Rich Martini thank you for giving me the opportunity to feel Amelia ….. Below is an account from his book Hacking the Afterlife…. The movie is this Sunday on beautiful Amelia Earhart. 
I can’t begin to describe the emotion I had after three different mediums answered the same odd questions I had them ask directly to Amelia. I’ve been researching her story for 25 years, and have found evidence of what happened to her after she disappeared, but is not public knowledge. (Some of it will be featured in Sunday’s History Channel show from Les Kinney and Dick Spink who had similar paths.) Without meaning to, I had access to three different mediums (Pattie Canova, Jamie Butler, Jennifer Shaffer) and as an experiment – not being well versed in mediumship, I thought “Why not ask the same 20 questions to Amelia through three different mediums and see if her story changes?”  
As I report in “Hacking the Afterlife” (https://www.facebook.com/hackingtheafterlifebook/) the answers did not. But beyond that, while asking the question “so what happened to you? How did you die?” (Pattie had said “stomach illness” Jamie said “She’s telling me not to focus on the manner of her death but on how she lived” then said “Amelia is telling me she won’t reveal how she died to me now, but if the person who wrote this question wants to talk to her privately, she will” (that’s me and I did 2 years later while transcribing the session and hearing it for the first time) and Jennifer said “She’s showing me a stomach illness. Dysentery?”) 
During the Jennifer interview “Amelia” added that two GI’s had dug up her body on Saipan (in 1944) but had only recovered “an arm.” I was familiar with the accounts from Fred Goerner’s book “Searching for Amelia” where in the 2nd edition he hunts down the two GI’s and they confirm they dug her up, but made no mention of only recovering an arm. 
A few minutes after my interview (on film) with Jennifer, I was driving away from her office and got a phone call from a former NTSB investigator who had been given access to this research that will be featured on Sunday’s show. He said “Rich, everything you’ve been saying about her being arrested and incarcerated is accurate. But I noticed something unusual – in the documents, it said that the GIs who dug her up only recovered her arm.” Literally seconds after hearing that detail from Amelia, it was being repeated to me from someone who had read a document detailing it.  
Six months later, I found a published interview with the two GI’s (Chicago Tribune, UPI Jan 1977) where the two GI’s said “off camera” that they had only recovered her arm and a partial rib cage. I asked “Amelia” point black – “So where is the rest of you?” I fully expected something like “buried at sea” or “on a ship that sunk in Okinawa” but she didn’t say that. She had Jennifer draw me a map – of Saipan, where I had just spent four weeks filming eyewitnesses – and she drew a location that I knew exactly what she was talking about. I had been there. She explained why she was there.
Hopefully one day I’ll head back there and xray that spot, see if what she’s saying is accurate or true – we had permits to excavate the airfield where the Electra is, but ran out of funds. But when someone asked me recently “So why aren’t you on the next plane to Saipan to dig up her bones?” I replied “What’s more important? The fact that Amelia’s body is recoverable, that her bones still exist? Or that I was able to communicate with her in real time and prove that she still exists as a person? That we don’t die? That we all exist once we leave the planet, and we are all accessible by means if we take the time to figure out how to communicate with ourselves “back home.” What’s the bigger story here? That Amelia was incarcerated and died on Saipan? Or that she still exists on the Flipside, and we can talk to her directly?”  
That’s why I’m in no hurry to get back to Saipan. Yes, I know where she’s buried (or so she indicated). But more importantly, I know where she is now, and she’s having a hell of time with her pals on the Flipside. I know how controversial this comment is – but seeing her in these color pix brought back the memory of that moment a few years ago, thanks to Jennifer – thanks to my friend Abbie Adams Yaffe who 30 years ago said “No one’s told the story of Amelia Earhart and you should do that…” and while she may have disappeared 80 years ago, she’s precisely where she wants to be at the moment. (or so she says.)

https://www.facebook.com/SmithsonianChannel/videos/10209277929445768/
https://www.smithsonianchannel.com/shows/america-in-color/the-1920s/1004516/3437453