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The American man claimed to have been attacked by a legendary Jersey demon: a hand came in through the car window

author:Duff observes

A man in New Jersey recalls his encounter with the infamous Jersey devil decades ago, the latest episode of Fox State Television's Monsters Over America.

In this episode, Michael Michael Orfe also recalls being a south Jersey high school student 60 years ago, when he was dating a girl named Violet, who was driving his father's car and carrying his girlfriend on a bumpy road when suddenly Violet noticed something unusual coming toward them.

The American man claimed to have been attacked by a legendary Jersey demon: a hand came in through the car window, and Orff said: "Every time I see it, I feel chills." "He was holding in his hand a sketch that he thought was a Jersey demon." When my children were young, I hid this sketch at home from them. ”

The American man claimed to have been attacked by a legendary Jersey demon: a hand came in through the car window

The backstory of the Jersey Devil is as varied as the number of people who claim to have encountered it. For more than 250 years, legends have been circulating about this creature from the barren areas of pine forests, and its origins are said to date back to a terrible local birthplace. Orff, an American man who is now an educator in New Jersey, recalled rolling down his car window when he felt "something in the woods, in the pine forest." Orff told show host Kathy McDowell: "I've always felt comfortable and autonomous in the pine forest, but that time it was completely different. ”

The stories of the legendary Jersey demons are ever-changing, like those who claim to have seen the monsters, Orff recalls: "We heard a rustling sound, and there must have been something in the pine forest." Suddenly, Violet's eyes widened, his mouth wide open, and he began to point out the window, for a hand came in through it. The hand was large, and the fingers were very sharp—like claws, sharp, sharp nails pointing directly at Violet's head. Orff said his first instinct was to "roll up the windows and close them." ”

Orff continued: "I lifted my arm against the car window and the blood spurted out, splashing on her face and on me. I tried to start the car and she was screaming... I started the car and tried to hang the gear to what I thought was reverse gear, but in the panic I hung up to the forward gear. Meanwhile, he jumped on the front hood of the car, raised his right arm, and shattered the windshield. Orff, an American man, added that after he successfully reversed, the monster finally "rolled down" the car, allowing the two children to escape, an experience that has plagued them for more than 60 years.

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