The Associated Press reports that in Monroe, Connecticut. Lorraine Warren, a paranormal investigator and author whose work with her late husband inspired the likes of “The Conjuring” and “The Amityville Horror,” has passed away. As of this writing, she was 92 years old.

On Friday, Warren’s grandson Chris McKinnell and son-in-law Tony Spera announced on Facebook that Warren had passed away peacefully in her sleep on Thursday night in Connecticut. Several members of Warren’s family were contacted via phone and email. Gary Barkin, Warren’s lawyer, emailed The Associated Press to confirm his client’s passing.

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She had a “remarkable, loving, compassionate, and giving soul,” as Spera put it. When paranormal activity was suspected in their hometown of Monroe, Connecticut, the Warrens formed the New England Society for Psychic Research in 1952. The group shared the news of her death on Facebook as well.

They spent their 61 years of marriage investigating and writing about more than 10,000 cases in the United States and around the world. Their peculiar line of work is often cited as the impetus behind people’s fascination with the paranormal and the rise of paranormal-themed movies and TV shows.

According to Larry Dwyer, a staff writer for Horror News Network, “they were just two people from Bridgeport, Connecticut, who came together and fell in love, and Ed happened to have had a lot of paranormal instances when he was growing up and Lorraine was always the sensitive clairvoyant,” when nobody was really even talking about ghosts. He explained that the couple had come to terms with the fact that they could put their Catholic faith and “gifts” to use assisting those who felt haunted by spirits.

After Ed Warren’s passing in 2006, the New England Society for Psychic Research fell under Spera’s direction. Lorraine Warren “retired from active investigations regarding the areas of haunted homes and demonic infestations/possessions,” according to the website, but she was still a consultant for the group until her death.

Those who questioned the Warrens’ findings did so for a number of years. In 1997, the New England Skeptical Society said the Warrens’ “low-grade physical evidence” was far outnumbered by their “copious anecdotal evidence” of reports of hauntings.

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Warren acknowledged in a 2013 interview with The Associated Press that it was challenging for non-believers to accept that she could see ghosts. She hoped he would never do it and said as much. “I don’t think so,”

Based on their research into the mysterious happenings at a farmhouse in Rhode Island in the 1970s, the film “The Conjuring” was released in 2013. While filming was in progress, Lorraine Warren made a set visit. She also visited Warren’s on-screen counterpart, Vera Farmiga, at her home in Connecticut. Farmiga plays Warren in the film and its sequels. On Friday, Farmiga took to Twitter to express her sadness, writing that she felt “blessed to have known” Warren and “honoured to portray her.”

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Alta Militello

Writing and doing research are two activities that Alta Militello adores. Because she reads so much, she writes about topics such as history, culture, and current events. Alta worked in marketing after receiving her degree in business marketing, but she eventually left the field because she was unhappy there.

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