Over the years, Radford published the results of investigations on a variety of phenomena deemed strange or paranormal.
Psychic Detectives Radford has researched and conducted investigations into claims made by psychics for over 20 years, concentrating on
psychic detectives. Examples include
John Edward,
Sylvia Browne,
Theresa Caputo, Noreen Renier, Brian Ladd, Allison DuBois, Pamela Ragland, Nancy Weber and Jane Duperow In 2010, in the wake of a
devastating earthquake in Haiti, Radford issued a public plea for psychics to aid in finding missing victims, calling out several practitioners who claimed to have helped on missing person cases. None responded or helped. From his investigations, Radford concluded that in virtually every case the missing person was found either by police and searchers, or random passersby, without assistance from specific information provided by psychics. In many cases, after a person or body is recovered through ordinary means, psychics will reframe some of their earlier vague clues and predictions to make them appear accurate and relevant.
Chase Vault coffins (2017-2019) Radford investigated 19th century reports of coffins that moved by themselves at the
Chase Vault in the Barbados town of
Oistins. He was able to determine the brick vault walls didn't show any of the damage would be expected from the movement of lead-lined coffins; there were also sourcing issues with the main testimony. Radford connected the legend with other similar stories in the region, showing the Chase Vault coffin tale is probably an adaptation of a story that has its point of origin elsewhere.
Dyatlov Pass Deaths (2014) The 2014
Discovery Channel special
Russian Yeti: The Killer Lives explored claims that the Dyatlov group was killed by an enraged Russian yeti. Radford wrote an in-depth review of the show for the Doubtful News website on June 1. In it, he notes that "
Russian Yeti: The Killer Lives begins with the premise that the injuries sustained by the skiers were so grave and extraordinary that could only have been inflicted by an inhumanly strong creature." Radford points out that no evidence is offered to support this premise, and that the injuries (such as broken ribs, skull fractures, burnt hands, and a missing tongue) can be accounted for by an avalanche, struggling to start a fire, and post-mortem predation by conventional animals. Radford further points out that the only reference to “snowmen” in one of the hikers’ diaries is clearly a joke, never mentioned by any of the others in their private journals. Similar media-inspired monster sightings have been offered to explain for
Loch Ness Monster (inspired by scenes depicting a
Plesiosaur-like monster in the 1933
King Kong movie) and of the fictional bogey-man
Slender Man reported on the talk-radio show
Coast to Coast.
Tracking the Chupacabra was a Finalist for two books awards including Book of the Year. According to
Outside Magazine, Radford came to the conclusion that the chupacabra "was nothing but a cinematic fever dream."
The Los Angeles UFO / mystery missile (2010) In November 2010, a UFO was sighted and recorded in the sky over Los Angeles by a news helicopter cameraman. In a column for Discovery News, Radford was one of the first journalists to critically analyze the video and correctly identify the UFO or “mystery missile” as an airplane contrail.
Kansas City gym ghost video (2008) Radford investigated and solved the mystery of an alleged "ghost video" taken at Anytime Fitness, an all-night fitness club in Overland Park, Kansas in 2008. Surveillance cameras caught the glowing, fuzzy light in a workout area, wandering over the weight benches and fitness machines. The video was circulated on YouTube, generating more than 100,000 views. Radford concluded the actual culprit to be merely an insect on the camera lens. His conclusions were based on the several facts: 1) the image only showed up on one of several cameras covering the area, 2) the fuzzy and out-of-focus image indicated that the object was closer rather than farther to the security camera which is designed to focus at longer distances, 3) the image appears to reflecting rather than emitting light, and 4) the image appeared to go over objects in the room rather than going around them.
Santa Fe courthouse ghost (2007) In 2007, Radford solved the mystery of the "
Santa Fe Courthouse Ghost", a mysterious, glowing, white blob that was captured on videotape June 15, by a security camera at a courthouse in Santa Fe, New Mexico. While the court personnel who first saw the image could not explain it, others soon offered their own explanations, and a ghost was among the most popular. Radford conducted several days of on-site field investigations at the courthouse, and after several experiments duplicated the "ghost" effect by placing insects on the video camera that recorded the original event. in a panel discussion at The Amaz!ng Meeting 2012
Pokémon panic (2001) In 2001, Radford investigated the mysterious 1997 incident in which thousands of Japanese children seemingly suffered seizures while watching "
Dennō Senshi Porygon", an episode of the
Pokémon anime. Though many doctors advanced theories including photosensitive epilepsy, Radford proffered evidence that the incident was rooted in mass hysteria. The resulting article, co-authored by
Robert Bartholomew, was published in the February 2001
Southern Medical Journal. "We studied a reported illness outbreak occurring on December 16, 1997, involving more than 12,000 Japanese children who had various signs and symptoms of illness after watching an episode of a popular animated cartoon, Pokémon. While photosensitive epilepsy was diagnosed in a minuscule fraction of those affected, this explanation cannot account for the breadth and pattern of the events. The characteristic features of the episode are consistent with the diagnosis of epidemic hysteria, triggered by sudden anxiety after dramatic mass media reports describing a relatively small number of genuine photosensitive-epilepsy seizures. The importance of the mass media in precipitating outbreaks of mass psychogenic illness is discussed." Joe Zarzynski, author of
Champ: Beyond the Legend (1984), calls the photo "the best single piece of evidence on Champ." The results of the
Champ and Mansi photo investigation were published in the book
Lake Monster Mysteries, as well as in
Skeptical Inquirer magazine and
Fortean Times magazine. Radford and Nickell re-enacted their experiments and investigation for the
Discovery Channel in 1995. ==Films==