About Our Local Coordinator Rick Moran
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Rick Moran is best known in the field of Unexplained Phenomenon as the
investigator who debunked Jay Anson’s famous book, The Amityville Horror, but
that is not the whole story.
Rick began his journalism career at the age of 14, when he photographed his first
major fire and sold it to a New York newspaper for $15 and a “brick” of B&W film.
After graduating from high school his family expected him to go into the “family
business,” namely the New York City Police Department and Rick agreed.
Knowing it was a great way to have someone pay for his college education. He
later graduated from Jesuit College and Fordham University with degrees in
Journalism and Comparative Religious Studies. He later attended John Jay
College of Criminal Justice and earned an advanced degree in Public Safety
Management for the Emergency Medical Service and later lectured in Sociology.
While a police officer, Rick freelanced as a stringer for a number of newspapers in
New York, specializing in criminal justice stories and soon joined forces with Paul
Hoffman at the New York Daily News, which was his introduction to unexplained
phenomenon. He later became a principal writer for CBS Publications Psychic
World magazine and began traveling the country on his days off, covering
assignments for CBS' Popular Magazine Group.
When Anson’s book was in pre-press release, a copy found its way into the hands
of the Psychical Research Foundation at Duke University where they learned that
the book was being sold as a true story based on the presence of three PRF staff
members. They first asked Hoffman to do his own investigation, but he turned
down the job, and Rick was asked to do it instead. By this time Rick was involved
with the Association for the Study of Unexplained Phenomenon and agreed to
investigate the books claims with the group. In all he and his team spent several
days in the Amityville house and he later spent almost a year playing devil’s
advocate against Anson on radio and TV interviews.
More than a year after Amityville, Rick was invited to lecture on his Amityville
experiences at Duke. He was expecting a handful of researchers but when arrived
on campus he learned that more than 250 academics had turned out to hear about
his experiences. His lecture was later said to have broken new ground in Fortean
research, suggesting that it was impossible to prove the existence of their subject
matter using the scientific method of empirical standards. He suggested that they
adopt field guidelines that would use the tools commonly associated with both
journalists and police investigators, which included the collection of collaborative
statements and hard evidence.
Rick was later asked to test his theory by doing a follow-up investigation into the
case of the Mothman Prophecies, from a book by John Keel. His team traveled
and stayed in West Virginia, reinterviewing witnesses and gathering press
accounts of the year long event, which ended in the collapse of the Silver Bridge.
To everyone’s surprise, Rick later wrote a white paper on the investigation, in
which he said he had found many of the story’s key elements credible, but he did
not elaborate. He maintained that the methods the group used in West Virginia
worked perfectly. When he didn’t report that he had his own encounter with both
the men-in-black and Mothman related experiences after leaving Point Pleasant.
Those experiences were catalogued by the group, but were not published at the
time, although they were known to key players in the field. Those notes later found
there way into the movie, The Mothman Prophecies.
With both Amityville and Mothman behind him, Rick returned to New York and
resumed his career with the NYPD, eventually becoming the primary writer and
editor of department’s New York’s Finest magazine. He later became the
academic director of the New York Police Academy and joined the staff at John Jay
College of Criminal Justice as an associate, which he held until he changed
careers and returned to full time journalism with Photo Associates News Service
where he was a bureau chief in New York and later Boston and Washington D.C.
He later began to specialize in community journalism and became editor of
several newspapers, which eventually led to his move to Texas more than a
decade ago.
In 2001, Rick returned to New York to volunteer his services after the 9-11 disaster,
writing a series of personal profiles of fallen heroes. He returned to Texas a year
later, where he suffered a massive heart attack, which forced him into early
retirement. He continues to freelance, writing primarily on the three topics that
most interest him, American History, Sociology and Fortean Phenomenon. He has
also assisted in the production of several TV programs for both US and Australian
film companies about Unexplained Phenomenon, which have aired prominently on
both the Learning Channel, Travel Channel and A&E. He is a regular guest on
dozens of radio talk shows, as well, including the TAPS radio program.
In 2006, Rick decided that he would start a research and field investigation group
in Texas and received permission from earlier members of ASUP to continue to
use their name. His first investigation, was into the Fouke (AR) Monster, which was
a major story due to a 1970’s film, The Legend of Boggy Creek, which later ran in
Fortean Times magazine of London.
While it might sound as if Rick has limited himself to the big stories, nothing could
be further from the truth. He has led field investigators through literally hundreds of
cases, covering everything from haunting and beasties to UFO’s and other
paranormal encounters. He hopes that the new group being formed in Northern
Texas will continue this body of work as a team.
“The goal is not just to study and write about unexplained phenomenon,” Rick
explains. “The true goal is to hopefully make that one important discovery that will
crack the code, so to speak and make all Fortean phenomenon understandable.
While quantum physics is far from my personal area of expertise, explaining what
is going on all around us could well unravel any number of scientific anomalies,
from string theory to the entire time/space continuum. There is no guarantee that
there is a connection, but we will never know unless we look!”
©2006 – ASUP (All Rights Reserved)
Rick Moran, 2006
Rick Moran in 1972