An alleged demonic possession occurred in May 1953 when Clarita Villanueva, a 17-year-old girl incarcerated at the Manila City Jail in the Philippines was said to have been bitten[1] and tormented by two demonic entities and their followers. American pastor Lester Sumrall was building a church in Manila, when the news broke of Clarita's possession. The case was widely and sensationally reported worldwide.[2]
Clarita Villanueva, whose mother was a spiritist and fortune teller, never knew her father. When she was 12 years old, her mother died, forcing her into a life of prostitution. She did not have an immediate family to take care of her and she became a vagabond. From her island province home, she made her way to Manila in the summer of 1953 looking for her father and settled in the district of Malate.[3] Clarita was frequenting the bars and taverns of the city and soliciting men for harlotry. On May 6, 1953,[4] she mistakenly offered her service to a plainclothes police officer and was incarcerated at the Old Bilibid Prison (now Manila City Jail), as she was a minor and prostitution was illegal.[5] According to the grandson of the judge who handled Clarita's case, she was possessed in the middle of a hearing.
Clarita described her attackers as a "very big dark man with curly hair all over the body" and "a body with an angelic face and a big mustache".[6] Sumrall also claimed that Clarita was Visayan and can only speak the Tagalog language. However, she was able to speak English during the alleged possession.[4]
Clarita Villanueva was arrested on charges of vagrancy. It was unclear, however, if she was also arrested on charges of prostitution.
Clarita was surrounded by "about 100 medical specialists, nurses and Pressmen" according to Rodolfo Nazareno, a reporter for the United Press. According to records, this was the first day when Pastor Lester Sumrall and Clarita met, with the girl stating her hatred towards the pastor and God, and making blasphemous statements.
Manila Mayor Arsenio Lacson, who received reports about the incident, ordered that Clarita be brought to the city morgue so that he could see for himself. Within 15 minutes of sitting beside next to her, bite marks appeared on her index finger and neck. Lacson said that he saw the human bitemarks where Clarita had been bitten, and that "they were not made by her". Lacson was holding her hands when she was bitten. Clarita had been examined and was declared as mentally sound.
After three days of confrontation, Sumrall stated that the miracle of God came upon her and that Clarita said "He (the devil) went that way" and "He's gone". The third day was the final time that the demons reportedly tormented her before fleeing in defeat.
Ripley's Believe it or Not "True Ghost Stories" featured the story as "The Fiendish Spectre."