The Magnus Archives - MAG 19 Confession I
Episode Date: May 18, 2016Case #0113005Statement of Father Edwin Burroughs, regarding his claimed demonic possession.…Be sure to subscribe using your podcast software of choice to get every episode automatically downloaded t...o your device. Visit Rustyquill.com/subscribe for quick and easy links. It’s more convenient for you and really helps us out.Like what you’re hearing? Let us know.Find ad-free episodes and bonus content on our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/rustyquillCheck out our merchandise available in our official stores:RedbubbleTeepublicCrowdmadeYou can subscribe to this podcast using your podcast software of choice.Please rate and review on your software of choice, it really helps us to spread the podcast to new listeners, so share the fear.Join our community:WEBSITE: rustyquill.comFACEBOOK: facebook.com/therustyquillTWITTER: @therustyquillTHREADS: @rustyquillukINSTAGRAM: @rustyquillukEMAIL: mail@rustyquill.comThe Magnus Archives is a podcast distributed by Rusty Quill Ltd. and licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Sharealike 4.0 International Licence Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The Magnus Archives Agnes Archives.
Episode 19. Confession. The End The End
The End
The End
The End
The End
The End
The End
The End Statement of Father Edwin Burroughs, regarding his claimed demonic possession.
Original statement given May 30th, 2011.
Audio recording by Jonathan Sims, head archivist of the Magnus Institute, London.
Statement begins.
The Magnus Institute, London.
Statement begins.
Thank you for coming.
I know this can't have been easy to arrange,
and I appreciate the opportunity to make my statement.
The prison service probably didn't make it easy for you.
They're understandably hesitant to give anyone extended access to me in case I get violent,
but I'm very glad they made an exception for you.
At least assuming that you're real.
I hope you're real.
I hope you're real. But maybe it's that hope that's being used against me in a cruel joke.
Or maybe the joke would be that I would let that doubt cost me my only chance to tell my story.
Either way, I choose to make my statement, and if you're not real, then hopefully no harm done.
We'll get to the cannibalism, of course, but first I just want to provide some context. I don't know how much you work with the
Church in your institute. You may be surprised that a man of the cloth such as myself, however
far from grace I may have fallen, would enlist the aid of an organisation dedicated to studying the
paranormal. Well, to be honest, it's generally kept quiet, but the Catholic Church
is not against belief in the supernatural outside of the official doctrine, demons, ghosts, black
magic. It's generally up to the individual how much they believe in these things, and I believe
that very much of what you research is real. Dangerous, but real. I've always seen the devil's work as a very tangible thing, and those priests who might speak of them as metaphor or symbol are, I fear, often placing themselves and their parishioners in a position of peril.
Sorry, this is becoming a homily. It's just been some time since I've had a chance to express myself like this.
I almost don't care if it is on one of its phantasms. It's just been some time since I've had a chance to express myself like this.
I almost don't care if it is on one of its phantasms.
So it was only natural, I suppose, that it was relatively early in my vocation as a priest
that I trained as an exorcist.
It's not something all that special, really.
Every diocese should have a trained exorcist available, or failing that a bishop can do
it, but nine times out of ten the duties of an exorcist are to recommend a good psychiatrist, doctor or substance abuse programme,
and bishops don't usually have the time for that.
I was an exorcist for the Diocese of Oxford when all this happened.
I trained as a Jesuit, so I was used to moving about a lot, but I was at Oxford from about 2005 right through to my arrest in 2009.
There were two exorcists in the diocese, myself and an old Augustinian by the name of Father
Harrogate. I would ask as a favour that you not follow up with him. He plays a no-pass in what
happened to me and would, I think, be upset by any reminder of my actions. In my time I have performed just over 100 exorcisms,
with varying degrees of success. It was relatively rare that it felt like much more than a blessing
or a prayer. It still helped in most cases, but as one of the most common types of possession
is not the exorcist style of speaking in a demonic tongue and floating off the bed, but rather that of an unnatural depression,
it was often hard to be sure. It is difficult to say how many were devout believers who came to us
with a very natural depression and simply preferred to look to the church than to counselling or
medicine. Even those were helped to some degree, I believe, even if only as a placebo. On a few
occasions, though, I did encounter things
that served to firm up my belief in the devil and my faith in my... my... I'm sorry. It won't let me
say the words. It won't let me pray either, but I hope I will not be judged too harshly for it on the final day. As I was saying,
there were times when I felt things pushing back. I was once cursed at in Sumerian by a young man
who was utterly illiterate, and had the names of my childhood pets thrown at me by an old Jamaican
man. I will admit that there were times that I have been very afraid of what I was trying to remove,
but I always had faith in Jesus.
I always had faith.
None of it prepared me for what happened on Bullingdon Road, though.
That was something else entirely.
I was doing some work at the Catholic chaplaincy in St. Allgates,
generally trying to help the spiritual well-being of the students who came to us,
when Father Singh, one of the other priests working there, came to me.
He said he had a student from St. Hugh's asking after an exorcism and wanted to refer her to me.
I told him of course and he set up a meeting between us.
The student's name was Bethany O'Connor
and much of what she told me was under the seal of confession
something I will not break even now.
and much of what she told me was under the seal of confession, something I will not break even now.
So suffice it to say she believed that she was no longer in control of her own mind.
Even as we talked, she spent much of her time looking around or staring into my eyes with what I can only describe as pointed suspicion.
Bethany told me that her will was still her own, but she could no longer trust her senses,
and had found herself doing much that she did not understand.
I remember one moment very clearly, in our second meeting, I believe.
We were taking a walk around the botanical gardens, as she said it calmed her when talking of her problem.
She reached into her bag, took out what appeared to be a small slab of stone, slate I think, and started to lift it to her mouth as if to eat it.
I asked what she was doing and she stopped, looked at the rock she held in her hand and threw it away before bursting into tears.
She told me that it felt like something was in her head, changing what she saw and felt and thought.
I asked when this had started and she told me it was after she had moved out of her college halls and into a house on Bullingdon Road with her friends. I suggested that perhaps
it had something to do with the stresses of entering second year, but she insisted it
was something to do with the house. Finally, after several discussions, I agreed to look
over the house and perform a small blessing in case there was anything wrong with the place, spiritually speaking.
It was a cold morning in December, near the end of Michaelmas term, when I visited 89 Bullingdon Road.
It was an old house, though not so old as to be unusual in that part of Oxford,
and had clearly once been a small family house, now partitioned by the Lettings Agency, to house as many students as possible. Bethany
told me that there were six of them living there at the time. I went around the house looking for
signs of anything amiss, but found nothing that seemed out of the ordinary.
She kept asking me if I felt any evil in the house, and I tried to explain to her that priests,
unfortunately, don't have the power to simply sense the presence of evil.
I didn't realise how unfortunate that was, at least not until we got to her room.
It was on the first floor at the back of the house, and it was a long, thin bedroom, easily
the biggest. It was adorned in typical student fashion, with movie posters and flat-packed
bookshelves. My attention was immediately taken by a large patch of wall,
where the wallpaper had been crudely hacked away
to reveal the bare brickwork underneath.
Written there, in faded blue paint,
was a single word.
Mentis.
I'd been out of seminary for some years at this point,
and had never been one for the Latin Mass, but I still knew the word for mind.
My immediate assumption was that Bethany had painted it in some sort of mania, but looking
closer I saw that the paint was far too old to have been done since she moved in.
It looked more as though it had been painted on the wall and then covered up with layers
of wallpaper over the years, until finally being unearthed by stripping it away. What was slightly more concerning
was that watching Bethany pace around the room, following my gaze with some confusion,
it became clear that she didn't seem able to see it. When I asked her what the word
on the wall meant to her, she looked at me as though I was talking nonsense.
It didn't seem like there was much more to be gained there at that point, so I performed a short blessing over the place, took some photographs, and told Bethany that I would
have to come back later, once I'd looked into a few things. She seemed disappointed there wasn't
anything more immediate that I was doing, but didn't try to argue. And so I left what would turn out to be my first visit to the house on Bullingdon Road,
calling Father Singh to arrange a meeting the next day
where we could discuss whether to attempt a full exorcism.
It was at that meeting that I got a call from the hospital.
Bethany had been admitted with severe facial lacerations
and was asking to see me immediately.
I made my way to the John Radcliffe as soon as I was able and was asking to see me immediately. I made my way to the John Radcliffe
as soon as I was able, and was surprised to see two police officers standing near her bed. I was
met by Anne Willett, the nurse who Bethany had asked to call me. I knew Annie a bit already,
as she had attended the church where I ministered, and I recognised her from the congregation.
She explained to me that Bethany had apparently attempted to attack
one of her housemates with a kitchen knife, and in the ensuing struggle, it ended up falling
headfirst into a full-length mirror, cutting herself very badly. I was, to put it mildly,
somewhat taken aback. This was such an escalation from what Bethany had described before,
and I was starting to fear that if I didn't manage to do something, the poor girl would most likely end up locked away somewhere.
Annie was convinced that an exorcism was the only way, and so, finally, I agreed to do so.
I had already got permission from the bishop, but that was before Bethany's hospitalisation, and I would have preferred to discuss it with him.
Still, it was clear she was getting worse, and I decided to take a risk and try it anyway.
It was a stupid risk to take.
I was cocky and complacent,
full of spiritual pride and an eagerness to test my faith
against whatever was inside of Bethany's soul,
not even considering that I might be risking it.
Still, I have paid dearly for my hubris. We waited until the police had taken their statements and left,
and then I set up and began the exorcism. It went unusually. There was no resistance
from Bethany, almost no reaction at all.
In many parts of the ceremony where, in my experience, there was usually a response, either from the demon or at least the victim,
it was instead just silence as she stared at me with a look that almost seemed like pity.
Annie just stood in the corner, watching and clearly eager to help, despite the fear I saw in her eyes. At last, Bethany locked eyes with me and slowly shook her head.
I'm so sorry, she said. It wants your faith. Without warning, she began to convulse, thrashing
in obvious pain. I tried to continue the ritual, but the doctors pushed past me, desperately trying to help Bethany as blood began to pour from her mouth where
she had bitten into her tongue. In the end, they couldn't save her. Brain haemorrhage,
they said, probably from the blow to the head when she hit the mirror, and they just hadn't
spotted it. I was asked to leave in no uncertain terms. The doctors made it very clear that I may not have been the one that hit her in the head,
but they held me very much accountable for her death.
I was also given a very thorough dressing down by my bishop,
who told me to take a step back and leave the exorcisms to Father Harrogate for a while.
Annie almost got suspended over the matter,
but in the end was spared further
disciplinary action as she had been simply passing on the wishes of the patient. And for a couple of
years that was it. I felt a great deal of guilt over my involvement with Bethany's death, and I
started to drink more than I had before. I was never, I think, in danger of becoming an alcoholic,
as most of the priests I worked with had done work with substance abusers,
not to mention the fact that priests are certainly not immune to alcoholism and would have picked up on the warning signs.
But they did express concern over the occasional disappearance of bottles of sacramental wine.
At the time, I was sure it wasn't me.
I preferred scotch, and the muscatel wine they bought had never really been to my taste.
But looking back, I can't really be sure what I was drinking.
I know it's something of a jump from unwittingly stealing holy wine to my later crimes,
but I'm trying my best to fit this into a relatively coherent narrative.
Apart from that, the years passed uneventfully,
and I was starting to feel like
I'd put the whole affair behind me, until I got a call from Annie. She said that a gentleman had
been admitted to the John Radcliffe after having some sort of scare in a house up on Hilltop Road.
I explained to her that I wasn't performing exorcisms at the moment and said she should
talk to Father Harrogate. She assured me it wouldn't need a
full exorcism, and if I did, we could bring him in. But she didn't know or trust Father Harrogate,
but just wanted my opinion. Finally, after a lot of pestering, I agreed to pay a visit to the house.
It was late when I got there, and starting to get very cold. The whole affair was beginning
to bring back some less-than-pleasant memories
of my arrival at Bullenden Road all those years ago.
I was also a bit annoyed at Annie for not mentioning that the house was still under construction,
not only making it unlikely to be the haunt of demons or spirits,
but also meaning that the coat I had brought along
would be somewhat inadequate against the chill in a house without windows.
I knocked on the door, and one of the builders opened it.
I forget his name, I'm afraid. Something Polish, I think.
Or maybe Czech.
He seemed confused at first as to why I was there,
but I explained, and it turned out he was the one that had been treated by Annie at the hospital.
She had not mentioned the builder's possible schizophrenia to me,
and I began to fear that this may be a waste of time.
Still, I had a look around and asked the builder questions about the place.
He certainly did have an interesting story, but I was unsure of how much of it I believed.
Eventually, I decided that I had seen enough and that there didn't seem to be any malicious presence here.
The builder was looking at me in such a way as to make me hesitant to tell him that,
so I decided I would at least give the place a quick prayer or blessing.
I asked him to wait outside, though.
Something in his manner was a bit off-putting,
and I felt uncomfortable with him watching me like a hawk,
as though I was about to vanish at any moment.
He headed into the back garden, and I was alone in the house.
I moved into the hallway and began to pray, praying for protection and sprinkling holy water around
from a flask I carry on me in these situations. As I spoke the words I felt something alarming.
I was starting to grow very hot, as so the room was heating up very rapidly.
I looked around for the source of the heat, but the radiators hadn't been installed yet,
and I couldn't see anything else that might have been warming the room.
It continued, though, and soon I was sweating through my shirt.
I began to cough, and I could smell smoke, even though I couldn't see any, or any fire for that matter.
I fell to one knee and choked back a scream as I felt my skin began to crackle and burn. I began to pray again for protection, not for the place this
time, but for me. As I did, I felt something answer me. And yet, I cannot stress this enough.
I cannot stress this enough. What answered was not God. It wasn't him. Something else answered my call for protection.
I felt my lips move. They made no sound that I could hear, but I felt them form every syllable.
I am not for you. I am marked.
The heat slowed in its increase, but it did not stop. My mouth continued to speak for me when I heard the sound of a car engine outside in a great crash. Instantly the feeling
was gone, as though it were never there, and looking out I saw the builder had managed to uproot a tree from the back garden.
I sat there for a while, catching my breath.
When he came back inside I told him I had completed the prayers, and excused myself quickly.
It was the first time I had experienced...
Statement ends.
Unfortunately, this statement as it stands is incomplete and stops at this point.
It does not appear to be the actual end of the document,
so I have hopes that the rest is simply misfiled somewhere else in the archives.
If this is the case, I will record and add that part when it is found,
either by myself or, given the scale of the archive's mismanagement,
by my successor when I pass away from old age. With this in mind, all but the most preliminary
of investigations into this statement are being put on hold until the rest is found.
Most of the details do appear to be correct, and match the statement given by Mr. Ivo Lensik in 2007.
We did find Father Burroughs' arrest record, though, and I am very curious to see how the events recounted here could have led to the incident in 2009, where he apparently murdered
two first-year university students following Sunday Mass, and then peeled off and ate most
of their skin.
End recording.
The Magnus Archives is a podcast distributed by RustyQuill.com
and licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Sharealike International License.
Today's episode was written and performed by Jonathan Sims.
It was produced by Alexander J. Newell, Mike LeBeau, and Murray Porter,
and directed by Alexander J. Newell.
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