From: Bruce Cornet [bcornet@monmouth.com]
Sent: Thursday, March
15, 2001 10:42 AM
To: Lisa Stem
Cc: James
Forberg
Subject: Re: Hi
Dear Lisa,
My comments are inserted
below.
Bruce
>
> Hello Bruce.
> The following is some additional
information I received from Chuckie and
> Bonnie. I was doing a reading
for Jim and this info came in. I thought maybe
> you could confirm some
of this info. I am at work but will write more later.
> What did you
think about the photos? I am dropping the negatives off at
> another
place to see what happens. I was looking at the negatives and it
> looked
as though there may be some others that did not get developed. I look
>
forward to hearing from you. Many Blessings, L
>
> Hello Jim,
> Your paintings look beautiful. You do certainly have a talent!
>
As soon as IChuckie was allegedly driving to school early one morning in October 1991 (I say allegedly, because later I learned that Chuckie was either contemplating dropping out of high school, or had dropped out but didn't want his father to know). There was dense fog on the road, as is typical of that time of year in southeastern Texas. Chuckie had recently gotten his third speeding ticket, but didn't have his permanent driver's license (only a learner's permit). Three strikes and out!
He was driving a Volkswagen beetle, his third car after the two previous cars his father had given him became disabled for one reason or another. He was driving recklessly with abandon. He decided to pass the car in front of him, which was being driven by a paramedic. He barely got ahead of that car when a full sized sedan suddenly appeared right in front of him. He swerved to the right, but the sedan plowed into the driver's side, collapsing that side of the VW beetle. A piece of the door tore into the left side of Chuckie's face, crushing his cheek bone and severing the left side of his jaw. It would make sense Lisa that you detected (received information on) severe damage to his left eye. The paramedic tried to save him and stop the horrendous bleeding, but ultimately Chuckie lost too much blood, dying in the ER. I am surprised that these memories are still so vivid (and unresolved) for the spirit of Chuckie. That bothers me. I feel helpless.
This information is known only to a few people
(mostly relatives, the police, and medical personnel), and was never published
in the newspaper.
BC: Again, I must ask: Why is she seeking help from Jim now after ten years? And yet I was clearly drawn into the loop through you Lisa, perhaps because I knew how to put you in touch with Jim.
> It seems that she has always
bailed him out
> from the age of 12 yrs. when all changed in their lives.
BC: Bonnie and Chuckie moved in with me when he was 9 years old. At 12 years old we were forced to move out of my house and into a town house after I was one of the casualties of a hostile oil company take-over. That was also the time when Bonnie and I got married (June 1986) after wnning a custody battle against Bill Marzi (it took two years and thousands of dollars). Bill had used every dirty trick, slander, and lie in the book to try to gain custody of Chuckie. Chuckie was very much traumatized by what his father put him and his mother through. Later in 1988 when we moved to New York so that I could take another job, Chuckie was separated from his father even more, being able to see him only on holidays or school breaks. Bonnie fought to protect Chuckie from his father's bad influence, but eventually lost in July 1990 when Chuckie snuck out of our condo one morning with a plane ticket his father had secretly mailed to him. Bonnie never saw her son again. I remember the long phone calls Chuckie had with his father before leaving us. Bill was good at laying down a major guilt trip on Chuckie, convincing him that his mother was purposely trying to separate them. Bill promised Chuckie a car and auto insurance and driving lessons, which is something Chuckie very much wanted (and which we could not afford at the time).
>
Chuckie was upset atBC: I have no knowledge that Bill Marzie had remarried or had a live-in girl friend down in Texas. Perhaps this person is not a step-mother, but Chuckie's grandmother May (Bonnie's mother). May had doted over Billy, supporting Bonnie's first ex-husband in his quest to gain custody of Billy. She never gave Chuckie the same attention, nor supported Bill in his quest to gain custody of Chuckie. On the contrary, she gave a deposition against Bill during Bonnie's custody fight. Perhaps Chuckie wanted to live with his father, but felt guilty about abandoning his ill mother.
> He felt that life gave him a
rotten deal and
> became good at blaming others and making them feel
guilty.
BC: There is no question Chuckie got a rotten deal in life, with a father like Bill Marzi, a grandmother like May Harrington, and a disabled mother. It is a shame that he turned to blaming others for things that were out of their control.
> He quit school and
> seemed
to alienate himself. His new friends became pot and alcohol. The shame
>
is that he was a very bright boy with
a high IQ.
BC: Yes, this is a good piece of information you picked up Lisa, although Chuckie may have only recently quit high school before his death. He did associate with drop outs who used drugs and alcohol, according to Jimmy's girlfriend. Yes, Chuckie had an above average IQ.
> I need to ask Bruce but I
>
think the boy wanted to be buried by his Mom but feel he was buried or
>
cremated at some distance away.
BC: Bill Marzi is an atheist. He abhorred religion and tried to do everything to discourage Chuckie from being exposed to any religion, while his mother tried to introduce him to her chosen religion, Catholocism. Bill buried Chuckie as quickly and cheaply as possible in an unmarked grave in a pine box on the other side of Houston from where his mother is buried. This was a major problem for the spirit of Bonnie and Chuckie's brother and relatives, who would have wanted him buried next to his mother. Ironically, I purchased two crypts next to each other, and would have gladly given the second one to Chuckie had his father not been such an evil, cruel, and spiteful bastard. There was no funeral or memorial service for Chuckie. I later learned that a group of school friends went to his grave and placed flowers on it and said prayers, but Bill would have nothing to do with Chuckie once he was dead - and that's after fighting for years to gain custody of his son! Nice father!
> Bonnie was waiting for him when he
passed
> over but his spirit was still full of rage directed at everyone.
Bruce said
> he was mad at his Mom but I get his rage was more at life
and his dad and a
> female associated with the father.
BC: I'll never forget that experience when I confronted the spirits of Chuckie and Bonnie in Chuckie's bedroom the night of the day after he died. Yes, Chuckie was full of rage, but his mother was equally outraged by his accusation that she caused his death in order to get even with his father for taking him from her.
> The letter K is strong.
BC: Interesting that the letter K is now strong, whereas earlier the letter M was strong. I asked you if you could find out if the spirit of Bonnie used the name KaRa, and if K refers to KaRa. Any information on this mystery and who KaRa is or was in ancient Egypt would be most helpful to me and Jim.
> I feel the boy has
> a very
sensitive nature and liked poetry and artistic things. He was made to
>
feel by his dad C or G? that he was weak when he displayed these feelings.
> Therefore he hid his feelings. He drew something at age 10 that Bonnie
kept
> and may have shown you?
BC: Yes, Chuckie was artistically talented. I remember a drawing Bonnie showed me that Chuckie had drawn soon after they moved in with me. Chuckie also won a Texas art contest in commemoration of the 1836 liberation of Texas over Mexico. Chuckie made a beautiful knitted flag of the lone star of Texas, which was displayed in the Texas capitol for months. I now have that flag framed and on my wall. I did not realize that Bill Marzi had actively discouraged his interests in artistic expression. Chuckie loved to build models of cars, and had them displayed over his desk in his bedroom.
> Also something about a bicycle
injury or skateboard.
> He was wearing blue jeans and a blue with red and
green plaid type shirt.
> There was a small tattoo on his finger at the
knuckle looks like a Celtic
> cross and a silver ring band.
BC: I do not remember a bicycle injury. He rode a bike I had loaned to him when he lived with us in New York. I do not remember him falling off that bike, but that may just be due to my poor memory. If he had a small tattoo on his finger, that is news to me. Perhaps it was a scar from that bicycle injury, or perhaps he got a tattoo after moving to live with his father in Pasadena, TX.
Hope this helps you in communicating with the spirits of Bonnie and Chuckie. I am very curious what this is all about, and want to know if Bonnie will answer some important questions about who KaRa is, why she wanted me to believe I had a daughter named Tamara Maria Durn, and why she said she went to Princeton University during the time she was recovering from cancer surgery. There are lots of unanswered questions, and if she was behind what I experienced in 1995, I would like to know why she put me through all of that hell and mind manipulation.
Perhaps that is why she wants to contact Jim Forberg rather than me. Could it be out of guilt? I am not angry at her. I would just like some truthful answers.
Thank you again for taking the time and interest to read all of this information, make contact with the other side, and for caring enough to help us. Bless you Lisa, for you are truly doing God's work.
Bruce