of the 
			Hutchison Effect 
			provide us with something far stranger.  
			
			  
			
			This underscores the point 
			made earlier that although it sounds as if the enigma of the 
			'poltergeist' is being diminished by identifying it as 
			electromagnetic field activity, in actual fact the mystery is merely 
			being redirected. 
			 
			Physicists and electrical engineers should now reconsider the nature 
			of severely modulated electromagnetic fields, for there are 
			evidently previously unrealized potentials. The energies involved in 
			the Hutchison Effect are clearly the same ones at work during 
			'poltergeist' activity, and it is only the ignorance and entrenched 
			positions of the psychical research fraternity that prevent them 
			from accepting these insights into electromagnetic energy 
			potentials. 
			 
			These energies include weird thermal effects.  
			
			  
			
			During Hutchison's 
			experiments, flames have been produced and emitted from blocks of 
			concrete, and fires have broken out in different parts of the 
			building where the device was housed. Again, these effects are 
			typical of 'poltergeist' reports. On one occasion, a steel file was 
			held in place against a wooden board by two plywood struts, to 
			prevent it taking off. The file glowed white-hot, but the board when 
			examined afterwards was not even singed.  
			
			  
			
			Such mischievous thermal 
			antics of 'phantom arsonists' have been attributed to the 'spirit 
			energy of the poltergeist', whatever that may be, but Hathaway's 
			warnings are more to do with effective safety practices in the 
			laboratory: 
			
				
				"From time to time there are scorch marks on the boards from other 
			experiments. The apparatus makes fire spontaneously in parts of the 
			lab, if you're not careful." 
			 
			
			The device can also induce unusual aurora-like lighting effects in 
			mid-air.  
			
			  
			
			Once when Hutchison was filming in 1981, a sheet of 
			iridescence suddenly descended between the camera and some of the 
			hardware being used. It had a strange pinkish centre to it, and 
			after it hovered there for a short period it vanished just as 
			suddenly as it had appeared. Hutchison actually thought he had been 
			hallucinating, but when the film was developed it transpired that 
			there had actually been something objective there. 
			 
			Once again, the Enfield case provides us with comparable examples of 
			strange, luminous phenomena in a domestic setting, and in this 
			extract they are accompanied by other typical phenomena also 
			explainable within the Hutchison Effect: 
			
				
				"The Harpers hoped to find some peace and quiet in the Burcombes' 
			house, but it was not to be. From the kitchen Sylvie suddenly let 
			out a piercing scream and dropped the kettle she was holding.  
				 
				
				  
				
				It was 
			some time before she could calm down enough to describe what had 
			happened. 
				 
				
					
					'I was just pouring the water from the kettle into the 
			teapot,' she said, 'when something appeared right in front of my 
			eyes and then dropped onto the kitchen unit top, and bounced once.'
					 
				 
				
				It was a plastic rod, about six inches long, from one of the 
			children's toy sets.  
				 
				
					
					'I sort of looked down, opened my eyes, and 
			this thing was in front of me,' she told Grosse when he arrived 
			shortly afterwards. 'I screamed, shouted and jumped back, and after 
			I jumped back I saw the thing jump and come up again.' 
				 
				
				"Grosse questioned Mrs Burcombe very carefully about this incident, 
			which seemed to be a genuine case of one of the rarest of all 
			psychic phenomena: materialization. The plastic rod had definitely 
			not been thrown at her, she insisted. It had just appeared in front 
			of her eyes and dropped down... But he had already seen too much, in 
			both his own and his sister's homes. He had watched open-mouthed as 
			a lamp slowly slid across a table and fell to the floor, vibrating 
			violently. 
				 
				  
				
				He had seen a drawer open by itself. He had felt an 
			invisible force stop him closing his own bedroom door, which simply 
			stuck half-closed though it normally swung shut on its own. And he 
			had seen something far more alarming as he stood one day at the 
			bottom of the Harper's staircase, looking up it.  
				
					
					'I saw this light,' 
			he said. 'It was the equivalent, I should say, of twelve inches 
			vertical. It looked like a fluorescent light behind frosted glass, 
			which burned fiercely and gradually faded away'..."4 
				 
			 
			
			With the insights gained from what is possible during operation of 
			the Hutchison device, coupled with my own findings that 
			'poltergeist' activity takes place at locations that are 
			electromagnetic hot-spots, we can begin to understand what is going 
			on in such cases.  
			
			  
			
			Unusual light phenomena can occur, and on 
			consulting Burke's Handbook of Magnetic Phenomena we find several 
			mechanisms documented where magnetic fields interact with light to 
			produce specific optical effects that are predictable in laboratory 
			conditions, but are obviously most startling when they occur 
			spontaneously in domestic settings. Having stated this, however, the 
			sheet of iridescent light which appeared during Hutchison's 
			experiments also came as an unexpected and surprising phenomenon. 
			 
			In the extract given above, it is not difficult to rethink the 
			apparent materialization of the plastic rod as a typical trajectory 
			of the Hutchison Effect, observed many times and recorded on video. 
			Likewise, the lamp slowly sliding across the table and vibrating 
			could have come straight out of the catalogue of effects similarly 
			induced. In fact, compared with the extreme effects that Hutchison 
			can obtain with his device, domestic 'poltergeist' phenomena which 
			previously seemed so dramatic, now seem quite tame.  
			
			  
			
			But as already 
			noted, this lessening of effect is consistent with the fact that the 
			Hutchison device involves a concentrated collection of devices which 
			appear to act as a single entity, whereas an electromagnetic 
			hot-spot occurs by the chance juxtaposition of freak environmental 
			field sources. 
			 
			Unfortunately, the investigators present during the 'poltergeist' 
			activity at Green Street, Enfield, England, in the late 1970s, did 
			not carry out a thorough field survey or identify the field sources 
			involved, despite the fact that a magnetometer registered distinct 
			deflections as objects were 'thrown' across the room.  
			
			  
			
			In fact, there 
			is the distinct impression that, for them, electromagnetic fields 
			were not a welcome explanation for the phenomena they witnessed, as 
			the Playfair book relates how they discontinued use of the 
			magnetometer once it showed that power surges occurred in 
			conjunction with physical phenomena: 
			
				
				"When everybody was settled into bed, we switched on both tape 
			recorders, Eduardo's being connected to the signal from the 
			magnetometer, and left the room, since I had told him that nothing 
			would happen if we both stayed there. From the landing we could keep 
			an eye on the dial of the machine, and in the following forty 
			minutes Janet's pillow was twice thrown across the room just as it 
			had been the previous evening in my presence.  
				  
				
				This time, of course, 
			I could not see Janet, although Mrs Harper assured me at once that 
			she had not thrown it. And each time the needle on the magnetometer 
			did indeed deflect, though Eduardo thought this might have been 
			caused by creaking bedsprings."5 
			 
			
			It is difficult to understand how bedsprings could cause power 
			surges strong enough to register on a magnetometer (I, myself, have 
			used many types of these instruments during investigations), and 
			even more difficult to understand how they could induce deflections 
			which happened to coincide with the movements of objects.  
			
			  
			
			Also, it's 
			a wonder the investigators did not eliminate this as an option, if 
			they thought it was possible, by simply moving the instrument away 
			from the bedsprings.  
			
			  
			
			Magnetometers are of course designed to 
			withstand the effects of magnetic fields, and so it is even more 
			puzzling why the following reasoning and actions were employed: 
			
				
				"I was a little worried that he might have to go back to his 
			university and report that the expensive instrument he had borrowed 
			without permission had broken down, so we called off the experiment 
			once we were satisfied that it seemed possible that there was some 
			link between poltergeist activity and anomalous behavior of the 
			surrounding magnetic field."6 
			 
			
			One of the primary investigators of the 
			Green Street 'poltergeist' 
			in Enfield, North London, was Maurice Grosse, who has given many 
			lectures on his experiences and is now regarded as one of the 
			leading authorities on this kind of phenomenon.  
			
			  
			
			On the whole, 
			'poltergeists' are regarded as discarnate and mischievous entities 
			who home in on the energies of an adolescent focus and who 
			unintentionally wreak havoc wherever they go, although particular 
			locations are usually favored for the most spectacular phenomena. 
			 
			In the course of my career as an investigator, I have discovered 
			that 'poltergeist' activity takes place in electromagnetic hot- 
			spots, and is electromagnetic in nature.  
			
			  
			
			However, 'poltergeist 
			expert' Maurice Grosse takes a different view: 
			
				
				"Albert's enthusiasm for his suppositions does him credit, 
			but... displays a distinct lack of practical experience of psychic 
			phenomena... I look forward with great interest to the day when 
			flying boxes, stones, toys, heavy items of furniture, plus 
			spontaneous fires and water phenomena, together with the passage of 
			matter through matter, levitation, metal bending, to name just a few 
			examples of poltergeist high jinks I have personally experienced, 
			can be explained by electromagnetic and bio-electromagnetic 
			activity."7  
			 
			
			Well, Maurice, this is the day you have been waiting for! In fact, 
			it was "the day" over 15 years ago when Guy Lyon Playfair's book on 
			the Enfield 'poltergeist' was published in 1981 in the UK, when at 
			the same time on the other side of the world in British Columbia, 
			Canada, John Hutchison's device was just getting underway and 
			generating all of the physical 'poltergeist' activity you were 
			considering. 
  
			
			  
			
			 
			
			ELECTROMAGNETIC HYPERSENSITIVITY
			 
			 
			This is not the place to fully expound my own biological research 
			into how the human body reacts to prolonged field exposure, except 
			to say that the body eventually acts as an oscillator and can add to 
			the electromagnetic mayhem generated at hot spots.  
			
			  
			
			
			That is to say, I 
			would add to the Hutchison Effect by including my own findings, as 
			outlined in my books, which point to 'poltergeists' being 
			electromagnetic phenomena, and my conclusion that there is a bio-electromagnetic aspect where the human body behaves as another 
			piece of electrical apparatus or hardware and re-radiates 
			generalized ambient fields in more beam-like, coherent forms.  
			
			  
			
			
			This 
			is a symptom of an increasingly common clinical condition known as 
			electromagnetic hypersensitivity (EH), caused by exposure to 
			electromagnetic pollution from power lines, transmitters, etc. The 
			condition was the subject for an international conference of medical 
			specialists and academics at Graz, Austria, in 1994. It is treated 
			at the Breakspear Hospital in Hertfordshire, England. 
			
			 
			However, nobody in psychical research here in England seems to be 
			aware of EH or the work of John Hutchison, and there are fixed ideas 
			which are protected with a religious fervor. Freak electromagnetic 
			field conditions which seem to stretch the laws of physics to almost 
			breaking point are not a welcome conclusion, although the history of 
			science is littered with painful upheavals where the established 
			view is turned on its head, and iconoclasts like myself and, 
			unwittingly, John Hutchison, threaten the status quo.  
			
			  
			
			
			For example, 
			Dr John Beloff, the Editor of Anomaly, the respected journal of the 
			Society of Psychical Research, wrote to me to tell me: 
			
				
				"Whatever the relevance of exposure to EM radiation... it has no 
			obvious bearing on psychic experiences in general." 
			 
			
			
			Having investigated reports of apparitions and 'poltergeists' in 
			hot-spot locations for over three years, and measured the fields 
			present with my trusty field meter, this statement made no sense at 
			all. Perhaps the reader will have some inkling of the sort of 
			establishment opposition I am up against, or may even refuse to 
			believe the Hutchison Effect themselves. 
			 
			However, it must be remembered that a number of well-known 
			electrical engineering organizations have been involved. For 
			example, McDonnell-Douglas Aerospace and the Max Planck Institute in 
			Germany, both took many photographs, some of which appear here. 
			 
			I anticipate that there will be a wave of controversy as a result of 
			this article, if the reactions here in the UK are anything to go by, 
			and I would be interested in any constructive suggestions that 
			readers may have. 
  
			
			  
			
			 
			Endnotes 
			
				
					
					1. Burke, Harry E., Handbook of 
					Magnetic Phenomena, Van Nostrand Reinhold Company, NY, 1986. 
					2. Playfair, Guy Lyon, This House Is Haunted, Sphere Books, 
					UK, 1981, p. 113. 
					3. ibid., p. 62. 
					4. ibid., p. 45. 
					5. ibid., pp. 77-78. 
					6. ibid. 
					7. Anomaly, Journal of the Association for the Scientific 
					Study of Anomalous Phenomena, UK, vol. 17, November 1995. 
				 
			 
			
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