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REAL story - A Haunting in CT

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The movie poster for "The Haunting in

Connecticut."





The new film "The Haunting in Connecticut" tells the story of the Snedeker family, who in 1986

rented an old house in Southington, Connecticut. Allen and Carmen Snedeker moved in with

their daughter and three young sons. While exploring their new home, Carmen found strange

items in the basement: tools used by morticians.



The family soon discovered — to their horror — that their home had once been a funeral parlor,

and the eldest son began seeing ghosts and terrifying visions. The experiences spread to other

family members and got worse: Both parents said they were raped and sodomized by demons;

one day as Carmen mopped the kitchen floor, the water suddenly turned blood red and smelled

of decaying flesh; and so on.



Finally the family contacted a pair of self-styled "demonologists" and "ghost hunters," Ed and

Lorraine Warren, who arrived and proclaimed the Snedeker house to be infested with demons.

The scariest part? It's all true, supposedly.



The Snedekers have told their story many times, including on national talk shows and in a

Discovery Channel TV show. The film's poster states in capital letters at the top that the movie is

"based on true events." Yet others aren't so sure.



Investigator Joe Nickell reports in the May/June issue of Skeptical Inquirer magazine that the

Snedeker's landlady found the whole story ridiculous. She noted that nobody before or since had

experienced anything unusual in the house, and that the Snedeker family stayed in the house for

more than two years before finally deciding to leave.



Apparently being assaulted and raped by Satan's minions for months at a time wasn't a good

enough reason to break the lease.



The Snedeker's story first came to light in horror novelist Ray Garton's 1992 book "In a Dark

Place: The Story of a True Haunting." In an interview in "Horror Bound" magazine, Garton

discussed how the "true story" behind "The Haunting in Connecticut" came about.



Garton was hired by Ed and Lorraine Warren to work with the Snedekers and write the true story

of their house from hell. He interviewed all the family members about their experiences, and

soon realized that there was a problem: "I found that the accounts of the individual Snedekers

didn't quite mesh. They couldn't keep their stories straight. I went to Ed with this problem. 'Oh,

they're crazy,' he said…. 'You've got some of the story — just use what works and make the rest

up… Just make it up and make it scary.'"



Garton, who had accepted the job expecting to have a real "true story" to base the book on, did as

he was told: "I used what I could, made up the rest, and tried to make it as scary as I could."



Though the Snedekers stand by their story, it seems there is little or no proof that anything

supernatural occurred at the house. Whether or not the Snedekers actually believed their story,

they stood to make money from the book deal. They were aware that the Lutz family — of

Amityville, New York — profited handsomely from selling the rights to their "true story" of a

haunted house. "The Amityville Horror" has long since been revealed as a fiction by investigator

Ric Osuna and others. Interestingly, the Warrens were also involved in the Amityville case.



Fiction passed off as memoir or true story is certainly nothing new, from William Peter Blatty's

book and film "The Exorcist" to James Frey's debunked bestseller "A Million Little Pieces."

Filmmakers have a long history of touting movies as being based on true stories, when in fact

they have little or no connection to any real events.



As for "The Haunting in Connecticut," Garton notes, "I suspect the movie will begin with the

words: 'Based on a true story.' Be warned: Just about anything that begins with any variation of

this phrase is trying a little too hard to convince you of something that probably isn't true."

Questioning the Story:









Southington home the Snedeker

family rented from 1986-1988.



Did the eldest son have cancer?

Yes. The real life Matt Campbell, Philip Snedeker, had a cancer of the immune system called Hodgkin’s

lymphoma. -TheCabinet.com



Did they move to be near a hospital?

Yes. The Haunting in Connecticut true story reveals that the real life family, the Snedekers, moved on

June 30, 1986 from Upstate New York to 208 Meriden Avenue in Southington, Connecticut to be near

UCONN hospital for their son's Cobalt treatments. -'A Haunting in Connecticut' Discovery Channel

Documentary



Was the house really a funeral home?

Yes. Darrell Kern, the former owner of the Southington home, confirmed that prior to purchasing the

property in the 1980’s, it had served as the Hallahan Funeral Home for multiple decades. -Hartford

Courant



Did the mom really not know that the house was formerly a funeral home?









(Back) Allen, Tammy, Ed and Lorraine Warren

(Front) Bradley, Carmen, Allen Jr., Jennifer



It depends on who you ask. Mrs. Carmen Snedeker (the real Mrs. Sara Campbell) claims, as depicted in

the movie, that she was never informed the house had been used as a funeral home. Carmen said that

she had not been in the basement due to renovation materials blocking the stairway, and only found the

embalming equipment after they moved in. However, the former owner and their in-house neighbor, claim

the family was fully informed of the situation prior to it being rented. -A Haunting in Connecticut

Watch the Discovery

Documentary that

inspired the movie.

Did the mop water turn bloody red?

Yes. According to the real mother herself, Carmen Reed, then Carmen Snedeker, “The mop water was

blood red. I mean a deep, deep red. It made my skin crawl. I started getting nervous that I was ruining the

floor.” -A Haunting in Connecticut



Did the dishes put themselves away?

Yes. While the movie depicts this occurrence happening to the eldest son, Philip Snedeker, the Discovery

Channel documentary reveals that it actually happened to the mother. “I thought I was losing my mind,"

Carmen recalled. "I know I set the table but the dishes weren’t there.” -A Haunting in Connecticut





Did a niece really live with the family?









Niece Tammy



Yes. According to the real life niece Tammy, “My mother and my father were divorcing. Just didn’t work

out too well so my aunt called and invited me to be with them. We were pretty close.” -A Haunting in

Connecticut



Did the younger brother really spin around on the gurney?

Yes. “My brother actually had me lay down on the gurney in the morgue and didn’t tell me what it was,"

recalled Bradley Snedeker. "It did freak me out real bad, but I didn’t want to run because of my older

brother. You know, I had to look tough around my older brother. It was pretty creepy, it scared me pretty

bad.” -A Haunting in Connecticut



Did the lights flicker without light bulbs?

Yes. According to a the middle son, Bradley Snedeker, “… the lights were coming on and off and on and

off even though there was no bulbs in it…” -A Haunting in Connecticut



Did the real Matt Campbell (Kyle Gallner) see things because of treatment side effects?

No. His mother, Carmen Reed, asked his oncologist about the possibility of visual side effects. “He said

there was no chance of him having hallucinations or delusions with the medication he was on.” -A

Haunting in Connecticut

Did the son really sleep in the basement?









Carmen Reed showing the

coffin lift in her basement that

leads up to a trap door in

the master bedroom floor.



Yes. Philip Snedeker slept in the basement with his brother, Bradley Snedeker. Since the upstairs rooms

were smaller, it was the only room that could accommodate the teens. The two brothers slept in the

casket display room down the hall from the former embalming room. -CarmenReed.com



How many séances did Jonah conduct in the house?

Zero. Jonah, portrayed in the movie by Erik J. Berg, is a fictional character. The filmmakers added Jonah

to the storyline to help provide an explanation for the supernatural elements of the movie.



Did they really find old pictures of dead people?

Yes. In this website's correspondence with the real life mother, Carmen Reed, she stated, "There were a

couple of photos in the home, but there were many toe tags and a head tag. There were other personal

items of the deceased.”



Did the son really see dead people with writing carved on them?

No, although other sightings were reported. Some of these include a thin man with high cheek bones and

long black hair and another with white hair wearing a pinstriped tuxedo. -AssociatedContent.com



Did Matt (Kyle Gallner) have a radical personality change?

Yes. According to his family, he became distant, dark and violent…like meanness had come over him. -A

Haunting in Connecticut Discovery Channel Documentary



Did the son meet Reverend Popescu (Elias Koteas) during cancer treatments?

No. Any priests that were met came from the Catholic church, not the hospital.



Did the shower curtain nearly suffocate the niece like in the movie?









Carmen Reed

Not exactly. In the movie, the shower curtain nearly suffocates the niece, Wendy (Amanda Crew). The

Haunting in Connecticut true story reveals that the shower curtain incident did happen, but to the mother,

not the niece. In our correspondence with the real life mother, Carmen Reed, she stated, "Yes, the

shower curtain did wrap around my face so that I couldn't breathe. My niece had to come and rescue me.

I couldn't have fallen as I was being pressed in upon."



Did Matt Campbell attack his cousin Wendy?

Yes. The real life Philip Snedeker did attack his cousin, Tammy (Wendy). An ambulance took him to a

mental hospital where he remained for forty-five days. -CNN



Did their father really remove all the light bulbs from the home?









Morgue doors are still visible on the side

of the Southington, Connecticut house.



Yes, but not in the drunken manner depicted in the movie. After seeing the high electric bill, the real life

father, Allen Snedeker, concluded that this was because of the children sleeping with all the lights on and

removed the light bulbs to get control over the situation.



Did the real life Matt find bodies in the walls of the home?

No. The bodies in the walls were created by Hollywood to explain who was haunting the family and why.

Since the bodies had never been properly laid to rest, their souls remained trapped in the home,

struggling to get out and find peace.



Did the son really burn the house down?









Carmen Reed and her

daughter, Jennifer



No, the oldest son, Philip Snedeker, never tried to burn the house down. The filmmakers needed a

climactic way to release the demons from the home and created the fire for theatrical purposes.

According to the Snedeker family, an exorcism was performed on the house on September 6, 1988,

which brought closure to the spirits.

-MyRecordJournal.com



Did Philip Snedeker survive cancer?

Yes. During the treatments in Southington, Philip Snedeker’s cancer went into remission and has not

resurfaced since. He is now in his thirties, works as a trucker and has four children. -People



Is the house still haunted?

No. According to the current owner of the Southington home, Susan Trotta-Smith, the true story is that

the house is not haunted now and never was. “We’ve lived in the house for ten years. Our house is

wonderful,” Susan said. “This is all Hollywood foolishness. The stories are all ludicrous.” -

NBCConnecticut.com



Why do the Snedekers believe the house was haunted?









John Zaffis



Do to the disturbances in the household, the Snedeker family brought in paranormal researchers,

including John Zaffis, Ed Warren, and Lorraine Warren, to help pinpoint the problems. The researchers

believed that former funeral workers were guilty of necrophilia, which led to the evil presence. Carmen

later reported that former workers were found guilty of the crime, although we are unable to find

documentation regarding this claim. -AssociatedContent.com



How do the paranormal researchers feel about the movie's retelling?









Lorraine and Ed Warren



During an interview, Lorraine Warren commented on what she had heard about the movie, "I was also

told about scratching on the walls, blood and séances. That isn't the type of things that were occurring

within the house at all." (MyRecordJournal.com) Lorraine Warren put it simply when saying, “The movie is

very, very loosely based on the actual investigation.”

-NBCConnecticut.com









Haunting in Connecticut Behind the Movie



Interviews & Video

Watch video featuring interviews with the Snedeker family mother, Carmen Reed, portrayed by Virginia

Madsen in the movie. Included in the interviews are her niece Tammy, played by Amanda Crew, and the

famous paranormal investigators, Ed and Lorraine Warren, who were called in to work the real life

Southington haunting.



Haunting In Connecticut - Current Affair TV

Segment

This is the piece "A Current Affair" did on the alleged

haunted house that became the focus of the 2002

Discovery Channel documentary, "A Haunting in

Connecticut," which led to the 2009 movie.





Carmen Reed CNN Interview

The real life mom, portrayed by Virginia Madsen in

the feature film, talks about her family's experiences

that became the basis for The Haunting in

Connecticut movie.





The Entity Trailer

The real mother behind The Haunting in Connecticut

movie expressed that she endured bouts of demonic

possession similar to those experienced by the main

character in this 1983 Barbara Hershey movie.









Link-to-Learn More:

Carmen Reed's Haunting in Connecticut Story



Real Pictures from the Haunting



John Zaffis's Paranormal Research Society of New England



Official The Haunting in Connecticut Movie Website



About Southington, Connecticut









INSIDE STORY: The Real-Life Haunting

in Connecticut

BY OLIVER JONES

Saturday April 04, 2009 01:35 PM EDT

Carmen Reed



Lionsgate; Courtesy Carmen Reed









Put this on top of the list of things you don't want to hear your teenager say three hours after you move

into a new home: "Mom, this house is evil. We need to leave here right away!"



That Carmen Reed failed to heed her son's advice would one day haunt her. Literally, she says. And two

decades later, the time she and her family spent in that creepy old house on Meriden Ave. in Southington,

Conn., is the inspiration of the surprise hit movie The Haunting in Connecticut.



"It has been very emotional for me seeing that time in my life play out on the big screen," says Reed, now

54, of the two years in the 80s her family spent in a former funeral home while her son underwent

treatment for cancer at a nearby clinic.



The Man With Long Black Hair



According to Reed, while she, her then husband, her three kids and two nieces lived in the house, they

regularly experienced a malevolent force that took different forms and would on occasion slap, grope,

threaten or otherwise freak the heck out of them.



It began the night they moved in. "My son started seeing this young man with long black hair down all the

way to his hips," recalls Reid. "He would talk to my son every day. Sometimes he would threaten him,

other times he would stand there and just say his name, which was enough to scare him."



During the course of his treatment, Phillip's cancer went into complete remission. Now 35, he is a father

of four who makes his living as a trucker. But when he started claiming that someone, or something, was

trying to communicate with him, doctors diagnosed him with another problem: schizophrenia.



Reed remembers watching as her son started to play cruel jokes on family members, like locking his little

brother in a chest – and then forgetting that it ever happened. She eventually sent him to live with

relatives, and he immediately stopped hearing voices, she says.



A Spirit on the Stairway



With Phillip out of the house, Reed claims the dark forces turned their attention to her 18-year-old niece.

"One night, my niece said to me, 'Aunt Carmen, it's coming, can you feel it?'" Reed says her niece clung

to her in fear. "I peeled her back," she says, "and I saw the impression of a hand going up underneath her

nightshirt."



Says Reed: "That is when I knew for sure that what I was dealing with was supernatural."



Reed contacted her parish priest, then the local archdiocese, then a host of experts in the paranormal.

"Compared to that house, the other cases I had been involved with were like dealing with Casper the

Friendly Ghost," says researcher John Zaffis, who has spent the last 36 years investigating paranormal

phenomenon. One particularly memorable summer night, Zaffis claims to have seen a spirit descend the

main stair well and say to him, "Do you know what they did to us?"



"All I wanted to do was get my car keys and get the hell out of that house," Zaffis tells PEOPLE.



An Exorcism?



According to Reed and Zaffis two priests visited the home but became frightened and left. A third, whom

they do not name, was finally able to rid the house of its evil once and for all after a three-hour exorcism,

says Reed. (According to a 1992 article in the Hartford Courant, however, the local Roman Catholic

archdiocese said no authorized excorcism was conducted at the house.)



The house still stands in Southington, and the current owner has not reported any disturbing visions –

save for the rubbernecking tourists who drive by hoping to catch a glimpse of some ghouls.



As for Reed's family, they all report being sensitive to supernatural forces since their time in the creepy

house in Connecticut. Sometimes it serves them well, says Reed. "I sold real estate for a while," she

says. "If I wouldn’t sell you a house, you can bet it was because I knew it was haunted."









A Connecticut Haunting: The Reel Deal

By KYLE REYES

Updated 12:14 PM EST, Wed, Mar 11, 2009 | Print

Buzz up! 0diggsdigg

Lions Gate Publicity





On March 27, the movie “A Haunting in Connecticut” hits the theaters. And it's based on a true story.

Kind of.



Here‟s how Lions Gate describes the film:



“When the Campbell family moves to upstate Connecticut, they soon learn that their charming Victorian

home has a disturbing history: not only was the house a transformed funeral parlor where

inconceivable acts occurred, but the owner’s clairvoyant son Jonah served as a demonic messenger,

providing a gateway for spiritual entities to crossover. Now unspeakable terror awaits, when Jonah,

the boy who communicated with the powerful dark forces of the supernatural, returns to unleash a new

kind of horror on the innocent and unsuspecting family.”



“Whhhaaaaatttt?!?!?!?”



That was the reaction of Lorraine Warren when she heard the synopsis.



Lorraine and her late husband, Ed, were the investigators in real life.



"It‟s a case that was much, much scarier than any movie could ever be," Lorraine said. She also said that in

typical Hollywood fashion, the movie is about as far fetched from the actual case as it could be. “The

movie is very, very loosely based on the actual investigation,” she said.



And she‟s not too thrilled with it, either.



“You don‟t know how many phone calls I‟m getting. It‟s embarrassing. Do you know the amount of time

and effort that we put into that case? Do you know how many meetings with the clergy we had to finally

bring closure to the family?”



So we asked Lorraine to explain how it all really happened.



And as you might expect, the true story begins in the witching hour, in the wee small hours of the

morning.

“It was back in the „80‟s. We were called, it was very late at night, that Ed and I were called by a woman

and her niece who were living with her at the time,” Lorraine said.



That family was the Snedekers. In the movie, they're known as the Campbells.



She said the family had moved into a house on Meriden Avenue in Southington while their son was being

treated for cancer at UConn. They wanted to find something close to the hospital so they could take him as

an outpatient. What they found – and bought – was a big and seemingly welcoming home.



“All they could see when they were going to rent this property was a big, airy place. That‟s what it looked

like. But what they didn‟t know was that it‟s a former funeral home," Lorraine said.



Oh, and by the way, the morticians at the funeral home were allegedly involved in necrophilia, or

performing sex acts with corpses.



What used to be the show room for the coffins was now the kids room. Just down the hall? The place

where the bodies were prepared for viewing.



“The boys were the first to start talking about things they had seen and experienced, saying they were

terrified,” Lorraine said. “The parents were kind of chastising the kids – they thought it was all crazy. But

the kids were so scared they started sleeping on the floor in the living room.”



Among the sounds the kids would hear were the sound of chains pulling the coffins upstairs. Only thing

was… there were no coffins.

“The night that the mother and the niece called us, they were really terrified,” said Lorraine. “Her niece

was in a small bedroom in the back and the covers on her bed were levitating around her like there was a

fan blowing them around.”



Lorraine said while the mother was on the phone with her, even more bizarre events started happening.



“The mother had rosary beads in her hand. They were in the kitchen talking to us and the beads were

actually being pulled apart in her hand and falling to the floor.”



Lorraine and Ed went over the next morning with the family‟s parish priest. Lorraine said even HE was

scared. A blessing of the house seemed to do nothing to calm things down, she said.



“You really felt for this family. We tried everything to keep them comfortable. You can‟t say to a family

that has a sick son in the house that you have to just move on,” she said.



That‟s when the Warrens decided to call in the big guns.



“It finally got to the point where we contacted the bishop‟s office in Hartford. Thank God he was very open

to our work and what was going on. He sent two priests to the house and both of these priests were very

high in the church. One had been used as an exorcist. They came to the house and said mass.”



But during that mass, Ed, who had recently suffered a heart attack, started having severe heart

palpitations.

Enough was enough.



“Both priests wrote a letter to the bishop saying an exorcist was needed, and they didn‟t want to do it,”

said Lorraine. “These were powerful forces at work.”

She said the church sent an exorcist, which seemed to do the trick. But not before one last “hurrah” from

whatever was believed to be haunting the house.



“When the exorcism happened, a crazy thing also happened that we still don‟t really understand,” she

said. “There was a huge tree in front of the house – and half of the tree, with no wind, broke off and fell on

the property.”



The family moved a short time later.



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