#Adolfo Constanzo
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Drug Cartels & Dark Magic: The Sacrificial Rituals of Adolfo Constanzo | Mysterious True Crime
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The Witch Doctor of Matamoros: Adolfo Constanzo | The Cult Next Door Ep. #4
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I can probably play a game of 'Spotted in central American rural farmers house' vs 'Something put together by narcos', there is a lot of demonizing of Palo Mayombe based on things Adolfo Constanzo made up and nothing else.
Is there any aspect of Latin American folk Catholicism that law enforcement manuals aren't afraid of?
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The song "Sacrificial Shack" by the band Pain Teens is sung from the point of view of a cult member who confesses his crimes to the police after he is captured, taking the police to the Constanzo's ranch for an explanatory tour.
#The Ritual Sacrifice of Mark Kilroy#Adolfo Constanzo#Ranch#Satanic Cult#Satanic Ritual Sacrifice#Youtube
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Borderland is a 2007 film loosely based on Constanzo and his cult from Episode Thirty: The Ritual Sacrifice of Mark Kilroy.
RIDER STRONG as PHIL in BORDERLAND (2007)
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10 Horror Movies and The Depraved Acts That Inspired Them
10 Horror Movies and The Depraved Acts That Inspired Them

Based on a True Story,’ or “Inspired by Actual Events”; are just two phrases that, when added to a cinematic production are guaranteed to raise eyebrows as well as ticket sales. Why; well it seems that when we see phrases such as these, our proverbial antennas rise and immediately we won’t know about the horrible tale that happened…
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#Academy Award#Adolfo de Jesús Constanzo#Based on a true story#BORDERLAND#Brad Douriff#CHILD’S PLAY#Doris Bither#Ed and Lorraine Warren#El Padrino de Matamoros#Gertrude Baniszewski#H.H. Holmes#Henry Lee Lucas#HENRY; PORTRAIT OF A SERIAL KILLER#Inspired by Actual Events#JACK KETCHUM&039;S#Keddie Cabin Murders#Liv Tyler#Michael Rooker#Ottis Toole#SAW#Scott Speedman#Sylvia Likens#Texarkana Moonlight Murders#THE ENTITY#THE GIRL NEXT DOOR#The Godfather of Matamoros#THE HAUNTING IN CONNETICUT#THE HILLS HAVE EYES#THE STRANGERS#THE TOWN THAT DREADED SUNDOWN
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Adolfo de Jesús Constanzo (November 1, 1962 – May 6, 1989) was a Cuban-American serial killer, drug dealer, and cult leader of an infamous gang dubbed by the media as The Narcosatanists (Spanish: "Los Narcosatánicos").[1] His cult members nicknamed him The Godfather ("El Padrino"). He was reportedly responsible for the murder of Mark Kilroy, an American student killed in Matamoros in 1989, along with several other cult killings.
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Danish Psych Rock/Noise Rock band Narcosatanicos is allegedly named after the cult headed by Constanzo.
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NARCOSATANICOS “nausea”
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Adolfo Constanzo And His Bizarre Cult, the Narcosatanists
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Did you ever hear about the case of a man named Adolfo Constanzo? A drug/cult leader/serial killer who said was a follower of Palo Mayombe. He whole heartedly believed murdering and slaughtering innocent people as "rituals" along with keeping their would remains would give him powers and make him invincible. He eventually died by suicide to evade his arrest. In a case like this where people swear they feel powerful, and they hear demons and Satan, are those delusions?
Yes, people like him are deluded and some of them display various symptoms of psychopathology, especially sociopathic tendencies, with sometimes borderline / narcissistic elements. There can be no excuse for such heinous acts. To say that demons or Satan told them to do that is ludicrous. In all my years I've never heard any demon incite racial hatred, genocide, terrorism, kidnappings, suicides or murders of any kinds. And many other people working with demons also concur that this kind of thing is never the demonic teachings, but mostly the products of deranged people. Sometimes the cause for feeling super-human or overtly powerful is delusions or acute psychosis. Anybody who has been unfortunate enough to have been in a situation like that, they know that these cult leaders can be very manipulative and extremely dangerous. To all that are in such a predicament, I would advise to contact the authorities, as their lives (and the lives of others) might be at risk.
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Episode Thirty: The Ritual Sacrifice of Mark Kilroy
1. Investigators examine a metal pot containing a stew full of human bones, blood, animal carcasses, coins, sticks, and cult paraphernalia found at Santa Elena ranch outside Matamoros , Mexico.
2. Adolfo Constanzo was the charismatic and well liked leader of a drug smuggling cult which used occult ritual and human sacrifice for protection from the law.
3. Over 16 bodies were found at Santa Elena ranch, the ranch where Adolfo Constanzo’s cult practiced their human sacrifices. The corpses were mutilated and had wires in their spines for easy removal after decay. It was said that the cult members would wear the vertebrae as token necklaces after a ritual.
4. Sara Aldrete was a cheerleader and honor student who lured men into the cult. She presented herself as innocent ; however, she was the head of recruitment into the death cult.
5. Up close of the stew pot found at the Santa Elena ranch. Cult members drank the stew of human remains in order to “gain the power manifested during the ritual.”
6. Investigators examine burned human remains at Santa Elena ranch. It’s estimated that there are multiple bodies which were never recovered from the ranch.
7. Mark Kilroy was an honor student on an athletic scholarship who decided to go Pre-Med at University of Texas. He was kidnapped and murdered as part of an occult sacrifice by Adolfo Constanzo’s cult on a spring break trip, which ultimately led to Adolfo’s demise.
8. Bodies were exhumed from the surrounding area and identified, then given proper burials. Most of the bodies were rival drug lords of Constanzo. Constanzo offered “spiritual protection” to rival drug cartels in exchange for money.
9. “Sacrifice” the book by Mark Kilroy’s father, brings to light the harmful effects of drug trafficking. The Kilroys have dedicated their lives to charities which teach children to “Just Say No” in order to reduce the market for illegal drugs.
10. The shack on Santa Elena ranch where the sacrifices and occult rituals took place, including the torture and murder of Mark Kilroy.
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"ignorance being taken over by a charismatic leader, is a lot of power."
~ Henry Zebrowski speaking true facts. (Ep. 432: Adolfo Constanzo Part III)
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Horror Movies Based on True Events
Open Water (2003)
When a couple goes scuba diving in Open Water, their boat accidentally leaves them behind in shark-infested water. It’s based on something that really happened to American tourists Tom and Eileen Lonergan, who were left behind by a diving company off the Great Barrier Reef. By the time the mistake was realized two days later, it was too late, and they were never seen again. A shark attack seems not to have been the cause of death, however, as the couple’s dive jackets were eventually found. The jackets weren’t damaged, which suggested that the Lonergans likely took them off, “delirious from dehydration,” and drowned.
Borderland (2007)
When three friends head to a Mexican border town to have some fun in this movie, they get mixed up with a cult specializing in human sacrifice. The concept loosely stems from the life of Adolfo de Jesus Constanzo, a drug lord and cult leader who was responsible for the death of American student Mark Kilroy.
A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)
The iconic baddie Freddy Krueger kills teenagers via their dreams in Wes Craven’s franchise-launching film. Craven told Vulture that the idea stemmed from an article he read in The Los Angeles Times about a family of Cambodian refugees with a young son who reported awful nightmares. “He told his parents he was afraid that if he slept, the thing chasing him would get him, so he tried to stay awake for days at a time,” said Craven. “When he finally fell asleep, his parents thought this crisis was over. Then they heard screams in the middle of the night. By the time they got to him, he was dead. He died in the middle of a nightmare. Here was a youngster having a vision of a horror that everyone older was denying. That became the central line of Nightmare on Elm Street.”
Black Water (2007)
Set in the swamps of Australia, this movie sees a group of fishers attacked by a humongous crocodile. It was inspired by an actual crocodile attack in the Australian outback in 2003 that killed a man named Brett Mann in an area that his friends said they’d “never, ever” seen a crocodile before.
Dead Ringers (1988)
In David Cronenberg’s movie, Jeremy Irons plays twin gynecologists who do messed up things with patients and ultimately die together in the end. Cronenberg adapted the movie from Bari Wood and Jack Geasland’s novel Twins, which was inspired by the lives of actual twin gynecologists Stewart and Cyril Marcus. TheNew York Times noted that the Marcuses enjoyed “trading places to fool their patients” and that they ultimately “retreat[ed] into heavy drug use and utter isolation.”
Deliver Us From Evil (2014)
The movie follows a cop and a priest who team up to take on the supernatural. It’s based on self-proclaimed “demonologist” Ralph Sarchie’s memoir Beware the Night, in which he tells supposedly true stories, such as the time he found himself “in the presence of one of hell’s most dangerous devils” possessing a woman.
Poltergeist (1982)
In Poltergeist, a family’s home is invaded by ghosts that abduct one of the daughters. The film was inspiredby unexplained events, such as loud popping noises and moved objects, that occurred in 1958 at the Hermanns’ home in Seaford, New York.
Psycho (1960)
Alfred Hitchcock’s essential film traces a woman who embezzles money from her employer and runs off to a mysterious hotel where she is (58-year-old spoiler alert) murdered by the man running it, Norman Bates. Bates is said to have been based on Ed Gein, a Wisconsin man who was convicted for one murder in the 1950s, but suspected for others. He also was a grave robber, and authorities found many disturbing results of that in his home, including bowls crafted from human skulls and a lampshade made from the skin of someone’s face.
Scream (1996)
The classic ‘90s slasher flick uses dark humor to tell the story of a group of teens and a mystery man named Ghostface who wants to murder them. But the real story ain’t funny. The movie was inspired by the Gainesville Ripper, real name Danny Rolling, who killed five Florida students by knife over a span of three days in August 1990.
The Conjuring (2013)
The movie stars Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga as ghost hunters helping out a family in a haunted 18th-century farmhouse. The hunters, Ed and Lorraine Warren, are real people, as is the Perron family that they assist. Lorraine was a consultant on the movie and insists that many of the supernatural horrors really happened, and one of the daughters who is depicted in the film, Andrea Perron, says the same. She recalled an angry spirit named Bathsheba to USA Today:“Whoever the spirit was, she perceived herself to be mistress of the house and she resented the competition my mother posed for that position.”
Annabelle (2014)
The creepy porcelain doll from The Conjuring gets her terror on in this spin-off of The Conjuring. The ghost-hunting Warrens have claimed that there was a real Raggedy Ann doll that moved by itself and wrote creepy-ass notes saying things like, “Help us.” The woman who owned it contacted a medium, who claimed that it was possessed by a seven-year-old girl named Annabelle who had died there.
The Disappointments Room (2016)
Kate Beckinsale stars in the movie as an architect who moves to a new home with a mysterious room in the attic that she eventually learns was previously used as a room where rich people would cast off disabled children. It was reportedly inspired by a Rhode Island woman who discovered a similar room in her house that she says was built by a 19th century judge to lock away his disabled daughter.
The Exorcist (1973)
Two priests attempt to remove a demon from a young girl in this box office smash. The movie was based on a 1949 Washington Post article with the headline “Priest Frees Mt. Rainier Boy Reported Held in Devil’s Grip.” Director William Friedkin spoke about the article to Time Out London: “Maybe one day they’ll discover the cause of what happened to that young man, but back then, it was only curable by an exorcism. His family weren’t even Catholics, they were Lutheran. They started with doctors and then psychiatrists and then psychologists and then they went to their minister who couldn’t help them. And they wound up with the Catholic church. The Washington Post article says that the boy was possessed and exorcised. That’s pretty out on a limb for a national newspaper to put on its front page… You’re not going to see that on the front page of an intelligent newspaper unless there’s something there.
The Girl Next Door (2007)
The movie follows the abuse of a teenage girl at the hands of her aunt, and it was inspired by the murder of Sylvia Likens in 1965. The 16-year-old girl was abused by her caregiver, Gertrude Baniszewski, Baniszewski’s children, and other neighborhood children, as entertainment. They ultimately killed her, with the cause of death determined as “brain swelling, internal hemorrhaging of the brain, and shock induced by Sylvia’s extensive skin damage,”
The Possession (2012)
Jeffrey Dean Morgan and Kyra Sedgwick star in the movie as a couple with a young daughter who becomes fascinated with an antique wooden box found at a yard sale. Of course, the box turns out to be home to a spirit. The flick’s “true story” basis came from an eBay listing for “a haunted Jewish wine cabinet box” containing oddities such as two locks of hair, one candlestick, and an evil spirit that caused supernatural activity. The box sold for $280 and gained attention when a Jewish newspaper ran an article about its so-called powers.
The Rite (2011)
In The Rite, a mortician enrolls in seminary and eventually takes an exorcism class in Rome, where demonic encounters ensue. The movie was based on the life of a real exorcist, Father Gary Thomas, whose work was the focus of journalist Matt Baglio’s book The Rite: The Making of an Exorcist. A Roman Catholic priest, Thomas was one of 14 Vatican-certified exorcists working in America in 2011. He served as an advisor on the film and told The Los Angeles Times that in the previous four years he had exorcised five people.
The Sacrament (2013)
In the movie, a man travels to find his sister who joined a remote religious commune, where, yep, bad things happen. It was inspired by the 1978 Jonestown massacre, in which cult leader Jim Jones led 909 of his followers to partake in a “murder-suicide ceremony” using cyanide poisoning.
The Shining (1980)
Stanley Kubrick’s horror masterpiece is about a man who is driven to insanity by supernatural forces while staying at a remote hotel in the Rockies. The movie Derives from Stephen King’s book of the same name, which was inspired by the Stanley Hotel in Colorado, where plenty of guests have reported seeing ghosts. The Stanley wasn’t actually used in the movie, however, because Kubrick didn’t think it looked scary enough.
The Silence of the Lambs(1991)
The Oscar-winning film tells the story of an FBI cadet who enlists the help of a cannibal/serial killer to pin down another serial killer, Buffalo Bill, who skins the bodies of his victims. FBI special agent John Douglas, who consulted on the film, has explained that Bill was inspired in part by the serial killer Ted Bundy, who like Bill, wore a fake cast. Ed Gein is also believed to be an inspiration, what with the whole skinning thing. And per Rolling Stone, 1980s killer Gary Heidnik was a reference for how Buffalo Bill kept victims in a basement pit.
The Strangers (2008)
Three killers in masks terrorize the suburban home of a couple (played by Liv Tyler and Scott Speedman) in this invasion thriller. Writer-director Bryan Bertino has said the film was inspired by something that happened to him in childhood. “As a kid, I lived in a house on a street in the middle of nowhere. One night, while our parents were out, somebody knocked on the front door and my little sister answered it,” he said. “At the door were some people asking for somebody that didn’t live there. We later found out that these people were knocking on doors in the area and, if no one was home, breaking into the houses.”
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974 & 2003)
Ed Gein also reportedly inspired elements of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and its remake. The movies are about groups of friends who come into contact with the murderous cannibal Leatherface. The original film memorably features a room filled with furniture created from human bones, a nod to Gein’s home.
The Town That Dreaded Sundown (1976 & 2014)
The original film follows a Texas Ranger as he tracks down a serial killer threatening a small town, and the 2014 sequel of the same name essentially revives the same plot. Both are based on the Texarkana Moonlight Murders of 1946, when a “Phantom Killer” took out five people over ten weeks. The case remains unsolved
Veronica (2018)
The recent Netflix release follows a 15-year-old girl who uses a Ouija board and accidentally connects with a demon that terrorizes her and her family. The movie’s based on a real police report from a Madrid neighborhood. As the story goes, a girl performed a séance at school and then “experienced months of seizures and hallucinations, particularly of shadows and presences surrounding her,” according to NewsWeek. The police report came a year after the girl’s death when three officers and the Chief Inspect of the National Police reported several unnatural occurrences at her family’s home that they called “a situation of mystery and rarity.”
#Horror Movies Based on True Events#horror#horror movies#paranormal#ghost and hauntings#ghost and spirits
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Nel marzo del 1989 Mark Kilroy, uno studente di 21 anni dell'Università del Texas, decide di fare un viaggio in Messico con i suoi amici per le cosiddette vacanze di primavera. Il 13 marzo varcano il confine con gli Stati Uniti per poter raggiungere la città di Matamoros e iniziare il loro giro tra bar e discoteche. Durante la serata, Mark viene avvicinato da un uomo, come testimonierà in seguito un suo amico e verso le 4:00 del mattino del ragazzo non c'è più traccia. Tutti si mobilitano per cercarlo ma si rendono subito conto che serve l'aiuto della polizia: le ricerche partono repentine ma per circa un mese, del giovane Kilroy, non si avranno più notizie. Fino a quando, per un caso fortuito, si scoprirà il triste destino di Mark: durante un posto di blocco un'auto non si ferma allo stop della polizia e viene inseguita sino ad un ranch messicano. Gli agenti, dopo un sopralluogo, scoprono che la fattoria altro non è che un nascondiglio di una setta, dedita a rituali che si rifanno alla Palo Mayombe, alla Santeria e alla Brujeria. (...) A capo di questa setta c'è Adolfo de Jesús Constanzo, un serial killer cubano-americano, leader di culto di una banda soprannominata Narcosatanisti e chiamato dai suoi seguaci "El Padrino". Adolfo promette a coloro che effettuano traffici illeciti di essere in grado di proteggerli dalle forze dell'ordine, in cambio di sacrifici umani e alte somme di denaro. Quella sera Mark fu rapito perché il capo della conventicola necessitava di un uomo bianco e intelligente per i suoi riti magici. Dopo l'irruzione della polizia nel covo, molti adepti riuscirono a scappare, compreso Adolfo e durante le perquisizioni furono ritrovati 74 cadaveri e 110 kg di marijuana. Secondo la confessione di uno dei membri della setta la fine di Mark Kilroy fu violenta e feroce: il "gringo" fu sodomizzato, torturato e decapitato con un machete. Per completare il rito gli fu strappato il cuore dal petto e il cervello bollito e mangiato. Non furono solo gli omicidi in quanto tali a rendere tragica la storia, ma anche la crudeltà con il quale avvenivano: gli adepti catturati testimoniarono di lacerazioni inflitte alle vittime ancora vive, come l'evirazione, raccontarono di dita spezzate e di organi rimossi. A tutto questo seguivano i rituali veri e propri: le parti del corpo estratte venivano cucinate in grandi calderoni, mescolate al sangue e successivamente ingerite. Intere famiglie furono ritrovate smembrate e dilaniate, semiseppellite attorno al ranch e appartenenti soprattutto ai rivali nei traffici illegali. Nemmeno i bambini furono risparmiati: 14 corpi affiorarono nei campi della fattoria, il loro scopo era quello di fare da esche per le vittime designate. Pochi mesi dopo la scoperta della banda, Adolfo venne ritrovato morto accanto al corpo della sua amante: sicuramente un omicidio-suicidio per evitare di essere arrestato e passare la fine dei suoi giorni in carcere. Cripto ........ Adolf Gesù, bel nome!
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favorite stories(from any medium)
uhhh i cant rank em really but some stories i love are
- dorohedoro
- that part in bai suhzen where she does necromancy on her baby daddy and hes like im so sorry i died of shock but even though you sometimes turn into a huge fucking snake i really do love you so much. im for real. please let me be your husband again i love you snake girl
- adolfo constanzos entire life
-the wailing (2016)
-the vampire lestat
- RATS IN THE WALLS
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