View Full Version : Mandatory.com: "10 Strangest Unsolved American Mysteries"


JamesG
04-25-2012, 09:44 PM
10 Strangest Unsolved American Mysteries


Last week the NYPD and FBI relaunched their search for the remains of the 6-year-old boy Etan Patz, whose disappearance on his way to school helped launch a missing-children's movement that put kids' faces on milk cartons.

The disappearance of Patz is one of our nation's most notable mysteries. Here is our countdown of the strangest American mysteries yet to be solved.









1. The Oakville Blobs


http://i879.photobucket.com/albums/ab358/JamesGrec1/oakville-blobs.jpg



On August 7, 1994, a bizarre gelatinous substance fell on the town of Oakville, Washington. Over the next three weeks, the gooey rain would fall six times, usually during the middle of the night.

During the same time, Oakville residents began complaining of a mysterious illness similar to flu, with blurred vision and shortness of breath mixed in.





A sample of the substance was taken in for testing, and was found to have a high amount of human white blood cells. Further tests found that it contained two types of bacteria, one of which is found in the human digestive system.

This led some to believe that it was human waste from an airplane, but the Federal Aviation Administration disproved this. Generally, evidence from the sample supported that the rain blobs were "alive."





But nobody knows what the hell the blobs were. Ridiculous theories of ocean bombings causing jellyfish particles to fly 50 miles onto the city have been made, and many believe it was biological weapons testing by the military.

The only fact, though, is that no samples of the substance exist today.











2. The Black Dahlia


http://i879.photobucket.com/albums/ab358/JamesGrec1/black-dahlia.jpg



In January 1947, Elizabeth Short was gruesomely murdered. Her body was found mutilated, sliced in half at the waist, in Leimert Park in Los Angeles.

The media quickly publicized the story, giving her the nickname "The Black Dahlia."



Short's murder remains unsolved to this day, and is still the source of widespread speculation. Movies have been made and James Ellroy wrote a bestseller about it. But despite all the attention paid to this case, it was never solved.

It's quite possible the murderer was a man connected to other killings who served life in prison. Or the man could still be walking the streets today. Nobody knows.











3. The Murder of JonBenét Ramsey


http://i879.photobucket.com/albums/ab358/JamesGrec1/jonbenet.jpg



On Christmas Day in 1996, American child beauty contestant JonBenét Ramsey was murdered in her home in Boulder, Colo. The 6-year-old's body was found beaten and strangled in the basement of the family home just eight hours after she was reported missing.

Initially, her parents and brother were the prime suspects, but they were partially exonerated in 2003 thanks to DNA testing supporting that they were not involved.

Her parents were completely cleared in 2008.





In August 2006, John Mark Karr (still in the running for biggest creep of all time) confessed to killing Ramsey while he was being held on child pornography charges.

However, Karr's DNA did not match that found on JonBenét's body, and he was not charged.

The Boulder Police Department has been overseeing the reopened investigation since 2009.











4. The Orphanage Mayday Mystery


http://i879.photobucket.com/albums/ab358/JamesGrec1/10-apr30.jpg



On every May 1 since 1981, a cryptic ad has been placed by a group calling itself The Orphanage in the University of Arizona's student newspaper, the Arizona Daily Wildcat. Typically appearing as a mix of languages, symbols and mathematical equations, the ads have a few recurring themes.

The Orphanage, the secret society supposedly behind the ads, is offering "The Prize" which is an unidentified reward for whoever solves the mystery. White Rabbit/Wonder Bread are unknown items transported by The Orphanage, and images of Martin Luther appear often.

If you're confused, well, so are we.





A rumor has circulated for years that an eccentric lawyer named Robert Truman Hungerford, who claims to be the legal counsel for the secret organization, is actually the madman behind all of it.

It has never been proven, though.











5. Max Headroom Broadcast Signal Intrusion


http://i879.photobucket.com/albums/ab358/JamesGrec1/screen-shot-2012-04-24-at-121838-pm-1.jpg



We all have heard some pretty awesome Internet hacking stories, but what about a TV signal takeover?

In 1987, on the evening of November 22, an unknown hijacker was successful in interrupting two television stations within three hours. The first signal intrusion occurred on WGN-TV's "Nine O'Clock News" during the sports segment, when a person broke in for about 30 seconds wearing a Max Headroom mask (Max Headroom is a British artificial intelligence character).

There was no audio, just a buzzing sound as the person stood in front of a swaying piece of metal.





However, just a couple hours later, during the broadcast of "Doctor Who" on the PBS station WTTW, the signal was hijacked using the same video that was shown during the WGN intrusion.

This time, though, the person in the mask appeared with distorted audio and was on screen for a much longer time, ultimately mooning the camera and getting his butt smacked with a flyswatter by an unknown accomplice.

To this day, nobody knows who is responsible.











6. The Toxic Lady


http://i879.photobucket.com/albums/ab358/JamesGrec1/200252911-001.jpg



On the evening of February 19, 1994, 31-year-old Gloria Ramirez was admitted to the Riverside General Hospital's emergency room in Riverside, Calif. She was suffering from the effects of advanced cervical cancer. Shortly after being admitted, Ramirez passed out.

When hospital staff began trying to defibrillate her heart, several people noticed an oily sheen covering her body, and a garlic-like odor in the room. When a nurse attempted to draw blood, she noticed the smell of ammonia coming from the tube, and a doctor nearby saw manila-colored particles floating in the blood.

The nurse fainted, and the doctor, Julie Gorchynski, became very sick.





Ramirez died as many of the staff began falling ill. Her body was moved into isolation and the ER was evacuated. All in all, 23 people became ill, five were hospitalized, and one nurse was kept in the hospital for 10 days with tremors and apnea.

Gorchynski was the most seriously affected, having to stay in intensive care for two weeks, contracting apnea, hepatitis, pancreatitis, and necrosis of the bone marrow which crippled her legs and required at least three surgeries.





So what caused all this? After tests and analysis done by a hazardous materials team, the coroner, and the Ramirez family's pathologist, the final diagnosis was that she simply died of cervical cancer and wasn't toxic at all.

A possible explanation is that some toxic reaction took place inside Ramirez's body and gave off a poisonous gas that affected the staff. Another is that the ER victims suffered from a mass sociogenic illness, triggered by the frightening unknown odor.

In other words, their illnesses weren't real. But that is very hard to believe.











7. The Zodiac Killer


http://i879.photobucket.com/albums/ab358/JamesGrec1/zodiac.jpg



In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the serial killer operated in Northern California, claiming 37 murders in letters to local papers, although investigators agree on only seven victims (two of which survived).

The killer originated the name "Zodiac" in a series of taunting letters sent to the local Bay Area press. These letters included four cryptograms, only one of which has been solved.

Several suspects have been named in the killings, and several more people have come forward claiming to know who the killer is, but the case has remained open by the California Department of Justice since 1969.











8. Bird Deaths in Arkansas


http://i879.photobucket.com/albums/ab358/JamesGrec1/hkg4424387.jpg



On the last two New Year's Eves, in the city of Beebe, Ark., hundreds of blackbirds have fallen from the sky and died. On New Year's Eve, 2010, an estimated 5,000 birds were found dead on the ground, and this past New Year's Eve at least 100 birds fell from the sky before midnight.

Scientists blamed fireworks for the first mass bird death, saying they were spooked from their roosts by the explosions and began flying into homes, buildings, telephone poles and each other. No such explanation was given for the most recent deaths.





Scientists will say that mass in-air bird deaths are common, but to happen in the same small city on the same night two years in a row seems a little too coincidental to us.

And if this was so common, why doesn't it happen in more towns across America?











9. The Disappearance of Jimmy Hoffa


http://i879.photobucket.com/albums/ab358/JamesGrec1/hoffa.jpg



Perhaps the most famous "union man" ever, Jimmy Hoffa was last seen in late July 1975, at a restaurant in suburban Detroit. He was declared legally dead on July 30, 1982.

However, his body has never been found, and years of FBI investigations have not been able to conclusively determine Hoffa's fate. It is widely assumed, though, that he was killed by members of the Mafia.











10. JFK Assassination: The Babushka Lady


http://i879.photobucket.com/albums/ab358/JamesGrec1/jfk.jpg



Conspiracy theories are countless when it comes to the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Was Lee Harvey Oswald the only gunman? Was it an inside job? Were mobsters involved? But perhaps the strangest mystery is the identity of the "Babushka Lady."

Receiving the nickname because of the headscarf she was wearing, the Babushka Lady was seen holding a camera to her face before and after the shooting took place. In film accounts of the assassination, she can be seen joining the crowd going up the grassy knoll after the shooting in search of a gunman.

However, neither she nor the film she may have taken of the event have ever been positively identified.

Note: In 1970, a woman named Beverly Oliver came forward and claimed to be the Babushka Lady, but to this day has never been able to provide convincing proof.

http://www.mandatory.com/2012/04/24/10-strangest-unsolved-american-mysteries/?icid=maing-grid7|main5|dl13|sec1_lnk3%26pLid%3D155154#photo=1

PrettyinPink55
04-25-2012, 10:49 PM
Wow!!! Thanks for sharing that!!!
That definitely gave me chills!! :eek:

A lot of those I had no idea about.

I had never seen a picture that close-up of the gelatinous goop before!! YUCK!!!

dks64
04-26-2012, 12:19 AM
Re: "The Toxic Lady"

My sister went to school with her daughter. The hospital where she died is no longer there. I still wonder what really happened.

PrettyinPink55
04-26-2012, 12:34 AM
Re: "The Toxic Lady"

My sister went to school with her daughter. The hospital where she died is no longer there. I still wonder what really happened.

:eek:
Wow! Very strange!!!

FarinaforBrkfast
04-26-2012, 01:04 AM
Thanks so much! This is a great list!

Corkys-Place
04-26-2012, 02:28 AM
OMG How scary is that Max Headroom Hacker person? I just watched the Dr Who Clip he hacked into on the forbidden site.

I would've freaked out had I been watching the TV that night. :eek:

Necco
04-26-2012, 08:07 AM
I think they left one glaring mystery off the list.

Who, in fact, is so vain that they probably think that song is about them?!?!
:lol:

justins5256
04-26-2012, 09:33 AM
Kinda surprised at the inclusion of some of these as the "strangest" mysteries.

I remember first hearing of the Max Headroom incident in 2001 or so. I did a tape trade with a guy who had been rolling tape on the Dr. Who marathon on PBS on the fateful night the pirate broke in. I never watched the episode in it's entirety, just the pirate part. The audio on the pirate portion was extremely garbled and it was difficult to understand what the guy was saying.

My impression was this was someone with way too much time on their hands. I must say the guy showed some serious restraint. He probably could have totally owned PBS yet all he did was go on for a minute to broadcast this strange monolog which was mostly unintelligible. In the end, his restraint is probably what prevented him from getting caught. I'm sure if he continued these antics the signal could have been traced. It is almost admirable in a strange way...because of his restraint and the technical skill he would have needed to pull this off.

I have to wonder if the guy will ever come forward and make his identity known. I have no clue what the statute of limitations would be for something like this.

TheCars1986
04-26-2012, 10:27 AM
Kinda surprised at the inclusion of some of these as the "strangest" mysteries.

I remember first hearing of the Max Headroom incident in 2001 or so. I did a tape trade with a guy who had been rolling tape on the Dr. Who marathon on PBS on the fateful night the pirate broke in. I never watched the episode in it's entirety, just the pirate part. The audio on the pirate portion was extremely garbled and it was difficult to understand what the guy was saying.

My impression was this was someone with way too much time on their hands. I must say the guy showed some serious restraint. He probably could have totally owned PBS yet all he did was go on for a minute to broadcast this strange monolog which was mostly unintelligible. In the end, his restraint is probably what prevented him from getting caught. I'm sure if he continued these antics the signal could have been traced. It is almost admirable in a strange way...because of his restraint and the technical skill he would have needed to pull this off.

I have to wonder if the guy will ever come forward and make his identity known. I have no clue what the statute of limitations would be for something like this.

I've always figured the hacker was a technical wiz-kid type in his mid to late teens who got lucky and figured out how to hack into the television signal. I'm sure the reason why this didn't continue was because he was afraid of getting caught, and he's probably still laughing about it to this day. Back then it was probably pretty scary for those who tuned in to see "Dr. Who", but now I find it funny that he was able to pull it off without getting caught. A sort of anti-hero.

Killarney Rose
04-26-2012, 12:47 PM
My family has always known where Jimmy Hoffa was in the 90s. He was living quite comfortably in my middle son's bedroom...it was family lore that he was hiding out in there eating quite well on all the food and stuff my son left...the room was known as The Black Hole as things were sucked into it never to be seen again....:p


seriously, I have wondered about most of those cases at one time or another myself.

RobinW
04-26-2012, 12:57 PM
My impression was this was someone with way too much time on their hands. I must say the guy showed some serious restraint. He probably could have totally owned PBS yet all he did was go on for a minute to broadcast this strange monolog which was mostly unintelligible. In the end, his restraint is probably what prevented him from getting caught. I'm sure if he continued these antics the signal could have been traced. It is almost admirable in a strange way...because of his restraint and the technical skill he would have needed to pull this off.

I have to wonder if the guy will ever come forward and make his identity known. I have no clue what the statute of limitations would be for something like this.

I'd love to find out after these years that it was Kevin Poulsen.

dynoguy88
04-26-2012, 01:03 PM
The Red Fox, where Jimmy Hoffa was abducted from, is just a 15 mile drive down the road from where I live. It's on Telegraph Road in Bloomfield Hills and I must have driven past it a hundred times.

It's an Andiamo restaruant now.

http://www.andiamoitalia.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/AndiamoBloomfieldExterior.jpg

Corky Kneivel
04-26-2012, 02:52 PM
I think the Jimmy Hoffa question was effectively answered with the publication of Charles Brandt’s excellent “I Heard you Paint Houses”. In it, longtime suspect, and admitted close friend of Jimmy Hoffa, Frank “The Irishman” Sheehan admits to being the one who fired the bullets into the back of Hoffa’s head in a small non-descript residence in Michigan. It’s very convincing and, if you take into account the culture of the mob and the secretive compartmentalized way they do things, quite plausible. Also in there the author lays out a convincing argument that Sheehan was one of the gunmen who killed “Crazy” Joey Gallo inside Umberto’s Clam House.

Thiussat
04-26-2012, 03:29 PM
OMG How scary is that Max Headroom Hacker person? I just watched the Dr Who Clip he hacked into on the forbidden site.

I would've freaked out had I been watching the TV that night. :eek:

Yeah I had never heard of that one before and just watched it as well. Turns out they never caught the guy. I think it would be interesting if he came forward now as the statute of limitations has surely expired.


I'd love to find out after these years that it was Kevin Poulsen.

I thought of that as well, but it seems Poulsen was working in the LA area at the time, so it's doubtful. And I think Poulsen would admit to it now since he is a respected tech writer for Wired magazine and is on the up and up in his career.

Some people think it was an inside job because the guy was bashing a reporter at WGN in one of the broadcasts. However, police could find no one who would fit the description, so it's still a mystery.

justins5256
04-26-2012, 04:27 PM
Some people think it was an inside job because the guy was bashing a reporter at WGN in one of the broadcasts. However, police could find no one who would fit the description, so it's still a mystery.

If I remember the story correctly, he first interrupted 11'o clock news with this message. The audio didn't come through at all, just the video. Also, the broadcasting station realized what was happening and was able to block the transmission so not much of his message made it to air.

Some time later that same night, he broke in to the PBS signal and was able to broadcast video and audio mostly in the clear. If you listen to the audio closely he does say something that sounds like "I stole WGN" and then mentions the anchorman (I think his name was Chuck Sworsky).

I've watched the pirate portion a bunch of times and I noticed "rainbow glitching" at points. You only see this glitching with VHS. Ergo, his "message" was prerecorded on VHS tape.

I would guess he taped this message and intended to broadcast it on WGN. When that obviously failed, he broke in to PBS.

As to the motive, your guess is as good as mine. Kinda weird to think someone would overtake a TV station and this is all they had to say.

scc1222
04-26-2012, 09:52 PM
where did the pic of the oakville blob come from? I always thought it odd that UM said there were no samples of it left.Surely someone somewhere must have preserved some,as much as it rained down on them and appeared to be connected with illnesses.

PrettyinPink55
04-26-2012, 10:10 PM
where did the pic of the oakville blob come from? I always thought it odd that UM said there were no samples of it left.Surely someone somewhere must have preserved some,as much as it rained down on them and appeared to be connected with illnesses.

I thought someone would've kept a sample as well?! :confused:

Zoe F
04-27-2012, 04:13 PM
The Max Headroom intrusion seems to be from a man or woman who had relatively little technical knowledge, but had a grudge of some sort against the Tribune Company. The Tribune Company owns WGN and the Chicago Tribune newspaper. Here's a transcript of the audio:

Max: That does it. He's a freakin' nerd!

*laughs*

Max: Yeah, I think I'm better than Chuck Swirsky, freakin' liberal. Oh, Jesus!

*laughs*

Max: Oh!

*sound cuts out*

Unknown Voice: . . . do you?

Max: Yeah.

*laughs*

Max: Catch the wave!

*tosses can*

*unintelligible audio*

Max: Your love is fading!

*screams*

*hums the theme from Clutch Cargo*

Max: I still see the X.

*continues humming*

Max: Oh my piles!

*makes bathroom noises*

Max: Oh, I just made a giant masterpiece for all the Greatest World Newspaper nerds!

*groans*

Max: My brother is wearing the other one, but it's dirty. Looks like it's got blood stains on it.

*groans*

*video and sound cuts out*

*Max returns and is being spanked with a fly swatter*

Max: They're coming to get me!

Unknown Voice: Bend over, bitch.

*Max screams*

Max: Oh, make it stop!

It should be noted that this wasn't the first time that a broadcast signal intrusion had occurred in the United States. HBO had been intruded upon in 1986 by John MacDougall (Captain Midnight), and the Playboy Channel had been interrupted in September of 1987 by Thomas Haynie of the Christian Broadcasting Network. The major difference is that Max produced his own content and wasn't captured.

UMFaninMD
04-27-2012, 11:57 PM
I remember watching a documentary on The Black Dahlia years ago. They interviewed a man who believed his father, a surgeon, was not only the Torso Killer, but Elizabeth Short's murderer. He had some interesting theories which seemed plausible, but there's been so much speculation, this may never get solved.

ernmerica
04-28-2012, 04:37 AM
You are probably talking about George Hodel, the doctor to the celebs in the 40s. The more and more I watch his sons theory, I suspect he is heavily affected by confirmation bias. In other words its like a conspiracy theorist that ignores certain aspects to prove the point they want to make. There is compelling evidence, especially police records that would link him but they have been rebutted by many people.

1990 UM fan
04-28-2012, 05:56 AM
that "toxic lady" ones sounds scary

Thiussat
04-28-2012, 09:46 AM
I thought someone would've kept a sample as well?! :confused:

MiB's got it.

Thiussat
04-28-2012, 09:48 AM
You are probably talking about George Hodel, the doctor to the celebs in the 40s. The more and more I watch his sons theory, I suspect he is heavily affected by confirmation bias. In other words its like a conspiracy theorist that ignores certain aspects to prove the point they want to make. There is compelling evidence, especially police records that would link him but they have been rebutted by many people.

Yeah, the same thing happened with Zodiac. Numerous people in recent years have written books swearing it was their father/neighbor/friend. And all of these are good suspects in the sense that things fit, but we know obviously that not all of them can be right no matter how adamant they are about it.

TheCars1986
04-28-2012, 03:39 PM
The Max Headroom intrusion seems to be from a man or woman who had relatively little technical knowledge, but had a grudge of some sort against the Tribune Company. The Tribune Company owns WGN and the Chicago Tribune newspaper. Here's a transcript of the audio:



It should be noted that this wasn't the first time that a broadcast signal intrusion had occurred in the United States. HBO had been intruded upon in 1986 by John MacDougall (Captain Midnight), and the Playboy Channel had been interrupted in September of 1987 by Thomas Haynie of the Christian Broadcasting Network. The major difference is that Max produced his own content and wasn't captured.

If this video message was pre-recorded, then I think it would indicate that whoever "Max" was had some sort of personal grudge against WGN and/or the Chicago Tribune. Disgruntled employee perhaps? The attacks on the anchor, Chuck Swirsky, and the references to "newspaper nerds" are what make it seem like it was a direct attack on the station or the newspaper or both. I think this "message" was intended to interrupt the WGN news broadcast but when they switched to a different frequency, they decided to hack into another signal later that actually got through (during the Dr. Who show). I hope this one gets solved just for the sheer curiousity of what the hell was this "message" that "Max" was trying to get across?

Zoe F
04-28-2012, 07:27 PM
If this video message was pre-recorded, then I think it would indicate that whoever "Max" was had some sort of personal grudge against WGN and/or the Chicago Tribune. Disgruntled employee perhaps? The attacks on the anchor, Chuck Swirsky, and the references to "newspaper nerds" are what make it seem like it was a direct attack on the station or the newspaper or both. I think this "message" was intended to interrupt the WGN news broadcast but when they switched to a different frequency, they decided to hack into another signal later that actually got through (during the Dr. Who show). I hope this one gets solved just for the sheer curiousity of what the hell was this "message" that "Max" was trying to get across?

The message was definitely prerecorded. The recordings of the WTTW intrusion all show a tracking problem with Max's video. Combined with what can be observed from the audio, it certainly looks like the source of the broadcast was an improperly calibrated mono VCR. Anyone with a broadcasting background would have been ashamed to operate like the Max Headroom pirates did, and they certainly would have used much better equipment. The intrusion was definitely very low budget.

I doubt that the source was a WGN employee or former employee. WGN was able to switch their broadcast between two transmitters, but the pirates only took over one of them. Even if the WGN intrusion had began exactly as the pirates planned, it still would have been stopped before its finish. An employee would have known this. Also, they interrupted the wrong guy. The first line of the broadcast seems to indicate that Chuck Swirsky was supposed to be interrupted, but the hijackers interrupted the other sportscaster, Dan Roan. Someone better acquainted with WGN would have known who was who.

So what message was supposed to be sent? I really don't know. It may have been as simple as, "We don't like you, and we can mess with you whenever we want."

PrettyinPink55
04-28-2012, 11:18 PM
The message was definitely prerecorded. The recordings of the WTTW intrusion all show a tracking problem with Max's video. Combined with what can be observed from the audio, it certainly looks like the source of the broadcast was an improperly calibrated mono VCR. Anyone with a broadcasting background would have been ashamed to operate like the Max Headroom pirates did, and they certainly would have used much better equipment. The intrusion was definitely very low budget.

I doubt that the source was a WGN employee or former employee. WGN was able to switch their broadcast between two transmitters, but the pirates only took over one of them. Even if the WGN intrusion had began exactly as the pirates planned, it still would have been stopped before its finish. An employee would have known this. Also, they interrupted the wrong guy. The first line of the broadcast seems to indicate that Chuck Swirsky was supposed to be interrupted, but the hijackers interrupted the other sportscaster, Dan Roan. Someone better acquainted with WGN would have known who was who.

So what message was supposed to be sent? I really don't know. It may have been as simple as, "We don't like you, and we can mess with you whenever we want."

How odd!! :eek: Can you imagine watching either broadcast that night?!?! :eek: I would've been scarred for life!!!