In 1987, Ruthie Mae McCoy called 911 from her apartment with a terrifying story: someone was trying to break in through her bathroom mirror.
To the dispatcher, it sounded impossible. Maybe even delusional. Ruthie Mae’s call was treated as low priority. Officers came, knocked, and left. Two days later, they forced the door and found her dead inside. The mirrored medicine cabinet had been pulled from the wall, revealing a dark passageway behind it. Ruthie Mae had been telling the truth. Someone had come through the mirror.
If that sounds familiar, it should. Ruthie Mae’s case would later become entangled with Candyman, the horror film that helped turn a mirror, a repeated name, and a hook-handed killer into one of the genre’s most enduring nightmares.
On this episode of Haunted Talks, we explore the real murder behind Candyman, and how architectural shortcuts, systemic neglect, folklore, and disbelief transformed an ordinary apartment fixture into a threshold for evil.
But this story is more than a chilling connection to a famous film. It is about fear, poverty, disbelief, and the unsettling truth that some of the most terrifying horror stories begin with something real.
If you enjoyed this episode, you might also like:
Episode 216 – Lizzie Borden: Inside the Murder House
Episode 184 – Dark Folklore From Around the World
Episode 151 – Forgotten: The Death of Joyce Carol Vincent