

Dr. Raymond A. Moody, Jr., came to prominence in the 1970s by relating life after death reports gleamed from patients who described their experiences after brief periods of death. The book, Life After Life, and the field of near death experiences are still controversial, but Moody was not dissuaded and has written other books on this and related topics.
In 1987 Dr. Moody wrote another provocative book, titled Elvis After Life, Unusual Psychic Experiences Surrounding the Death of a Superstar. It is an interesting little tome (check Amazon for a cheap copy), particularly Chapter VI, “In Search of a Son with Elvis.”
By 1982 Harold Welch had served as a policeman in a small Georgia city for 15 years. Welch, “a large, tough-looking man,” was “surprisingly gentle and soft spoken,” the doctor wrote. Moody found it difficult to think of him “having an uncanny psychic experience”, but he “had the distinct impression that he was describing events just as he remembered them.”....continues
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