A paranormal investigator claims to have communicated with the spirit of Ed Gein in a new documentary about the serial killer who inspired Silence of the Lambs and Psycho.
Steve Shippy, a paranormal investigator and documentary filmmaker, claims he successfully talked with the dead serial killer’s spirit in a two-hour Discovery+ special titled Ed Gein: The Real Psycho that airs on Friday.
Gein, who was known as the Butcher of Plainfield and the Plainfield Ghoul, was a murderer and body snatcher who exhumed corpses from graveyards to make a ‘skin suit’ from the bones and skin of the dead.
He told police after his arrest in 1957 that he used the skin suit to ‘become’ his dead mother.
Gein’s life has inspired a number of horror characters including Norman Bates from Alfred Hitchcock’s classic film Psycho, Leatherface in the Texas Chainsaw Massacre and Buffalo Bill in the Silence of the Lambs.
In the documentary, Shippy partners with psychic medium Cindy Kaza to question Gein and his mother, Augusta Wilhelmine Gein, about their relationship, Daily Beast reported.
Serial killer Ed Gein is escorted from the Wisconsin State Crime Laboratory to the county jail after confessing to two murders
The character of Buffalo Bill, pictured, is seen in the Silence of the Lambs and is inspired by Gein
The character of Norman Bates, right, is seen at the Bates Motel in the classic Alfred Hitchcock thriller Psycho
The documentary is an installment of the hit Shock Docs franchise and is the first time cameras have been allowed on the Gein property ‘where the gruesome evidence was first discovered.’
Shippy and Kaza then ‘question’ the Geins about their relationship, Daily Beast reported.
‘Put on the suit,’ Shippy claims Gein says during the paranormal encounter.
Shippy asks Gein if he is referring to his infamous ‘skin suit.’
‘Yeah,’ the serious killer’s spirit allegedly responds in the documentary.
At the end of the ‘interview,’ Shippy says: ‘This kind of evidence is unheard of.’
During some point in the documentary, Kaza ‘almost seems stung’ when Gein’s mother allegedly calls her a witch, Den of Geek reported.
‘Tapping into the energy of Ed Gein as he was alive, and dead, will haunt me for the rest of my life,’ Kaza said in the press release, which referred to her as a ‘world-renowned psychic medium.’
Cindy Kaza and Steve Shippy are pictured holding a knife owned by Ed Gein in a new documentary
Gein allegedly tells the investigators to ‘put on the suit’ referring to the skin suit he made from human flesh
An image of Gein shrouded in red is seen in the new documentary on Discovery+
Shippy and Kaza visited a number of locations in Gein’s hometown of Plainfield, Wisconsin, to find ‘the most haunted locations connected to the infamous killer’ and if he committed his heinous crimes while under his mother’s spell.
In one scene, a man alleges that his animals and family members died after he bought a knife belonging to Gein, The Sun reported.
‘People think this area is haunted. They see shadows where they shoudn’t be. They hear screaming and wailing, mostly female,’ a local historian Dave Bignell tells Shippy.
The investigators use a variety of high-tech ghost hunting equipment during their research. The documentary uses some archival media but relies heavily on dramatic recreations.
‘You’d think that having 20 years of experience investigating the paranormal would have prepared me for taking on this case,’ Shippy said in a news release.
‘No matter how much I had read about the man and his atrocities, I never expected to uncover what we did during our investigation.’
Waushara County Sheriff Art Schley, left, escorts Edward Gein, 51, of Plainfield, Wisc. into Central State Hospital for the Criminally Insane Nov. 23, 1957, in Milwaukee
Gein is pictured on his 160-acre farm after discovery of the mutilated and headless body of a 58-year-old woman and ten skulls on his property
View of a sign that welcomes visitors to Plainfield, Wisconsin in November 1957. At the time, the town was in the news following the arrest of murderer and body snatcher Ed Gein
A photo shows a close-up of a chair upholstered with human skin found in the home of murderer and body snatcher Ed Gein in Plainfield, Wisconsin in November 1957
An unidentified police officer examines the junk-littered kitchen in the farm home of Edward Gein, where authorities found human skulls and other parts of human bodies. They also found the butchered body of Bernice Worden hung in a shed near the house
Edward Theodore Gein, the second son of George Philip Gein and Augusta Wilhelmine Gein, was born on August 27, 1906 in La Crosse County, Wisconsin.
His father was an unemployed alcoholic and his mother was a highly religious Lutheran who held a domineering presence in Gein’s life and tried to preach to her children about the dangers of drinking and women, who she believed were tools of the devil.
Gein, a shy boy, only left the farm to attend school and teachers later remembered him as being strange and prone to random bursts of laughter. His mother would punish him for making friends with ‘sinners.’
‘His mother will never let him have a voice or thought of his own,’ Kaza says in the new documentary. ‘It was always from her.
‘She’s evil and, as a young child, I’m sad for him because I don’t think he was born this way. I feel like she created a monster.’
Deputy sheriff standing outside of house belonging to alleged serial killer Ed Gein, where he lived a deceptively quiet life and where parts of his victim’s bodies were found
Filthy, cluttered kitchen of alleged mass murderer Ed Gein, where parts of his victim’s bodies were found
Trooper Dave Sharkey looks over some of the musical instruments found in the home of bachelor farmer Ed Gein
An unidentified police investigator carries a chair from the home of murderer and body snatcher Ed Gein in 1957
Police investigators move a car as they search for evidence in a garage on the property of murderer and body snatcher Ed Gein in Plainfield, Wisconsin in November 1957
Overhead view of police investigators as they dig for evidence in a garage on the property of murderer and body snatcher Ed Gein in 1957
Smoldering ruins show all that remains of the House of Horrors after a fire of undetermined cause destroyed the two story home of confessed killer Ed Gein, who shocked the nation when human remains were found in it, the house was to be auctioned and police suspected arson
Gein’s father died of heart failure on April 1, 1940 so he and his brother Henry started taking jobs around town to help bring money into the family, including babysitting for local families.
Henry Gein died on May 16, 1944, as the brothers performed controlled burns on their farm, which got out of control and required the fire department to be put out.
At the time, it was believed that Henry Gein had died from heart failure as he was not burned during the fire. However, investigators more than a decade later questioned Gein about his brother’s death.
Dr. George W. Arndt, a psychiatrist who worked with the Wisconsin Board of Corrections, studied the case and wrote that, in retrospect, it was ‘possible and likely’ that Gein killed Henry and was ‘the ‘Cain and Abel’ aspect of this case.’
After Henry’s death, Augusta had a paralyzing stroke and Gein, the ‘town fool,’ was tasked with taking care of her as her health quickly deteriorated. She died on December 29, 1945.
Gein was devastated by his abusive mother’s death and felt like he had ‘lost his only friend and one true love,’ biographer Harold Schechter noted.
He continued to live and work on the farm but boarded up his mother’s rooms while the rest of the home fell to ruin.
A photo shows a squalid room in the home of murderer and body snatcher Ed Gein in Plainfield, Wisconsin in November 1957
View of a room in the home of murderer and body snatcher Ed Gein in Wisconsin in late November 1957. Gein had closed off the room, along with several others, when his mother died 12 years earlier, while he lived in squalid conditions in other rooms
Gein started to become fascinated with the concepts of cannibalism and began visiting local cemeteries in just two years after her death to start his 10-year grave robbing spree, according to a biography by Judge Robert H. Gollmar – who presided at Gein’s trial.
Despite all of his notoriety as a serial killer, Gein has only been confirmed to have murdered two victims while robbing the graves and desecrating the bodies of nine others.
Gein’s first victim, tavern owner Mary Hogan, was killed in 1954 – nearly 10 years after the death of his mother.
Nobody linked Gein to her disappearance when she vanished from work leaving nothing but blood at the scene.
The second murder victim, Bernice Worden, owned a hardware store in Plainfield and disappeared on the morning of November 16, 1957. Her son Frank Worden, a deputy with the local sheriff’s office, found the store’s cash register open and blood stains on the floor around 5pm that day.
An unidentified man with a cigarette holds up a sketch of evidence in the case against serial killer Ed Gein on November 20, 1957. The sketch appears to be a face, possibly a dead skin mask
Edward Gein, owner of Plainfield, Wisconsin farm where butchered body of Bernice Worden was discovered hanging in a shed, is shown as he was taken to the state crime laboratory to face a lie detector test
Worden told investigators that Gein had stopped by the store the night before and said he would return that morning for a gallon of antifreeze – the last receipt Worden wrote on the morning she disappeared.
The deputy told investigators he believed Gein was behind the murder of his mother, a widow, because he had been asking her to go roller skating with him, according to the 1998 biography Obsession.
Gein was just leaving a neighbor’s house after being invited to dinner when police approached him, and he implicated himself by insisting he had nothing to do with Bernice Worden’s death – even though no one had informed him the woman was dead.
Gein was arrested that evening while the Waushara County Sheriff’s Department searched his farm and found the woman’s decapitated body in his shed.
Worden’s body had been hung upside down to a wooden crosspiece and was ‘slit open from vagina to sternum,’ biographers noted in Obsession.
Exterior view of Worden’s hardware store in Plainfield, Wisconsin on November 20, 1957. The store was the site of a murder by serial killer Ed Gein who killed Bernice Worden there on November 16, 1957
A portrait shows murder victim Bernice Worden who was killed by Ed Gein, the inspiration for the film Psycho
Funeral for Bernice Worden, last victim of alleged serial killer Ed Gein, is held at Methodist-Episcopal Church
A crowd of about 2,000 persons took advantage of sunny skies to watch the auction on March 30, 1958 of the Ed Gein farm. The highest bidder for the land and charred ruins of the House of Horrors was Enden Schey a Wisconsin real estate broker who said he planned to put the entire 195 acres into pine for timber and pulpwood production
Inside the house, officers found human skulls attached to the posts of Gein’s bed and Worden’s heart in a saucepan on the stove.
Cops also found a trash can made of human skin, human skin covering several chair seats, bowls made from human skulls, a corset made from a female torso and leggings made from human leg skin.
Other items included the genitals of nine women in a shoe box, masks made from the skin of female heads, Mary Hogan’s face in a paper bag and her skull in a box, a belt made from female human nipples, and a lampshade made from the skin of a human face.
Despite the filth and horror in most of the farmhouse, however, authorities discovered a blocked-off, dusty yet tidy area: Augusta’s bedroom, which had been kept by Gein as a virtual shrine to his dead mother.
The amount of human trophies found in Gein’s home seemed to indicate that he had killed far more people than just Worden and Hogan. He admitted to both of these murders, though he claimed each was accidental.
Gein insisted he had not killed any other women, and instead studied death notices so he could engage in grave robbing.
He told investigators that he made as many as 40 grave robbing trips in the middle of the night to exhume recently buried bodies of middle-aged women he thought looked like his mom.
Gein provided investigators with a list of graves he had dug up – and they were found to be either empty or containing mutilated remains.
Despite admitted to killing Hogan and Worden after his arrest in 1957, Gein was initially found unfit to stand trial.
He was sent to a mental health facility and was judged fit to stand trial in 1968, and was later found guilty of murdering Worden.
However, he was also found legally insane and returned to the psychiatric institution.
He died at Mendota Mental Health Institute of respiratory failure on July 26, 1984.