BY CHARLIE FRAGO
Voices so faint they can’t be heard with the
unaided ear. Floating orbs with cometlike tails.
A
paranormal investigative group that spent
eight hours poking around the
state Capitol on Saturday night says it’s
convinced that the seat of state government is,
well, haunted.
“We’re still reviewing, but there’s something
paranormal in there,” said Alan Lowe, 55, of
Roland, a co-founder and the investigation
director of Spririt Seekers, a group dedicated
to finding the supernatural side of the Natural
State.
About 7: 30 p. m., Capitol police opened the
otherwise closed building to eight group
members, who spent the next eight hours snapping
photos and recording video and au- dio all over
public-access areas of the building, which was
completed in 1915.
Using sensitive audio equipment, the group asked
questions and then waited for 30 seconds.
“To give [the ghosts ] a chance to respond,”
Lowe explained.
One questioner asked if any nearby spirit had
been a senator, Lowe said.
“Real lightly and faint in the back, you hear
‘No, ’” Lowe said.
Another tape picked up a “grunt” and something
whispered “Edward” when asked his name, Lowe
said.
Ghost-busting the Capitol has been on Lowe’s
to-do list since he and his dad were
accidentally locked inside while viewing the
Christmas decorations there about 45 years ago.
He didn’t see any ghost then (“ I was just
scared, ” he said ), but another visit on a slow
weekend day a decade ago yielded an apparition
walking up the steps to the House of
Representatives. The ghost turned and tipped his
hat, Lowe said.
Spirit Seekers is still analyzing its data,
including video. Some photos appear to show
floating balls of energy called “spirit orbs,”
Lowe said.
It’s not unusual for groups to request
after-hours use of the Capitol, said Natasha
Naragon, a spokesman for Secretary of State
Charlie Daniels, who is in charge of the
building.
“But this is the first time in institutional
memory that we’ve had this type of request,”
Naragon said.
Daniels’ off ice gave the green light to the
group. It didn’t require any extra manpower or
other costs. The Capitol is staffed around the
clock with officers from the state Capitol’s own
police force, Naragon said.
Spirit Seekers
Paranormal Investigation Research and
Intervention Team isn’t the only outfit that has
been drawn to the Capitol. Movies have been shot
there, one of which involved letting motorcycles
rumble over its floors. A rocket was even fired
at the dome, leaving a black smirch and
then-Secretary of State Bill McCuen with a
political hotfoot.
Lowe’s group has investigated
paranormal activities around the state,
according to the group’s Web site, www.
thespiritseekers. org.
“Where the Here & the Hereafter Meet !”
proclaims Lowe’s business card. The group also
solicits donations on its site.
Capitol police officers said the Spirit Seekers
quietly went about their business.
The group searched all the public areas in the
247, 000-square-foot building, but the heavy
marble rendered their radios useless.
Before the Capitol was built, the state’s first
penitentiary occupied the grounds and Lowe said
he was intrigued of reports of prison ghosts
wandering the building.
No felonious phantoms were detected, though. And
the tale of a woman who wanders the halls in a
wedding gown remains a ghost story for now.
His group broke up into teams of two to conduct
the search.
“We always go out in twos,” Lowe said. “For
safety.” From the ghosts ?
“No, what if you went out by yourself and fell
down ? Who would help ?” Lowe said. “The ghosts
here are real Caspers.” Naragon, whose office is
in the basement, said she hasn’t noticed any
spectral signs.
“There’s a lot of strange activity, but none of
the
paranormal sort,” she said.