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He definitely came back and got his killer locked up.

610,402 次观看 • 1 年前 •via X (Twitter)

10 条评论

The Fact Checker 的头像
The Fact Checker1 年前

These are The ACTUAL Facts of Ryan Hammond: Important Dates: 2008: Ryan, at age 3, began sharing memories of a past life. 2010-2011: By age 5 or 6, Ryan identified a man in a photograph from a 1933 film as himself in a past life. 2015: Ryan, then 10, was extensively interviewed and his case was publicized, with investigations peaking around this time. March 17, 2015: The story was detailed in a widely circulated article, marking a key point of public exposure. Early 2025 (likely January or February): The case regained attention as a trending topic. Locations Muskogee, Oklahoma, USA: Ryan’s hometown, where he lived with his family and shared his memories. Hollywood, California, USA: The setting of Ryan’s claimed past life as Marty Martyn, tied to the film industry of the 1930s and 40s. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA: Marty Martyn’s birthplace, as recalled by Ryan and later verified. University of Virginia, USA: The base of Dr. Jim Tucker, the psychiatrist who investigated Ryan’s claims. Important Names: Ryan Hammond: The boy at the center of the story, born around 2005 (age 10 in 2015, approximately 20 in 2025). Cyndi Hammond: Ryan’s mother, a deputy clerk in Muskogee County, who supported and documented his claims. Marty Martyn: The Hollywood actor and agent Ryan claims to have been in a past life; born in Philadelphia, died in 1964. Dr. Jim Tucker: A psychiatrist and reincarnation researcher at the University of Virginia who studied Ryan’s case. Unnamed Daughter of Marty Martyn: Interviewed to verify details; met Ryan during the investigation. Facts Ryan’s Early Memories: Starting at age 3 (circa 2008), Ryan recounted vivid details of a past life, including nightmares of his heart exploding and missing Hollywood. He described being a tap dancer, actor, and later an agent in the 1930s and 40s. Identification of Marty Martyn: Around age 5 or 6, Ryan pointed to a man in a photo from the 1933 film Night After Night and said, “That’s me!” The man was identified as Marty Martyn, a lesser-known Hollywood figure. Details Provided by Ryan: Ryan shared over 50 specific memories, including: Marty Martyn’s birth in Philadelphia. His career as a dancer on Broadway and an extra in Hollywood films. His transition to a talent agent. Meeting celebrities like Rita Hayworth and advising Marilyn Monroe on her name change. Having three sons, two marriages (later corrected to five by Martyn’s daughter), and a sister who danced. Dying at age 61 from a heart attack and cerebral hemorrhage. Verification Process: Dr. Jim Tucker, a reincarnation expert, documented Ryan’s statements and cross-checked them against historical records and interviews with Martyn’s surviving daughter. Key facts aligned: Martyn’s death on December 25, 1964, from a heart-related issue. His multiple marriages and family details. His entertainment career, though he was not a major star. Emotional Evidence: Ryan displayed strong emotions, crying about missing Hollywood and sobbing when meeting Martyn’s daughter, claiming he missed being her father. Unusual Persistence: Unlike most children in reincarnation studies who forget past-life memories by age 6, Ryan’s persisted to age 10, making his case notable. Outcome Investigation Results: By 2015, Dr. Tucker concluded that Ryan’s case was among the strongest he’d studied, with over 50 verified details exceeding chance. However, he did not claim it as definitive proof of reincarnation, noting scientific skepticism. Public Exposure: The story was featured in a book, Return to Life, by Dr. Tucker, and a TV special, The Boy Who Lived Before, amplifying its reach in 2015. No final resolution was reached— it remained a compelling mystery. Follow for more of The Facts on viral videos!

Herman Williams III 的头像
Herman Williams III1 年前

I was here previously in 1945 when shot in the back trying to escape the train taking us to Auschwitz concentration camp. I used to dream about it all the time until about 12 years old. Don’t care if people laugh or joke - it’s my experience🧐 and it’s true.

𝘛𝘳𝘢𝘤𝘺 的头像
𝘛𝘳𝘢𝘤𝘺1 年前

Love this topic. Dr Ian Stevenson tracked 3000 kids all over the world with stories of this nature. “Some, who claimed to have died violently, had birthmarks or physical defects where the deceased had suffered a mortal injury, while others suffered from phobias relating to their past death. In most cases, he found that there is only a brief window of time—between the ages of about two and five—when past life memories start to surface, and they start fading away by age six. In total, Stevenson investigated over 3,000 cases of children who claimed to have memories and know people from their past lives. He was able to verify the facts and claims in more than 1,500 of these cases.”

AwakenedVeteran22 的头像
AwakenedVeteran221 年前

I have been in my souls akashic records. I have been in many of my other lifetimes and even my own deaths. We are eternal! This will be widely known and understood soon.

Andrea🔥 的头像
Andrea🔥1 年前

I have a theory that people are reincarnated if they have not completed their mission on earth. However I also believe if you are evil and commit evil acts you are denied this privilege. Hell exists to clean out the trash which are the evil souls. I’m not completely sure but as a child I was in heaven and it was peer love and I will never forget that amazing feeling. I’ve always read stories about life after death and reincarnation and I’ve concluded that some people are reincarnated. However they have to be of good faith and not evil.

Mama45🇺🇸 的头像
Mama45🇺🇸1 年前

Proof of reincarnation.

EnzymeX 的头像
EnzymeX1 年前

Yeah no. Per Grok: == The story you're referring to doesn’t directly align with any widely documented reincarnation case involving a boy named Ryan in the way you’ve described—specifically, a boy named Ryan leading police to the scene of his own murder involving an ax. However, elements of your question resemble a well-known reincarnation case reported by German therapist Trutz Hardo in his book *Children Who Have Lived Before: Reincarnation Today*, which has circulated online and might be the source of confusion or conflation with a name like "Ryan." In Hardo’s account, a three-year-old boy from the Druze community in the Golan Heights region of Israel claimed to remember being murdered in a past life by an ax blow to the head. This case was relayed to Hardo by Dr. Eli Lasch, a physician who allegedly witnessed the events. The boy, whose name was not specified (not explicitly "Ryan"), was born with a long red birthmark on his head, which the Druze interpret as a sign of a past-life wound. According to the story, when the boy was old enough to speak, he told his elders he had been killed by an ax and identified a man in a neighboring village as his murderer. He reportedly led a group of villagers to a spot where he said his body was buried, and upon digging, they uncovered a skeleton with a head wound consistent with an ax strike—matching the boy’s birthmark. The boy also directed them to a location where the ax was allegedly buried, and it was found. Confronted with this, the accused man reportedly confessed to the murder. ### Reasons for Skepticism - **Lack of Independent Verification**: Unlike reincarnation cases studied by researchers like Dr. Ian Stevenson at the University of Virginia, who meticulously documented witness testimonies and cross-checked details, this story lacks rigorous corroboration. Lasch’s account to Hardo is anecdotal, and no official police records, archaeological reports, or primary sources have surfaced to confirm it. - **Name Discrepancy**: You mentioned a boy named "Ryan," but no prominent reincarnation case involving a boy by that name matches your description. There is a separate, well-documented case of Ryan Hammons, an American boy studied by Dr. Jim Tucker, who recalled being a Hollywood agent named Marty Martyn. However, that case involves no ax murder or buried remains—just detailed memories verified against Martyn’s life. It’s possible the name "Ryan" got mixed into the Druze boy’s story through internet retellings. - **Cultural and Narrative Bias**: The Druze community’s strong belief in reincarnation might predispose them to interpret the boy’s statements as evidence, potentially influencing how events unfolded. The story’s dramatic resolution (a confession and physical evidence) also fits a compelling narrative pattern, raising questions about embellishment. ### Connection to "Ryan" The most likely explanation for the "Ryan" detail is a conflation with Ryan Hammons’ case, which is unrelated but widely discussed online. Hammons, born in 2004, recalled verifiable details about Marty Martyn’s life (e.g., living on a street with "rock" in the name, working in Hollywood), but his story involves no murder or police investigation—just personal memories confirmed through research. The ax-murder tale seems to stem from the Druze boy’s case, not Ryan Hammons. ### Conclusion The story of a boy leading people to his past-life murder site and uncovering an ax and remains exists in the form of the Druze boy’s case, as reported by Hardo. However, there’s no solid evidence it involved a boy named Ryan, and its truthfulness hinges on unverified testimony from Lasch via Hardo. Without police records, independent witnesses, or physical evidence beyond the anecdote, it’s best classified as an intriguing but unsubstantiated claim. The internet’s tendency to blend stories—like merging Ryan Hammons with the Druze case—likely explains the version you’ve encountered.

Frankie Rzucek 🇺🇸 的头像
Frankie Rzucek 🇺🇸1 年前

That's wild. God works in mysterious ways

John Johnson 的头像
John Johnson1 年前

Death is not the end, or the beginning. It's the continuation of ...

PROMETHEUS “THEDUDE” 的头像
PROMETHEUS “THEDUDE”1 年前

The problem with the story is if the man got killed how did he know where the body ended up being buried. Did you ever even consider he was reincarnated as the person that was the murder and the man that went to jail was just old and just confessed do to power of persuasion. Don’t believe every story cause it makes sense the higher your IQ the more the world isn’t what it seems.

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