My gifts where real at first. Seemed like a curse to me. Once I was on gmail things changed. The emails came and they were not the same anymore. It was almost as if I were hacked. I even sent messages to the person with no reply. That just didnt happen when we were communicating on yahoo I feel. Now I just feel like I cant trust the internet especially email accounts that get hacked everyday. Eventually everything will be on computer. Just like our doctors appointments. No need to come in just turn on your computer.
If we look from the sky down on earth, in most cities it looks like a huge circuit board. In the end we must learn to rely on own powers of intuition and psychi to live in the moment.
Especially when we notice those and things that try to take advantage of the human race. Thanks Ken. I disagree. Though I do not agree with using scare tactics, I have done business with her and the amulets are amazing.
They are not cheaply made. Just simply beautiful. I only buy what I like. What I believe I achieve. Bethea, this self-assuming idiot, got my e-mail address from God knows where as well as my birthday. I have never attempted to contact a psychic nor have I replied to any of her e-mails to me which come almost daily. I do read them as a source of entertainment then delete them. This has been going on for nearly a year.
I have been promised millions of dollars, everlasting love-if I contact her for a free tarot reading or a lucky charm. For those of you who are seeking advise for more in your life, ask God, not Bethea. She is the biggest scammer that I know of. Her predictions were worthless as none of it came true. All the jewelry I got from her is junk. She should be banned from advertising and lying to honest, hard working people.
All she wants is money and nothing else. Stay away from her and her sites. Which is to be expected from a leading psychic provider. And there is no purpose to be found in a fake reading! Keen, on the other hand, hosts a variety of readers all of whom have been recruited and verified by Keen. Keen also monitors the psychics who work for them to ensure quality, integrity, and professionalism.
This means that their readings, in general, are excellent. However, in the unlikely event that you do happen to have a poor experience, they also help you out.
There are plenty of different options to choose from. Finally, all readings are live at Keen. Live psychics mean that you can talk in person to your psychic in real-time, rather than receiving a generic and pre-written email reading.
We acknowledge that with any independent psychic, you only have a limited selection of reading styles. Instead, Bethea connects you with a scam and automated psychic service.
This is the type of service that delivers false, automated readings, and even worse manipulates you into believing that you need such services! This approach to pricing makes it easy to find the right kind of psychic for your budget. You can even search within a specific price range if you prefer. But you do receive a satisfaction guarantee from Keen! This approach to reviews allows you to see the good, the bad and the ugly so you can decide which psychic looks good according to your standards.
Take note, however, it is essential to bear in mind that most psychics will receive a few poor reviews due to the nature of what they do. Bethea and her friends do nothing to prove themselves by using sources outside of her website, although Bethea does have a Youtube channel. Keen goes out of its way to explain how they verify their psychics.
They maintain standards by monitoring their psychics, too, which offers you peace of mind. This is one astrologer that we would avoid. Hopefully, one day, karma will show her the lessons she clearly needs to learn in life.
Joining us was his daughter, our camera crew and our interpreter. This, Palfroy explained, was where his mother had worked on her books and other writings. The room was crammed with three-ring binders on cheap metal shelving, each labeled in sloppy cursive or capital letters. Brigitte Bardot. A gold Hindu statue sat in one corner; in another, three small clocks displayed the time in New York, Paris, and Tokyo, though they appeared to be set to the wrong hour.
On her desk was a vase of fake roses and a large calendar for Documents were piled everywhere. A drawing of a naked man and an ape hung on the wall behind a stuffed kangaroo. There were two photos in the room, identical shots of a middle-aged Duval, her chin resting on her hand as she peered into the camera. Want to follow more investigations like this? Sign up for our newsletter. Palfroy led us into a more spacious office where Duval once gave personal psychic consultations.
We immediately recognized the room from the YouTube videos used to promote her letters, with the same aging statue of a young, robed woman staring out from behind the desk. Like her personal office, this room was a time capsule. There were photos of Duval as a young girl and as a young woman traveling the world.
Pots of fake flowers dotted the floor. On the other side of the room, sliding glass doors opened onto her sprawling backyard, filled with countless statues. A money-sniffing dog had roamed for hours in the overgrown gardens, Palfroy told us, on a Thursday morning in March after French police and a US investigator arrived with a warrant to search the property. We recognized the name as the lawyer involved in the earlier civil case. Police rifled through drawers and tore through files, Palfroy said.
They looked under rugs and mattresses and garden statues, though some of the statues were too heavy to lift. They also took her computer. But, according to Palfroy, the accounts held little money, the safe was empty, and so was the house.
We had found that the hundreds of millions of dollars generated by the scam had been spread among countless shell companies and businessmen behind its day-to-day operations. Palfroy recounted this dramatic day to us as we walked from room to room.
As we looked through the articles, Duval watched us silently. Eventually, she slowly flipped through some, too, proudly pointing to old pictures of herself. Eventually, we determined she had achieved some notoriety as a small-town psychic.
Whether or not her psychic powers were fake, her celebrity was real. As predatory as the letters were, there had been some semblance of truth in all the lies. Duval was led to her bedroom upstairs to rest while we explored the property.
We battled a thick cloud of mosquitos as we wandered through the long grass surrounding her house, peered at a pool which Palfroy said was damaged in a storm last year and encountered a series of strange black-and-white paintings in a run-down guest bathroom. They appeared to depict ghosts having sex. When word came that Duval was ready to talk, we joined her and her family in her office.
She sat down in a chair across from us. Duval seemed unfazed by what was happening. She rattled off a basic sound check, counting upward with the ease of someone who had appeared on camera before. We were far more anxious, and not only because this was our one opportunity to speak with her. For months, as we pursued an interview with his mother, Palfroy would occasionally engage but mostly evaded us.
He would go dark for weeks and months. He told us his mother was sick. He said his mother wished to speak with us. Two attorneys from the Department of Justice, we learned, had also made the trek to Callas in March. They wanted what we did — to question Duval. The problem, according to Palfroy: Duval was unable to speak with police.
She could not even tell them her name. Not a single school, in any division, offered the 5-foot athlete a scholarship despite his all-area and all-conference accolades in two sports. In a way, Bethea understood why. My options were few. Growing up in Newport News, we all wanted to be [Hampton, Virginia, native] Allen Iverson, and so everyone talked about wanting to be professional athletes. And then, as you grow up, you see some guys falling off to the wayside, getting lost in the streets.
The three things that we always talk about is that even getting out of Newport News, you were either going to the military or you were the one getting lost in the streets. Cauthorn, was convinced of his potential, and the man who would eventually be his college coach, Ray Petty, became a believer as well.
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