'Ghost girl' photographed at the Stanley Hotel?

A family visiting an infamous haunted hotel in Colorado suspect that they may have photographed the ghost of a little girl standing atop a staircase.

The eerie image was taken during a 'spirit tour' at the legendary Stanley Hotel, which served as the inspiration for Stephen King's legendary book The Shining.

According to John Mausling, he and his family were stunned when they later looked a the photos from the gathering and spotted what appears to be an apparition in one of the images.

The chilling anomaly looks like a young girl, which further flummoxed the family because there were no children amongst the small group taking part in the tour.

Strangely enough, the spot where the potential ghost was seen in the image happens to be the same location that another possible spirit was allegedly photographed last year.

While skeptics will likely say that the 'ghost' is simply a trick of light and shadow or some other prosaic explanation, the Mausling family have not discounted the possibility that the really did photograph something supernatural at the Stanley Hotel.

What's your take on the spooky photo? Let us know at the Coast to Coast AM Facebook page.

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By George Noory / Coast to Coast AM Host

George Noory, host of the nationally syndicated program, Coast to Coast AM, says if he weren’t a national radio talk show host he’d be in politics. Heard by millions of listeners, Coast To Coast AM airs on approximately 564 stations in the U.S., Canada, Mexico and Guam.

While hosting The Nighthawk, a wildly successful, late-night program on KTRS in St. Louis, Noory was recruited by Premiere Radio Networks to guest host on Coast to Coast AM with Art Bell.  He became the permanent host of the phenomenally successful over-night program on January 1, 2003, following Bell’s retirement.  Since then, Noory’s audience has continued to grow.

Noory captivates program listeners with his discussions of paranormal phenomena, time travel, alien abductions, conspiracies and all things curious and unexplained. He is driven, he has said, by the desire to solve the great mysteries of our time. From his first days as a radio broadcaster he says, “I’ve wanted to cover stories that the mainstream media never touch—the unusual, the paranormal and things like that. I learned that broadcast was the best business for exploring these issues, and I’ve been doing it for 33 years.”

(Source: coasttocoastam.com; October 6, 2017; http://tinyurl.com/ybuy8y6m)
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