Oh, and by the way, I noticed you wrote this about Edgar Cayce:
"He made 9 specific predictions about the famous "Lindbergh baby kidnapping" while the child was still missing -- all wrong."
Police later realized the kidnappers were holding Lindbergh's baby on the small street Cayce told them at the moment. They didn't go, because they didn't believe in psychics. My family was friends with the Lindberghs.
Police later realized the kidnappers were holding Lindbergh's baby on the small street Cayce told them at the moment.
Feel free to document this. We'll wait. Be sure to also explain who you mean by "kidnappers", plural, since Hauptmann is the only kidnapper ever tied to the case (he had the ransom money), and how police "later realized" where exactly the baby was "held", since Hauptmann never divulged that information, and the baby was eventually found dead in the woods two miles from the Lindbergh's house? This should be... interesting.
Meanwhile, the astute reader can amuse himself by counting how many blatant failures Cayce had in his "predictions" about the Lindbergh kidnapping, including predicting that the child's hair has been cut and dyed (wrong), and that he had been moved to Jersey City and "was not well" (yeah, like if he was in Jersey City Hauptmann would have dragged the kid back to near the Lindbergh's home to dispose of the body...)
They didn't go, because they didn't believe in psychics.
Smart cops.