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Pennhurst haunted attraction in question

This story really shines a spotlight on something I think many serious paranormal investigators would say is a growing problem in the field: ghost tours of supposedly haunted places. I have no problem with haunted tours as a general rule. I think if they educate the public and offer historical value, then there’s nothing wrong with sharing a few ghost stories along the way. If the ghost tours help bring in much-needed revenue to a museum or other non-profit organization, then more power to them. On the other hand, there are people who are trying to capitalize on a current fad. Find a spooky building, charge people money to walk around, and tell them embellished and sensational ghost stories to make a quick buck. And if they’re not new ventures, then its places that have always had some supposed haunted activity that are now charging ghost hunters hundreds of dollars to come in an investigate. Usually it’s because they were investigated by TAPS on “Ghost Hunters,” or the “Ghost Adventures” crew, or “Ghost Lab,” or one of the other 500 or so shows on the air now. Places that used to be freely accessible to paranormal investigators are now booked for months in advance and really expensive. But ghost tours continue, at $25 or $50 or $80 per person, and it becomes nothing more than a sideshow attraction. Serious investigating takes a back seat, again. ABC Philadelphia has the story:

haunted house, new york paranormal society
“So spooky! My $50 bill just vanished into thin air!”

SPRING CITY, Pa. – September 22, 2010 (WPVI) — A landmark ruling more than 3 decades ago led to the closing of the former Pennhurst Center in Chester County and other institutions for the mentally challenged across the country.

Now, plans to turn the site into a haunted house attraction are causing a “fright” among families of former patients and local residents.

A hearing will be held Friday morning in a lawsuit aimed at stopping Friday night’s scheduled opening of the haunted house.

Promoters of the attraction say its simply a way to celebrate Halloween. But opponents say it disrespects the memories of former Pennhurst patients & would have a negative impact on the community. It’s an issue that has split the Spring City, Chester County area.

“It’s not good family fun. It’s totally inappropriate,” one neighbor told Action News.

Another said, “It’s going to bring revenue into our area and we don’t have anything here.”

At issue is the 110-acre Pennhurst property, where a judge ruled in 1977 that residents had been abused, neglected, beaten, and sexually assaulted. Pennhurst was closed 10 years later.

The lawsuit, filed by Saul Rivkin, who lives in the neighborhood near Pennhurst, contends the attraction will draw too much traffic, and raise the risk of vandalism and crime from Halloween revelers coming to the site.

Richard Chakejian, owner of the Pennhurst property, says the attraction does not exploit what happened at Pennhurst. “Absolutely not. It’s a Halloween event, with make-believe. Family fun to scare people,” he said.

Chakejian has developed the haunt with Randy Bates, owner of the Bates Motel and Haunted Hayride in Glen Mills. “The haunted house has nothing to do with the history of Pennhurst whatsoever,” he said.

Action News went on a tour of the attraction and walked through several rooms showing pictures of Pennhurst students, staffers, and activities. All showed boys and girls in crisp clean clothes, in classrooms and other school activities. That’s a different picture than what came out during the court case and during investigative reports leading up to the court-ordered closing.

In 1949, a Philadelphia Inquirer reporter wrote, “From it (Pennhurst) there is virtually no discharge except for the handful lucky enough to escape. And those who spend their lives there are kept in line with the sweatbox, the solitary confinement cell and the sawed-off pool cue.” 20 years later, after a visit there, a state lawmaker said, “You have to see it and smell it.”

After walking through the picture rooms, and into a hallway with a door on the side, a visitor gets their first shock – a woman rushing to the barred window, screaming, “Let me out, let me out.” As she does, the door handle jiggles back and forth to no avail. An ominous figure approaches her from behind, and slams her head on the glass. The startling scene is actually played out on a video screen.

The haunted house attraction is called the “Pennhurst Asylum.”

It will include a mock “morgue” and “crematorium,” along with lobotomy and shock therapy rooms. In the crematorium, fake skulls are piled in a kiln, while a laundry bin filed with fake body parts sits nearby. The haunted scene will be open on weekends, from September 24 to November 7th.

Bates hopes it will draw 2,500 to 3,000 people a night. A regular ticket costs $25, with $50 VIP tickets for those who want to skip the lines. Bates and Chakejian say up to 80 workers will be employed there, many of them from the ranks of the long-term unemployed. The two have invested an estimated $450,000 in preparing the site.

“The only reason they they can sell a ticket is because they are capitalizing on the suffering of real people,” says attorney David Ferleger. Ferleger brought the 1974 case of Haldeman vs. Pennhurst, which resulted in the landmark ruling that shut down the facility and other institutions for the mentally challenged. He is shocked at the mockery of patient memories.

Advocates for the mentally challenged have rallied against it.

Rivkin’s lawsuit contends East Vincent township officials should have required permits for the event. A memo from township zoning officer to township manager Mary Flagg show the Halloween attraction was to be a one-time event.

However, Bates told Action News he considers this year the beginning of a long run. “We want to build on this first year, and keep growing,” he said. He pointed toward a second building, saying he and Chakejian plan repairs, perhaps to use the building for storing props.

This is a very tricky issue. One could also argue that paranormal investigators disrespect the memories of people who died in institutions like this as well, simply by investigating. But I think there’s a big difference between scientific paranormal groups who are there investigating and looking for proof of the afterlife and a cheesy Halloween tour that’s designed to be spooky and entertaining (and profitable). The TV shows have been great as far as bringing paranormal investigating to the forefront. But when it turns into pure entertainment and profiteering, it’s just sad.

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