CFLarsen had good points, but I'd like to respond to this as well. Perhaps I have a different take on things.
I'd say, as I always say, that if you strongly believe that, then you should really report her to the proper law enforcement agencies who deal with that sort of thing, because complaining about it on a bulletin board won't solve anything.
I would love to. However, there is a very broad line between what is a scam which is legally actionable, and one which the authorities will ignore. I suppose my best course of action might be to contact the BBB. I cannot file a consumer complaint, as I am not actually a customer of this woman's.
I suppose the FTC might have some juridiction. I will contact them about this, but have my doubts about what their response will be. Although the fortune tellers and astrologers get off under the guise of entertainment (and I do agree that they provide this for some people), the "police psychics" might be crossing a line by making more substantial claims.
However, it would be hard to argue any real harm beyond monetary issues, and I doubt those are large enough for the FTC to care.
There is a distinction between what is legally a scam, and what is ethically one, at least in the mind of the US government. I did not say I agree with that, but my agreement or disagreement has no bearing on reality.
Apparently some of the people actually using her services do consider them useful.
But that is beside the point. I would argue that those using her "find missing people" services are laboring under false hope.
But that's like saying you have the ability to become a policeman and solve crimes yourself, so therefore you are aiding the theives in their crimes. In other words, you are arguing based on hypothetical situations.
Yes, I am. And
hypothetically if she can see the person committing a crime or knows the location of a missing person, then she has the same obligation to society that any criminal witness has. I did not say she would be put in jail for refusing to help, only that she is unethical. If she does not have those abilities, then she is lying.
There's certainly been cases of that.
http://www.crimelibrary.com/criminal_mind/forensics/psychics/11.html
I see psychic shows all the time that show real police personnell saying a psychic helped them out. If you disagree with that fact, that's really irrelevant.
That's funny, I read something interesting at the bottom of that article:
"Thus far, a psychic's reliability for law enforcement has not been established. Anecdotal information is sometimes impressive and even surprising, but nothing can be concluded about using psychics as resources in solving a crime."
You know, that article is hardly supportive of the position that psychics are used often.
Police personnel saying that a psychic "helped them out" is also totally irrelevant. Being fooled by someone does not give them the ability to perform under controlled conditions with the possibility for deception and vague guesswork removed.
Again, why no FBI unit? My agreement is completely irrelevant, of course. However, I would argue that the evidence is far from compelling. I saw a TV show where some guy said aliens were real. Does that make them real?
As CFLarsen said, please provide
specific examples. I do not care about vague "police use psychics sometimes" statements. I don't care about the police humoring a psychic when they have no leads and don't want to look like they are doing nothing. The evidence I have seen leads me to believe this woman is a fraud, as are all other police psychics I have ever seen.
Can you please cite specific examples and
prove me wrong!
Tai, another question: does a well-known person who claims to be psychic being wrong numerous times generally suggest to you that psychics do not have powers, or does it suggest to you only that the one person who was wrong is not a
real psychic, but that the powers are still real and possible?