Creepy Messages Sent From Beyond The Grave

By Sughra Hafeez in Bizarre On 22nd June 2017
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#1 "soree mom 4 giv me"

A Mexican teenager who had been driving erratically after an argument with his mother sent a text reading ‘soree mom 4 giv me’ this was later found to have been sent 2 hours after he was pronounced dead from a car accident. The phone in question was also destroyed at the time of the crash. In 2008 in Los Angeles a passenger train collided with a freight train killing 26 people among the 26 was one Charles E Peck who died on impact, for 11 hours after the crash his phone called at least 5 members of his family and all they could hear was static and, return calls went to voice mail.

#2 "I'm Watching", "Did you hear me? I'm at your house. Clean your f***ing attic!!!"

Jack Froese suddenly died in June 2011 aged just 32 from a heart arrhythmia, leaving behind a number of grieving friends and family.

But five months after his death, some of those who were closest to him started receiving mysterious emails from his account mentioning private conversations they had had with him just before his death.

One of the recipients is his childhood friend Tim Hart of Dunbar who said the men had been 'inseparable' for 17 years and right up until his death.

Mr Hart was stunned to receive a message from his old friend months after his tragic death.

'One night in November, I was sitting on my couch, going through my emails on my phone and it popped up, "sender: Jack Froese".

'I turned ghost white when I read it,' he told the BBC.

'It was very quick and short but to a point that only Jack and I could relate on.'

In the subject heading of the message read the words 'I'm Watching', and the email then went onto say: 'Did you hear me? I'm at your house. Clean your f***ing attic!!!'

Mr Hart said that shortly before Mr Froese's death, the two had a conversation in his attic, during which his friend teased him over the mess and dust in it.

'Just he and I up there. That's it,' Mr Hart said.

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#3 The email

Mr Froese's cousin Jimmy McGraw also said he received a posthumous email from him about an ankle injury that happened after his death.

The email read: 'Hey Jim, How ya doing? I knew you were gonna break your ankle, tried to warn you. Gotta be careful.'

Mr McGraw says he had broken his ankle a week before he received the email on the night of November 21.

'I'd like to say Jack sent it, just because I look at it as he's gone, but he's still trying to connect with me,' he said.

'Trying to tell me to move along, to feel better.'

The email also included another message for a friend, whom 'Jack' said he 'couldn't get through to' because the 'email didn't work'.

#4 “Ben! Ben, Help Me! Help Me!”

An American teenager named Ben woke up in the dead of night to the sound of his cell phone ringing, showing an unknown number. Ben’s mother was working the night shift at the time, so he thought it might have been her. When he answered he heard what sounded like a strong wind on the other end as if someone was running. Then came a blood-curdling scream followed by a woman’s voice shrieking, “Ben! Ben, Help Me! Help Me!” before the phone cut out.

Ben ran to wake his father and together they contacted his mom who turned out to be safe at work. But later that day they found out that Ben’s great-grandmother had died, around the same time that he received the call.

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#5 "The girl with this phone is dead was smiling"

The distraught family of a missing woman received a harrowing text message claiming she was dead less than two hours after she disappeared.

Rajwinder Kaur, of Queens, New York, left home on Sunday to go and do volunteer work at a homeless centre in Brooklyn at around 8 pm and never returned.

Later that evening Kaur's sister, Gurpreet, received a text message from the 26-year-old's phone. It read: 'The girl with this phone is dead, was smiling'.

'There may be some bad, cracked person she faced that night, and that’s the scary part.

Police said Kaur's phone was tracked to Brooklyn that night where it was then shut off.

No other trace of her has been found.

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#6 "I’m sorry. I love you. Please help me."

One man recounted his terrifying story which involved his sister who had committed suicide a few months earlier. Early one morning, around 3:00 am he was awoken by his phone which showed a private number as the caller. He answered, but all he heard on the other side was muffled static sounds. He was about to hang up when a female voice, identical to his deceased sister, said, “’I’m sorry. I love you. Please help me.’ Stunned, he asked where she was but all he heard was a loud screeching sound before the call disconnected.

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#7 Help!

when a Metrolink commuter train passing through the Chatsworth district of Los Angeles collided with a freight train. One of its passenger’s, Charles E. Peck, died on impact at 4:22 p.m. that day, and 25 others also perished in the crash.

However, Peck’s story did not end there. For 11 hours, up until the point when rescue teams recovered his body, Peck’s cell phone dialled out to a number of his family members – his fiancée, his stepmother, his brother, his sister, his son. All they heard when they answered was static, and returning the calls only led to his voicemail.

The calls were, however, able to lead searchers to the location of Peck’s body some 12 hours later, at which point they determined he had died on impact. An hour before they found him, the calls stopped.

Although, strangely enough, they never did locate his cell phone.

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#8 "I’ll never be mean to anyone again.”

This one comes out of the late 1960s.Simma Liberman had just moved in together with her lover, a man named Johnny. The two were blissfully happy and planned on getting married soon. One night Johnny went out and a few hours later Simma received a strange call from him. The line was full of static and his voice sounded rushed. According to her account, he said, “I just want you to know that I love you, and I’ll never be mean to anyone again.” She tried to ask him what was wrong but the line went dead.

A few hours later she received another call, this time from Johnny’s mother. She told Simma that Johnny had been shot and killed in his car earlier that night, long before she received the strange call from him.

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#9 “Please, be careful!”

Another ghostly phone call occurred on September 20, 1988, involving the prolific author Dean Koontz. As Katherine Ramsland of Psychology Today shared in 2013, Koontz had been at his office that day when he received an unexpected phone call. When he answered, “a female voice that sounded far away” spoke to him.

But it only spoke three words: “Please, be careful!”

Koontz asked who it was, but received no answer. Instead, the ghostly voice simply repeated its cryptic warning three times before fading to silence.

Koontz sat dumbfounded, listening intently to the now-silent phone line, and he wondered. Who could it have been? His number was unlisted, after all, and the voice sounded strangely like his mother’s. But she had been dead for almost two years.

Perhaps his story wouldn’t be worth mentioning here if not for what happened only two days later.

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#10 Haunted

In 2008, The Register reported the bizarre tale of a Lancashire man who claimed to be “haunted” by text messages from his deceased wife. They had, after all, buried her with her cell phone. The texts would contain words that she’d often used, but there would be no number. The strange experience did, however, begin with a missed call, one from his own number, and the strange smell of his wife’s perfume.

That’s not to mention the strange encounters he and his family had experienced involving what they called The Thing, but perhaps that’s a story for another time.

Strange text messages. Phone calls with nothing but static, or faint voices that seem to fade away. A chilling voicemail. Again, this is the Internet. These are stories. You can’t trust everything you read or see or hear these days.

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#11 Dead Man Makes 35 Calls After A Train Crash

One of the most popular stories involving messages from the dead in recent history was that of a man named Charles E. Peck. In 2008 Charles was aboard a Metrolink commuter train that was travelling through Los Angeles when it crashed into a freight train. The disaster claimed the lives of 25 people, including Charles who was killed on impact.

Charles Peck had died on impact. Yet long past his death, his cell phone had continued to reach out to many of those he cared most about, and ultimately led rescuers to his mortal remains. (As far as investigators revealed, they never found Peck’s cell phone.)

The phone made at least 35 calls and when his loved ones answered all they could hear on the other side was static. When they tried to call back the phone went straight to voicemail.

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#12 Deceased Wife Haunts Her Husband With Text Messages

In 2008 a man from Lancashire claimed that he was getting text messages from his wife. The only problem was that his wife had died a few months earlier. The bizarre haunting started when the man received a phone call from himself and when he answered he was struck by the familiar scent of his wife’s perfume. Then the text messages began; they all came from a hidden number and they all included words and phrases that his wife had often used.