Sylvia
Brownes Biggest Blunder
Benjamin
Radford
The
tragic consequences of listening to psychic advice were brought into sharp focus
in January 2007, when yet another psychic vision from Sylvia Browne was revealed
to be wrong. Several years ago during one of her many appearances on the Montel
Williams show, Browne told the parents of missing child Shawn Hornbeck that their
son was dead. His body, she said, would be found in a wooded area near two large
boulders. Furthermore, according to Browne, Hornbeck was kidnapped by a very tall,
dark-skinned man, he wasnt Black, more like Hispanic, who wore
dreadlocks.
According
to a spokesman for the Hornbeck family, following the Montel broadcast Browne
tried to get money from the family: She called Pam and Craig about one month
after the show and pretty much offered her services to continue their discussion
for a fee. Pam was that desperate that if she had had $700 in her bank account
she would have put it on the table. We are talking about a mother who would have
sold her soul to have her boy back.
In
fact, Hornbeck and another boy were found very much alive January 16, 2007, in
the home of Michael Devlin, a Missouri man accused of kidnapping them. Hornbeck
had been missing for four years, but his parents had not given up hope of finding
him despite Brownes misinformation. Devlin, a Caucasian, is not Black, dark-skinned,
nor Hispanic and almost certainly did not have dreadlocks at the time he allegedly
abducted Hornbeck.
Within
days of Hornbecks recovery, critics such as James The Amazing
Randi spoke out against Browne. CNNs Anderson Cooper featured Randi and
gave refreshingly skeptical (and harsh) coverage of the case, calling attention
to Brownes highest-profile failure to date. Browne, in a statement posted
on her Web site, responded to the criticism, stating that I have never nor
ever will charge anyone who seeks my help regarding a missing person or homicide.
In these cases I choose to work strictly with law enforcement agencies involved
to aid and not impede their work and only when asked. To be accused of otherwise
by James Randi and others like him is a boldface [sic] lie. . . . If the brilliant
scientists throughout history had a James Randi negating every aspect of their
work, I doubt we would have progressed very far in medicine or in any technology.
. . . I cannot possibly be 100 percent correct in each and every one of my predictions.
Yet
her documented track record is one of nearly 100 percent failure rate instead
of 100 percent success. Brownes confidence in her body of work is baffling,
and her claim that her flawed visions were one human error is an amazing
understatement.