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Reverend warns of vampire attacks on Torino athletes

By David Moye

February 20, 2006

San Diego--Paranormal preacher Dr. James Capers has warned that the Olympic athletes competing in Torino, Italy, were at risk of psychic vampire attacks from angry sports fans wishing ill will on them.

Capers runs the Temple Of Divine Prophecy Church, an international ministry that is based in San Diego, and he has an international media presence thanks to his unusual predictions and paranormal solutions to problems.

“Curses are very real,” he insists. “Especially when you have a multitude of people wishing ill will on one athlete. For instance, a person can focus their energy on John Doe the skier and say, `I don’t want them to win’ and walk through a complete scenario where they picture exactly how the athlete will lose the contest, such as a broken leg.”

Dr. James Capers

Capers has been on the metaphysical map since 1990 but he says his psychic powers were given to him in the womb and then nurtured by his great aunt, Dr. Grace Valentine.

“In our family, every seventh child who was a girl had the gift.” Despite being all male, Capers was also a seventh child and apparently has developed the nine gifts of psychic ability.

“Those gifts are: faith; speaking in tongues; discernment of spirit; prophesizing; healing; powerful words; knowledge and wisdom. How many is that?”

Eight.

“Oh, did I say prophesizing?”

Yes.

“Oh, well, there’s knowledge.”

You said that.

“Oh my goodness, the devil must have taken control! I can’t figure out that ninth gift. Wait! It’s faith.”

Capers’ gift as a paranormal researcher has taken him many places and many worlds. Back in 1995, at the height of the O.J. Simpson trial, he spoke with Ron Goldman’s ghost, who told him O.J. was innocent and that he and Nicole were killed by two black men, one short and the other, a tall fat man.

Another time, he attended a Hollywood gala and saw Whitney Houston sing—but only after hubby Bobby Brown performed a voodoo ritual on her.

And when Kobe Bryant was accused of rape, Capers publicly defended him by using his amazing mental abilities to travel back in time and witness the alleged incident. His professional opinion: The sex was consensual but Kobe was “…a mule if you know what I mean.”

Capers is, admittedly, a different kind of religious figure than, say, the Pope, but he believes everyone is drawn to mentors for different reasons.

“Billy Graham attracted some people who appreciated his humility but there were others who weren’t into his message.”

He must be doing something right. Capers hosts a weekly public access program on Cox cable called “A Prophet Among Us” and he says, “I’ve been told it’s the number one show on Sundays.”

Although he has been asked to run the show on other cable networks across the country, so far he’s declined. “If you run those shows, you’re recruiting and I don’t want to get out of control.”

Currently, Capers is promoting a new DVD, “Learn How To Defend Yourself Against Psychic Attack, Witchcraft And Sorcery,” and is working on his pet project, an actual church of his own.

“Before Joan Kroc died, she was supposed to donate some money for a church.”

That hasn’t happened but Capers vows he will have a real-life temple for his Temple of Divine Prophecy and says he doesn’t want it to be just a black church.

“I want Asians, whites, blacks, Hispanics and every race and creed so they can all get healed.

“I want it to be a place where the psychic gifts are so developed that a minister can tell a mother to be sure to walk her child to school on Monday in order to prevent a car accident that is prophesized to happen.”

For information, check out www.drjamescapers.com

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David Moye is a fifth generation resident of San Diego county and has the same birthday as Reggie Bush--but none of the athletic ability.

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