The four-minute video posted on YouTube shows Elisa pressing all of the elevator buttons and waiting for it to move. Seeing that the elevator doors are not closing, starts behaving extremely bizarrely. Here’s the video.
At first, Elisa enters the elevator and apparently presses all of its buttons. She then waits for something to happen but, for some reason, the elevator door doesn’t shut. She starts to look around, as if she is expecting (or hiding from) someone. At 1:57, her arms and hands start moving in a very strange matter (almost not human) as she appears to be talking to someone, something … or nothing at all. She then walks away. The elevator door then shuts and appears to start working again.
Right after the events of the video, Elisa apparently gained access to the rooftop of the hotel, climbed to its water tank and, somehow, ended up drowning in it. Her body was found two weeks after her death, after hotel guests complained about the water’s taste and color. Incredible.
Seeing the surveillance footage, most people would conclude that she was under the influence of drugs. However, Elisa did not have a history of drug use and her autopsy concluded that no drugs were involved. When one looks at the context and the circumstances of this death, things become even more mysterious.
Cecil Hotel’s Dark History
Built in the 1920s to cater to “businessmen to come into town and spend a night or two”, Cecil Hotel was quickly upstaged by more glamorous hotels. Located near the infamous Skid Row area, the hotel began renting rooms on a long-term basis for cheap prices, a policy that attracted a shiftier crowd. The hotel’s reputation quickly went from “shifty” to “morbid” when it became notorious for numerous suicides and murders, as well as lodging famous serial killers.
Built in the 1920s to cater to “businessmen to come into town and spend a night or two”, Cecil Hotel was quickly upstaged by more glamorous hotels. Located near the infamous Skid Row area, the hotel began renting rooms on a long-term basis for cheap prices, a policy that attracted a shiftier crowd. The hotel’s reputation quickly went from “shifty” to “morbid” when it became notorious for numerous suicides and murders, as well as lodging famous serial killers.
“Part of its sordid history, involves two serial killers, Richard Ramirez and Jack Unterweger.
Now on death row, Ramirez,
labeled “the Nightstalker”, was living at the Cecil Hotel in 1985, in a
top floor room. He was charged 14 dollars a night. In a building filled
with transients, he remained unnoticed as he stalked and killed his 13
female victims. Richard Schave, said “He was dumping his bloody clothes
in the Dumpster, at the end of his evening and returned via the back
entrance.”
Jack Unterweger, was a
journalist covering crime in Los Angeles for an Austrian magazine in
1991. “We believe he was living at the Cecil Hotel in homage to
Ramirez,” Schave said.
He is blamed with killing three prostitutes in Los Angeles, while being a guest at the Cecil.
In the 50’s and 60’s the
Cecil was known as a place that people would go to jump out of one of
the hotel’s windows to commit suicide.
Helen Gurnee, in her 50s, leaped from a seventh floor window, landing on the Cecil Hotel marquee, on October 22, 1954.
Julia Moore jumped from her eighth floor room window, on February 11, 1962.
Pauline Otton, 27, jumped
from a ninth floor window after an argument with her estranged husband,
on October 12, 1962. Otton landed on George Gianinni, 65, who was
walking on the side walk, 90 feet below. Both were killed instantly.
There was also a murder of
one of the residents. “Pigeon Goldie” Osgood, a retired telephone
operator, known for protecting and feeding pigeons in a nearby park, was
found dead in his ransacked room on June 4, 1964. He had been stabbed,
strangled, and raped. The crime still remains unsolved.”
- Las Vegas Guardian Express, Elisa Lam, Morbid History Of Two Serial Killers Unfolds At “Cecil Hotel”
Elisa Lam’s case is yet another sordid addition to the hotel’s
history and can lead us to ask: “What the hell is wrong with that
place”?
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