D. Scott Rogo

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BornDouglas Scott Rogo
(1950-02-01)February 1, 1950
Los Angeles
DiedAugust 18, 1990(1990-08-18) (aged 40)
Los Angeles
Pen nameD. Scott Rogo
D. Scott Rogo
BornDouglas Scott Rogo
(1950-02-01)February 1, 1950
Los Angeles
DiedAugust 18, 1990(1990-08-18) (aged 40)
Los Angeles
Pen nameD. Scott Rogo
OccupationWriter, journalist, musician
NationalityAmerican
Period20th century
GenreParapsychology

Douglas Scott Rogo (February 1, 1950 – August 18, 1990) was an American writer, journalist and researcher on subjects related to parapsychology. Rogo was murdered in 1990 at the age of 40.[1][2] His case remains unsolved.[3][4]

Death

He wrote or co-wrote 20 books and more than 100 magazine and journal articles, 7 books were reprinted in 2005 by Anomalist Books,[5] Leaving the body was reprinted in 2008 by Simon & Schuster.[6] Rogo was active at the Psychical Research Foundation (formerly at Durham, North Carolina) and at Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn, New York.

Born in Los Angeles, California, and educated at the University of Cincinnati and San Fernando Valley State College (now California State University, Northridge; he graduated summa cum laude from the latter institution in 1972. (His B.A. was in music; Rogo played the oboe and the English horn, and for two years played professionally with the San Diego Symphony and other ensembles.) Rogo served as a consulting editor for Fate Magazine for which he wrote a regular column; he advocated greater involvement by both researchers and skeptics in parapsychological research.[7] He is most well known for his book written with Raymond Bayless titled Phone Calls From The Dead (1979) in which they describe an alleged paranormal phenomenon in which people report that they receive simple, brief, and usually single-occurrence telephone calls from spirits of deceased relatives, friends, or strangers.[8]

In his book The Haunted Universe (1977) Rogo hypothesized that strange phenomena such as flying saucers and Bigfoot are really psychic projections that are produced by the minds of the observers themselves.[9]

Rogo was last seen alive on August 14, 1990.[3] He was found by police in his home on August 16. He had been stabbed to death.[1][4] There were no signs of a struggle although a number of Rogo's personal items were missing and his wallet was empty.[3] The police later arrested 29-year-old John Battista. After an initial mistrial, he was tried and convicted of Rogo's murder in 1992. After lengthy appeals, his conviction was later overturned, due to prosecutorial misconduct, in 1996.[4] His killer is still unknown and the case remains open.

Reception

In his memory, the Parapsychology Foundation established The D. Scott Rogo Award for Parapsychological Literature in 1992 to benefit authors working on manuscripts pertaining to parapsychology.[10][11] The parapsychologist George P. Hansen wrote: "Scott was also a leading authority on the history of psychical research. In this I would estimate that there are only three or four people in the world who might be considered to be in his league. The breadth of his historical knowledge of the field was unsurpassed."[2]

Rosemary Guiley has written "within the parapsychology establishment, Rogo was often faulted for poor scholarship, which, critics said, led to erroneous conclusions."[12] The parapsychologist Douglas Stokes wrote that Rogo's Phone Calls From The Dead "was widely criticized in the parapsychological community for its generally sloppy and credulous nature."[13]

Science writer Terence Hines has written Rogo was a proponent of pseudoscience as he had advocated a nonfalsifiable hypothesis in parapsychology.[14]

Skeptical investigator Joe Nickell has heavily criticized Rogo for being "credulous". In his book Miracles: A Parascientific Inquiry Into Wondrous Phenomena, Rogo declared various cases to be evidence for genuine miracles. However, Nickell found possible naturalistic explanations that Rogo had ignored.[15]

Bibliography

References

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