CLIFFORD HOYT: THE MAN WHO HAS SEEN HELL
CLIFFORD HOYT: THE MAN WHO HAS SEEN HELL
I immediately make a premise. Many Paranormal groups report news similar to the one I am about to publish, about a certain Harry Hoyt, aged 31, who died in 1999 a few days after having an accident from which he woke up saying he saw Hell (and they put a scene from the movie “Hellraiser 2” as a photo).
Well, what I found in my research is very different, although the common thread is the same. So it's up to you to decide which version is the right one (assuming one of the two is true).
Let's go to the facts.
The protagonist is Clifford Hoyt (not Harry: Harry Hyot is an American filmmaker to me), 31 who suffered serious injuries in a car accident due to icy asphalt in 1999, on his way home after a long day at work in Maryland. .
He remained in a coma for a few hours and when he regained consciousness, he revealed to the nurse that he was looking after him that he had been sucked into a vortex that led him straight to Hell. He told of the psychological torture and anguish he experienced in every detail and the terrible images of men and women torn apart by monstrous creatures enveloped in flames.
To his claims, the doctors feared undiagnosed brain damage and offered him a series of psychological tests. Clifford refused psychological treatment and signed out of the hospital.
A few weeks later, Hoyt's neighbors complained to Hoyt's landlord about the strange music that was heard in his apartment at all hours, especially at night. The owner of the building after having tried in vain to contact him on the phone went to the house and there he found Clifford lying on the floor, naked and hugging a large block of ice.
Mr. Hoyt was still quite lucid and protested heatedly when the landlord called the police. Worried about the damage done to his property, he took pictures of the apartment (including the image I report) ..
Clifford at the station claimed that the demons of Hell were still trying to capture him. He explained that his body burned incessantly and the only remedy to avoid this pain was to put the music on loud to distract the demons. Since he had the accident he was seen leaving the house for only short periods of time for minimal supplies, including large blocks of ice to soothe the burning he felt while trying to sleep.
Doctors attribute Clifford's actions to brain damage he sustained in the accident and he currently resides in a mental rehabilitation center in Maryland.
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