Official Witness Archive

Witnesses of Rebecca’s Grave official film archive

They do not belong to the same world, but they all touched the same wound. Each account arrives from a different angle. Each one leads back to Rebecca’s Grave.

This is the official witness archive for Rebecca’s Grave™, Garett Pringle’s psychological found-footage horror film rooted in the Moncton legend, Morgan Wallace’s disappearance, the recovered tapes, and the silence surrounding the grave.

Case Context

The Accounts Do Not Agree. The Pattern Does.

The witnesses connected to Rebecca’s Grave do not speak from one institution, one family, or one version of the story. They come from local history, law enforcement, construction, intelligence, business, academia, and private grief. Together, their accounts form the outer edge of the film’s mythology: a Moncton legend, a missing documentarian, recovered tapes, and a place people kept describing long after they claimed to have forgotten it.

Kelly Wallace witness profile for Rebecca’s Grave, the Moncton found-footage horror film

Kelly Wallace

Primary Witness / Local Source

“He didn’t vanish all at once. Something had already started taking him.”

Witness Type: Family source

Connection: Morgan Wallace disappearance

Archive Relevance: Behavioral changes before Morgan vanished

Morgan Wallace’s sister, Kelly speaks from the closest edge of the disappearance. Her account is not folklore or theory; it is what changed in Morgan before he went missing, what he believed he had found around Rebecca’s Grave, and how quickly concern turned into silence.

Detective Reginald Walker witness profile for Rebecca’s Grave official archive

Det. Reginald Walker

Former RCMP Officer / Private Investigator

“Every clean answer in this case had something missing from it.”

Witness Type: Investigative source

Connection: Hired to trace Morgan Wallace

Archive Relevance: Timelines, missing evidence, stalled leads

A former RCMP officer later hired by Kelly Wallace, Walker enters the archive through procedure: dates, statements, locations, and gaps. What he brings is structure. What unsettles him is how often that structure bends around the same place.

Estelle Godin heritage witness profile for Rebecca’s Grave Moncton legend

Estelle Godin

Heritage Preservationist

“Some stories survive because a town refuses to say them correctly.”

Witness Type: Historical source

Connection: Moncton records and inherited memory

Archive Relevance: Places the grave inside local history

Estelle Godin connects Rebecca’s Grave to the older fabric of Moncton: buried records, softened accounts, and the community habit of moving dangerous stories to the margins. Her testimony suggests the grave was never outside history. It was history’s unfinished sentence.

Dr. Harold Brunvand folklore professor witness profile for Rebecca’s Grave

Dr. Harold Brunvand

Folklore Professor / Academic Source

“The story changed depending on who was telling it. The fear didn’t.”

Witness Type: Academic source

Connection: Folklore, warning legends, haunted sites

Archive Relevance: Separates myth behavior from ordinary rumor

A folklore professor at Dalhousie University, Brunvand frames Rebecca’s Grave as a living legend: a story that mutates while keeping its emotional shape. He gives the archive an academic counterweight, but even his analysis keeps returning to a troubling consistency.

Sophia Leblanc downtown Moncton witness profile for Rebecca’s Grave

Sophia Leblanc

Downtown Business Owner

“People only mentioned the grave in pieces. Never the whole thing.”

Witness Type: Community source

Connection: Downtown Moncton proximity

Archive Relevance: Tracks how fear moved through conversation

Sophia Leblanc’s account comes through doors, streets, late conversations, and the small habits of people who know more than they say. She does not claim to solve Rebecca’s Grave. She records how carefully people avoided naming what they believed.

Sarah Ladyrose local witness profile for Rebecca’s Grave official archive

Sarah Ladyrose

Local Witness / Community Source

“It was never just a story. It was something people learned to talk around.”

Witness Type: Local witness

Connection: Community memory and rumor

Archive Relevance: Gives the legend a grounded human witness

Sarah Ladyrose speaks from lived proximity rather than expertise. Her testimony carries the texture of ordinary Moncton life: what people heard, what they dismissed, and what lingered anyway. She makes the archive feel less like research and more like something people carried home.

Mark Hannah construction witness profile connected to recovered tapes in Rebecca’s Grave

Mark Hannah

Owner, Hannah Constructions Inc.

“The tapes came out of the ground. That changes what kind of story this is.”

Witness Type: Recovery source

Connection: Debris clearing and tape discovery

Archive Relevance: Anchors the recovered materials to a physical site

Mark Hannah is pulled into the case by work, not belief. While clearing debris, his crew uncovered tapes beneath the roots of a tree scheduled for removal. His account matters because it gives the archive something rumor cannot provide: a place, an object, and a recovery.

Cayden Clay intelligence source witness profile for Rebecca’s Grave recovered tapes

Cayden Clay

Canadian Security and Intelligence Service

“The tapes did not behave like rumor.”

Witness Type: Verification source

Connection: Recovered tapes and chain of review

Archive Relevance: Pushes the materials beyond ordinary hoax territory

Cayden Clay’s connection to Rebecca’s Grave runs through the tapes and the scrutiny surrounding them. His testimony does not add folklore or emotion. It adds pressure: confirmation that some of what survived passed through official review and remained difficult to explain.

Kilby Belliveau downtown resident witness profile for Rebecca’s Grave Moncton legend

Kilby Belliveau

Downtown Resident / Local Witness

“The city was losing things. The grave just gave the loss a name.”

Witness Type: Downtown witness

Connection: Moncton decline and community atmosphere

Archive Relevance: Expands the legend beyond one grave or one disappearance

Kilby Belliveau widens the frame. Her testimony connects Rebecca’s Grave to storefronts thinning out, people leaving, work disappearing, and the weight a city carries when it stops naming its losses. In her account, the legend is not separate from Moncton. It moves through it.

Nine Accounts. One Grave.

The Archive Does Not Ask You to Believe. It Asks You to Notice.

Each witness brings a different kind of truth: personal grief, local memory, official procedure, academic distance, recovered material, and the quiet dread of a city that kept circling the same story. Together, they make Rebecca’s Grave harder to dismiss — and harder to leave alone.

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