00:00A German law office was billed for dozens of calls.
00:03No one admitted making.
00:05Then the lights failed.
00:07Pictures turned.
00:08The office seemed to move.
00:11But the disturbances were not random.
00:13The disturbances began in Rosenheim, Germany, inside an ordinary lawyer's office.
00:20Nothing looked unusual until the routine became impossible.
00:24The first clue came from the phones.
00:27The account showed repeated calls to a time service, but staff denied making them.
00:33No one knew how.
00:35Soon, the electrical system failed.
00:38Fluorescent tubes twisted in their fittings.
00:41Fuses tripped.
00:42Technicians checked the wiring.
00:44The disturbances continued.
00:46Then the disturbances spread.
00:49Pictures turned.
00:50Lamps swung.
00:51A heavy filing cabinet reportedly shifted from the wall.
00:55Technicians installed recorders.
00:57Police searched for sabotage.
00:59A picture was reportedly filmed turning on its hook.
01:02Still, no answer emerged.
01:04Then investigators found the pattern.
01:07The activity seemed to begin whenever one 19-year-old employee was nearby.
01:13When she left, the office became quiet.
01:16Theories spread.
01:17Some believed the activity came from her, without her knowing.
01:23Others blamed electrical faults or deliberate tricks.
01:27Nothing settled the case.
01:30When the employee left the firm, the disturbances reportedly stopped.
01:35The office returned to normal.
01:37The timing made the mystery stranger.
01:39Later, critics claimed nylon threads were attached to office fixtures.
01:45They argued the moving objects were staged, and the haunting was a hoax.
01:50The threads offered one explanation, but the phone charges and electrical records remained disputed.
01:57Even the evidence became part of the mystery.
02:01Decades later, the Rosenheim poltergeist remains disputed.
02:06When the employee left, the office fell silent.
02:10But whether it was paranormal or staged was never settled.
Comments