The countdown to Halloween has started.
Crazy people put razorblades in apples and needles in Halloween candy

Sadly, that’s true. There have been specific, documented cases about kids being pricked by needles hidden inside of Halloween candy. More than 80 cases have been recorded since 1959, but only 10 resulted in even a minor injury. The worst case was when one woman required a couple of stitches. In most cases, Snopes says, it’s usually because siblings or friends were trying to freak each other out. In 2000, though, a man in Minneapolis did put needles in Snickers bars and handed them out to kids he didn’t even know. One boy did get stuck, but not enough to require medical attention. The man responsible was charged with intent to cause death, harm or illness.
Crazy people poison Halloween candy.

This one is NOT true. At least, not in the way you think. Most people would assume that someone like the above guy in Minneapolis would poison candy and hand it out to any little kid that shows up at his doorstep. Nope, no documented proof of that. But in 1974, Texan Ronald O’Bryan killed his own son and tried to make it look like he was given poisoned Halloween candy. He poisoned four Pixie Stix and gave one to his son and one to three other children – but not as the act of a random madman. He was just trying to make it appear random so he could blame this urban legend for his son’s untimely death. None of the other children ate their Pixie Stix, but Timothy O’Bryan did and was pronounced dead at 10 p.m. on October 31, 1974.
Bad guys hide under women’s cars in parking lots and slash their Achilles’ Tendons.

We’ve all gotten that e-mail, right? This scary story has been lurking around since the 1950s and has seen a resurgence in recent years with e-mail chain letters. Snopes says that yes, people have definitely been attacked in shopping mall parking lots. But none of attackers were ever lying underneath the car, and there are no documented cases of them slashing the victims’ ankles.
We all know that The Amityville Horror was based on a true story… except it wasn’t.

Yes, Ronald DeFeo, Jr., did kill his entire family in that house, but no demons were involved. The family that bought the house after the DeFeos didn’t experience anything supernatural. William Weber, Ronald Jr.’s lawyer, admitted that he and the Lutzes completely fabricated the entire “haunted” story over a lot of wine. The author of the book, Jay Anson, built upon their tall tale and wrote the book.
A “bug bite” on a woman’s cheek ends up erupting with baby spiders – turns out a spider laid eggs under her skin.

Nope. Not possible. There’s a short story about this legend (involving a kiss from the devil) that dates all the way back to 1849, so it’s an oldie. Apparently in 1998, a doctor in Mexico did tell a man that a bulge on his thigh could possibly be where a spider laid eggs, but no baby spiders ever erupted from it.
That song “Love Rollercoaster” originally done by the Ohio Players and later covered by the Red Hot Chili Peppers incorporates the scream of a woman being murdered

Not true. Some rumors say that they killed a woman in the studio to get the scream; one said that microphones picked inadvertently picked up a murder next door; others said the band just used a 911 recording. Neither is true. Visit Snopes for a sound clip and you can listen for yourself to see if you think it sounds like someone being killed. The band kept mum on the rumors for a while to sell more records, but eventually admitted it was a just one of the singers reaching a high pitch. Not a murder.
People posing as the hanging victim at a haunted house have actually died…

And the whole night passed before they were discovered. Yep, that’s true. It’s happened on multiple occasions, actually, and suicides have been mistaken for Halloween pranks as well. One such occasion happened on October 26, 2005. A 42-year-old woman committed suicide by hanging herself from a tree on a busy road, but no one reported it for hours because they assumed it was just a Halloween decoration.
People are drugged and then relieved of their kidneys, which are then sold on the black market for $10,000 each

That’s a negatory. And you’re thinking, “But wait, they’re also left in a bathtub full of ice.” Well, that’s only been added to the story since the mid ‘90s. The victim used to just be left along the side of a building or something. A Turkish man claimed that this exact thing happened to him in 1989, but it turned out that he willingly participated in the “surgery.”
Campus Halloween Murders

“A psychic predicted on a popular television talk show that a mass murder would take place on Halloween at a college campus.”
False.The classic “Halloween Campus Murders” fright tale is a legend almost plague-like in its cyclicity, one that periodically resurfaces, spreads widely, and sends many students rushing home or barricading themselves inside their rooms during the weekend of (or just before) Halloween. (That each major outbreak of the rumor seems to occur several years after the previous iteration suggests that the legend takes hold anew once most of the students who
experienced the previous occurrence have graduated and moved on, making room for a new crop of youngsters who have never been exposed to it before.)
This story’s first known appearance was in the Midwest in 1968, perhaps inspired by Richard Speck’s murderous attack on nine nurses in a Chicago rooming house a few years earlier. It has seen numerous outbreaks since then, most notably in 1979 (Midwest), 1983 (nationwide), 1986 (Central Pennsylvania), and 1991 (New England), and it made a huge comeback in 1998 (perhaps inspired by the release of the movie Urban Legend earlier that year) when it spread across college campuses throughout the Midwest.
The basic outline of the rumor is that a psychic has predicted a crazed killer will strike on a college campus on or near Halloween, with the psychic providing only vague clues about which campus will be targeted — clues that are ambiguous enough to allow them to be applied to nearly every college campus in the country. Nearly all the details of the legend — when and where the prediction was made, who the killer will be, what weapon the murderer will wield, which campus he will strike, what building the slayings will occur in, and how many students will be killed — vary according to where and when the legend is repeated.
