
US army veteran Dan Rivera was in pennsylvania on his sold-out "Devils on the Run Tour" when the event occurred, according to the New York Post. According to the New england Society for Psychic Research (NESPR), he passed away on sunday, just after concluding a three-day sellout tour of Gettysburg organized by "Ghostly Images of Gettysburg Tours" at the Soldiers National Orphanage.
The Post claims that Mr. Riveria passed very suddenly after finishing his tour, during which the group traveled the nation to different locations with the purportedly haunted doll, Annabelle. On sunday night, firefighters and medical personnel were dispatched to his Gettysburg hotel after receiving a report of a male patient undergoing cardiopulmonary resuscitation. However, Mr. Rivera had passed away by the time the medical personnel arrived on the site.
It's still unknown what caused the death. The coroner's office staff told the evening Sun that Rivera was discovered alone in his hotel room and that the death did not seem suspicious. There is an investigation going on.
The Travel Channel's "Most Haunted Places" featured Rivera as a paranormal investigator, and he also produced several additional episodes, such as Netflix's "28 Days Haunted." He and other NESPR members were touring the united states to display the purportedly demonic doll.
After being presented to Donna, a nursing student from Connecticut, Annabelle has been connected to several alleged hauntings in the 1970s. According to the Post, renowned paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren said the doll would physically raise its own arms, pursue individuals around the apartment, and exhibit other ominous and malevolent behaviors. The doll also allegedly caused a car accident involving a priest and stabbed a police officer, according to the pair.
The ghost of a deceased 6-year-old girl named Annabelle is thought to have resided in the doll. Warrens relocated the doll to their museum in Connecticut after claiming it was demonically possessed. The film 'The Conjuring' was inspired by the demonic doll.
Annabelle made waves earlier this year when conspiracy theorists connected the doll to a horrific fire and jail breakout in Louisiana. Experts subsequently confirmed, however, that the doll was never "out of control".