Satanist Dies in Shooting & Jesus Showed Him The TRUTH

THE EIGHT MINUTES THAT SHOOK AMERICA
Former Occult Leader Claims He Died in Cleveland — And Returned With a Terrifying Warning
CLEVELAND, OHIO — On a freezing March night in 2021, police officers responding to a shooting outside a gas station on the east side of Cleveland found 46-year-old Adrian Cole bleeding out on the pavement beside Pump Number Four.
Witnesses said the attack happened fast.
A black Dodge Charger pulled into the station around 11:17 p.m. Surveillance footage later showed two masked men arguing with another customer before gunfire erupted across the parking lot. Panic exploded instantly. Customers ran for cover. One bullet shattered the front windows of the mini-mart. Another struck a fuel sign near the curb.
Adrian Cole wasn’t involved in the argument.
According to police records, he had simply stopped to buy coffee and cigarettes on his way home from a late-night construction shift. But in less than seven seconds, two stray rounds tore through his chest and lower abdomen.
Paramedics arrived within minutes.
By then, Cole had no measurable pulse.
Doctors at MetroHealth Medical Center would later pronounce him clinically dead for approximately eight minutes before emergency teams managed to restart his heart.
What happened during those eight minutes has since become one of the most controversial stories circulating through churches, podcasts, paranormal communities, and online religious forums across America.
Because Adrian Cole says he did not merely hallucinate while dying.
He says he crossed into another reality.
And according to him, what he saw destroyed everything he once believed.
“I Was Raised TO Hate Christianity”
When people meet Adrian Cole today, they often expect someone unstable or theatrical. Instead, they encounter a soft-spoken middle-aged man living quietly outside Columbus, Ohio.
He drinks black coffee. Drives an old Ford pickup. Volunteers at recovery centers. Reads constantly.
But twenty years ago, Cole says he lived an entirely different life.
“I grew up in northern New York near Buffalo,” he explained during a recorded interview earlier this year. “My family wasn’t casually into the occult. It was our identity.”
Cole claims multiple generations of his family practiced ritualistic occult spirituality rooted in ceremonial magic, dark mysticism, and anti-Christian ideology.
“There were symbols everywhere in the house,” he recalled. “Candles. Altars. Ritual objects. Gatherings every month. I thought it was normal.”
Neighbors from his childhood remember the family as secretive but intelligent. One former classmate described Adrian as “quiet, intense, and extremely smart.”
“He used to debate teachers about religion constantly,” she said. “He hated Christianity more than anyone I knew.”
By his twenties, Cole had moved west, eventually spending several years in Los Angeles, where he became involved with underground occult circles operating in parts of Hollywood and East L.A.
“There’s a side of Los Angeles most Americans never see,” Cole said. “People think occult practices are just movie stuff. They’re not. There are communities deeply involved in it.”
He described private ceremonies held in rented mansions in the Hollywood Hills, abandoned warehouse gatherings downtown, and invitation-only spiritual groups obsessed with power, enlightenment, and supernatural experience.
“We believed humanity didn’t need God,” he said. “We believed we could become gods ourselves.”
Former acquaintances confirm parts of his story.
One ex-member of a California occult organization, who requested anonymity, said Adrian quickly became influential because of his charisma and “fearless commitment.”
“He could lead rituals for hours,” the former member said. “People followed him.”
Cole insists he never doubted his beliefs.
“I wasn’t spiritually confused,” he said. “I thought I had found the truth.”
That conviction would follow him all the way to the parking lot in Cleveland.
The Night Everything Changed
March 12th, 2021 began normally.
Cole had recently moved back to Ohio after years working construction jobs around Los Angeles and Las Vegas. Friends say he was trying to “reset his life,” though he remained deeply involved in occult practices.
That Friday night, after finishing a renovation shift near downtown Cleveland, he stopped at a Speedway gas station shortly before midnight.
Security footage obtained during the police investigation shows him walking toward the entrance carrying a phone and work gloves.
Seconds later, gunfire erupts.
Detective Marcus Hill of the Cleveland Police Department later described the scene as “pure chaos.”
“When officers arrived, there were shell casings everywhere,” Hill said. “People were screaming. Cars were leaving the lot at high speed.”
Cole suffered catastrophic internal bleeding.
Emergency responders performed CPR inside the ambulance while rushing him toward MetroHealth.
“He coded twice before arriving,” one paramedic later told investigators.
Inside the trauma unit, doctors fought to stabilize him as blood pressure collapsed.
Then, according to hospital documentation reviewed during this investigation, Adrian Cole flatlined.
For eight minutes.
“I Watched Them Working on My Body”
Cole remembers the moment with startling clarity.
“One second I was choking on blood,” he said. “The next second everything went silent.”
He claims he became aware above the operating room, looking down at doctors surrounding his body.
“I could see the trauma surgeon cutting my shirt open,” he recalled. “I remember one nurse yelling for more blood units.”
Near-death researchers note that out-of-body experiences are commonly reported during cardiac arrest events. Skeptics argue these perceptions can result from oxygen deprivation, anesthesia reactions, or neurological activity during trauma.
But Cole insists what followed cannot be explained medically.
“At first I felt calm,” he said. “Then everything changed.”
He described the operating room fading into darkness.
Not darkness like sleep.
“Darkness that felt alive.”
His breathing quickened as he recounted the experience.
“I wasn’t falling physically. It felt spiritual. Like I was being pulled somewhere.”
What he describes next is difficult to verify and impossible to prove.
But it changed his life permanently.
“There Was Nothing There Except Fear”
According to Cole, the darkness became overwhelming.
“There was no light. No sound. No sense of time,” he said. “But there was terror.”
He claims he sensed hostile presences surrounding him.
“I knew something was wrong immediately.”
Cole says he tried mentally repeating occult invocations he had practiced for decades.
Nothing happened.
“No power came. No presence answered.”
Then came what he describes as an unbearable awareness of guilt.
“It was like seeing every terrible thing I’d ever done at once,” he said quietly. “Not excuses. Not rationalizations. Just truth.”
At several points during interviews, Cole broke down emotionally while describing the experience.
“I realized I had spent my life chasing darkness thinking it was freedom.”
Then, according to his account, a memory surfaced unexpectedly.
His grandmother.
“She lived in Rochester, New York,” he said. “She was the only Christian in our family.”
Cole says she spent years praying for him despite relentless mockery from relatives.
“I used to laugh at her faith.”
But in what he describes as complete desperation, he claims he spoke a single sentence into the darkness:
“Jesus… if you’re real… help me.”
The Light
What happened next forms the centerpiece of Cole’s testimony — and the reason his story spread across religious communities nationwide.
“The darkness exploded with light,” he said.
Not ordinary light, he insists.
“Living light.”
He describes overwhelming warmth replacing fear instantly.
“It felt like love itself entered the place.”
Then came what he says was the appearance of Jesus Christ.
“I know how crazy that sounds,” Cole admitted. “I would’ve mocked me too.”
He struggles even now to describe the figure he encountered.
“There was authority in Him. But also unbelievable compassion.”
Cole claims scenes from his life unfolded around him.
He says he saw moments from childhood, years in occult circles, people he influenced spiritually, and countless choices he regretted.
“I saw how much damage I’d caused,” he said.
Most emotional, however, was what he claims he learned about himself.
“I thought I was powerful,” he explained. “But I realized I had been completely broken for years.”
According to Cole, the figure told him he was being given another chance.
“He said my life wasn’t over.”
Doctors Call Survival “Extraordinary”
Medical experts interviewed for this report caution against interpreting near-death experiences as objective proof of the afterlife.
Dr. Elaine Porter, a neurologist at Case Western Reserve University, says vivid spiritual experiences during cardiac arrest are well documented scientifically.
“The human brain under extreme trauma can produce extraordinarily intense perceptions,” Porter explained. “Patients often interpret those experiences through cultural or religious frameworks.”
Still, Porter acknowledged certain cases remain difficult to explain completely.
“There are patients who report details from operating rooms later confirmed accurate,” she said. “Science does not yet fully understand consciousness during cardiac arrest.”
Trauma surgeon Dr. Kevin Ramirez, who worked on Cole that night, avoids discussing spiritual claims directly.
But he does describe the survival itself as remarkable.
“He lost massive blood volume,” Ramirez said. “Most patients with those injuries don’t make it.”
When asked whether Cole regained consciousness suddenly, Ramirez paused.
“I remember hearing shouting from one of the nurses,” he said. “He came back aggressively. Like someone waking from a nightmare.”
A Complete Transformation
Friends say Adrian Cole changed almost immediately after leaving the hospital.
“He was different overnight,” said former coworker Nathan Briggs. “Completely different.”
Cole threw away occult books, ritual objects, and symbols from his apartment days after returning home.
“I couldn’t even look at them anymore,” he said.
He also began attending a small church outside Akron despite having mocked Christianity for most of his life.
Pastor Daniel Reeves remembers their first meeting vividly.
“He walked in shaking,” Reeves said. “And he just said, ‘I think Jesus saved my life.’”
Over the next several months, Cole says he experienced intense emotional breakdowns as he tried rebuilding his life.
“There was shame,” he admitted. “A lot of shame.”
He also claims he faced hostility from former occult associates after publicly sharing his testimony online.
“Some thought I’d lost my mind,” he said. “Others were furious.”
One former associate from Los Angeles reportedly warned him to “stop talking publicly” about occult practices.
Cole says those reactions only strengthened his conviction.
“If I almost died without knowing the truth,” he said, “then other people are living the same way.”
America’s Growing Fascination With Near-Death Experiences
Stories like Adrian Cole’s are no longer rare in America.
Interest in near-death experiences has exploded over the past decade, fueled by podcasts, documentaries, YouTube interviews, and bestselling memoirs.
Researchers estimate millions of Americans report some form of near-death encounter after cardiac arrest, accidents, or medical emergencies.
Common themes appear repeatedly:
Leaving the body
Traveling through darkness or tunnels
Encounters with light
Life reviews
Intense feelings of peace or judgment
Reluctance to return
Yet experiences vary dramatically depending on culture, belief systems, and personal background.
For believers, stories like Cole’s represent evidence of spiritual reality.
For skeptics, they remain neurological phenomena intensified by trauma.
But regardless of interpretation, these accounts continue captivating public attention.
Especially when the storyteller once stood violently opposed to religion.
“I Don’t Care If People Mock Me”
Today, Adrian Cole travels occasionally to churches and recovery programs throughout Ohio, Pennsylvania, and New York sharing his testimony.
He does not claim perfection.
“I still struggle,” he said. “I’m still human.”
But he insists the experience permanently altered his understanding of life.
“Death is not the end,” he said quietly. “That’s what changed everything for me.”
Critics accuse him of exaggeration or fabricating details for attention.
Cole responds calmly.
“I understand why people doubt me,” he said. “I would’ve doubted me too.”
Then he added something striking.
“But I know what happened to me.”
At the small Ohio church where he now volunteers weekly, members describe him less as a preacher and more as someone trying to rebuild a life he once nearly destroyed.
“He doesn’t come across fake,” Pastor Reeves said. “He comes across grateful.”
As America grows increasingly fascinated with spirituality, trauma, and questions about consciousness after death, stories like Adrian Cole’s continue spreading online at astonishing speed.
Some dismiss them instantly.
Others listen carefully.
But almost everyone asks the same question afterward:
What if he’s telling the truth?
The Final Eight Minutes
Late one evening earlier this spring, Adrian Cole returned to Cleveland for the first time since the shooting.
The Speedway station still stands.
Traffic still moves endlessly through the intersection.
Most customers pumping gas there have no idea a man once died on that pavement.
Cole stood silently near the curb where paramedics loaded him into the ambulance five years ago.
“It’s strange,” he said softly.
Then he looked toward the city lights glowing against the Ohio sky.
“I thought that night was the end of my story.”
He paused.
“But maybe it was the beginning.”
For now, the debate surrounding Adrian Cole’s experience continues.
Doctors argue science.
Skeptics argue psychology.
Believers argue faith.
And somewhere between medicine, mystery, and mortality stands one former occult leader from America’s Midwest who insists that during eight minutes of clinical death, he encountered something more real than life itself.
Something he says changed him forever.
Whether the nation believes him may ultimately depend on something deeper than evidence.
It may depend on what Americans themselves believe waits on the other side of death.