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Mystery Of The Lost Kitty by Jonathan Churcher
Missing Person Case Turns Into Murder
by PSI TECH Staff
Flashback: Targeting Iraq
by Jeff Lucas
Mystery Of The Lost Kitty
By Jonathan Churcher
September 12, 2002
One of the things I enjoy about Technical Remote Viewing® is downloading real things that exist in real time and real space. It is an extraordinary ability. A good 'psychic' can say something like "your missing cat is fulfilling its earthly destiny as a roaming predator - when the time is right, the animal will return." Okay, that's fine, and he or she may be correct, but such information is of little value to the cat's caretaker who wishes to ensure the cat's well being by having it back home.
Little Fox was one of Joan's favorite cats (she has a dozen or so) and the little feline never stayed away from the house for more than a few days. When I got a request to TRV the location of the cat, she had been gone for three months. Joan was really worried; she could not emotionally accept the fact that the cat had perished, but as time dragged on, the logic of this conclusion became stronger and stronger. I told her how to cue the target (Joan's cat Little Fox/present location) and how to generate the random digits for the Target Reference NumberTM. I was fifty miles away when I did the session and I did not know the natural or community environment of her house.
I was skeptical at the chances of locating the cat and thought that moving targets were very difficult to find. However, I did my best and a week later Joan called. It was a partial success and a good start. Details from the analysis are in italics.
Chain-link fence and large dog or small pony - Joan knew this place immediately; the animal was a large, big shouldered, tough looking Rottweiler.
Sounds of road traffic and a bell - this led her away from the fenced yard to a place in a field where Joan could hear cars from the road and the clanging of a railway-crossing bell. Sloping field/flowing water - from where she stood, Joan walked downhill to an irrigation system and a stream, and there she found:
water reservoir with concrete (See Fig. 1.1.)
Joan returned to that spot a few times and called for the cat, but had no response. I told her to re-cue the target in her own words and not to tell me exactly what she had written. All I knew was that it concerned the missing cat. She told me later that the new cue was "Joan's cat Little Fox/current residence."
In the second analysis, I stated that the cat was around humans and other creatures so this eliminated the open field. I also wrote: new construction is happening near the site. Across the field from the reservoir she saw a bulldozer, a backhoe, a dump truck and a large area of newly excavated soil, i.e., new construction. Once there, she followed a short road through some trees because I had written that the cat was in a building used for holding animals or storing crops. She soon came across an old farm shed that was apparently abandoned. The next clue from the Technical Remote Viewing data read "..equipment for processing food...includes cooling or freezing." The shed was filled with baskets, shelves and produce display units
from a grocery store - including a long freezer (See Fig. 1.2.) Calling the cat's name, Joan wandered around outside the shed and, in response to a familiar 'meow', looked up to see Little Fox enjoying an early evening snooze in the branch of an apple tree.
In the context of all the good, bad and ugly things that happen on this planet and in this beautiful, expanding universe, the finding of someone's pet cat does not rate very highly in the scheme of things. However, to do so by sitting at a desk, miles away, scribbling a bunch words in neat columns, is really extraordinary.
Missing Person Case Turns Into Murder
By PSI TECH Staff
October 3, 2002
Three weeks ago tragedy struck one of
our TRV University students. His 53 year old aunt-in-law was discovered
missing during a camping trip in Southern Oregon.
What is of great importance to those reading this, is that
there are two dangerous killers on the loose, who have
murdered before. After being alerted to the case last week by the family member,
PSI TECH tasked its professional remote viewers and has
issued the following preliminary report on Darlene's status.
Here is a reconstruction of events of that day. On September 1,
Darlene Barnes and her sister were camping near Gold Hill,
Oregon, close to the famous "House of Mystery."
They were walking together and split up by a fork in Sardine Creek Road which generally took twenty minutes to walk around.
But Darlene has not been seen since.
Her disappearance was not reported for thirty hours.
The Sheriff was alerted at 6:00 PM on September 2.
Since then as many as 75 people have helped search
a 12-square mile area around Sardine Creek .
"We've eliminated the fact that she's up there,"
said Mike Hurt, a friend and U.S. Navy veteran who helped set up the search team.
Jackson County Search and Rescue personnel as well as members of the civil air patrol flew over the area,
which was also searched by dogs.
The case is also being investigated by the Jackson County Sheriff's Office.
Darlene is a former U.S. Marine and mother of four. She is
in remission from cancer and recovering from recent chemotherapy
treatment. Darlene is 5 feet, 2 inches tall, weighs
110 pounds and has short hair. She was last seen
wearing a white tank top with green pants and tennis shoes. She often explored
for recreation and the spot where she was last seen was an old
campsite that is frequented by hunters.
Anyone with information is asked to call the Jackson County Sheriff's Office at (541) 776-7131.
Flashback: Targeting Iraq
Technical Remote Viewing's Role In Locating Weapons Of Mass Destruction
By Jeff Lucas
September 26, 2002
In recent weeks, there has been intense debate about whether Iraq continues to possess and develop weapons of mass destruction. Since the end of the Gulf War, Saddam Hussein has repeatedly violated sixteen United Nations Security Council Resolutions (UNSCRs) designed to ensure that Iraq does not pose a threat to international peace and security. President Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair have been at the forefront of the campaign to enforce the U.N. Security Resolutions that have been ignored by Iraq for the past decade.
U.N. weapons inspectors have not had access to Iraq since Saddam's regime ended all cooperation in 1998. Penetrating Saddam's inner circle has proven difficult for Western intelligence agencies, due to the fact that Hussein surrounds himself exclusively by either family members (which he reportedly routinely murders) or people he has known since childhood at his birthplace in the village of Tikreet.
UNMOVIC (United Nations Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission), formed in December 1999 to replace the U.N. Special Commission (UNSCOM) which Saddam expelled, makes use of commercial satellite imagery. They compare a database of 15,000 items for changes at sites inspectors have previously visited. But satellites cannot see through roofs.
Fortunately, there is an intelligence collection technique that governments can avail themselves to when conventional methods fail - Technical Remote Viewing ®. On several occasions since 1991, remote viewers at PSI TECH have turned their attention to hidden weapon sites in Iraq, locating canisters containing the deadliest bioweapons known to man, using only their trained minds, pen and paper, while sitting at their desks thousands of miles away.
Background: A Decade Of Defiance
Resolution 687, adopted on April 3, 1991, demanded Iraq provide full disclosure of all aspects of its programs to develop weapons of mass destruction and ballistic missiles with a range greater than 150 kilometers . It further declared that Iraq shall accept unconditionally, under international supervision, the "destruction, removal or rendering harmless" of its weapons of mass destruction.
The resolution created the U.N. Special Commission (UNSCOM) and called on inspection teams
to be given "immediate, unconditional and unrestricted" access to any and all areas,
facilities, equipment, records and means of transportation which they wish to
inspect. In May of 1991, Iraq accepted the privileges and immunities of the Special Commission (UNSCOM) and its personnel. These guarantees include the right of "unrestricted freedom of entry and exit without delay or hindrance of its personnel, property, supplies, equipment.
However, in June of 1991, Iraqi personnel fired warning shots to prevent the inspectors from approaching their vehicles. Two months later, Iraqi officials confiscated documents from the inspectors. The inspectors refused to yield a second set of documents. In response, Iraq refused to allow the team to leave the site with these documents. A four-day standoff ensued, but Iraq permitted the team to leave with the documents after a statement from the Security Council threatens enforcement actions. This began Saddam's seven year long game of cat and mouse
with inspectors, agreeing at times to allow them greater access and then frustrating their
attempts to visit suspected weapons sites.
Remote Viewing Iraq's Weapons of Mass Destruction
On November 19, 1991, the United Nations turned to PSI TECH to help locate Saddam Hussein's hidden weapons sites. Sketches from remote viewing sessions performed by PSI TECH remote viewers were carried into Baghdad by Maj. Karen Jansen (U.S. Army.) (See Washington Times article.)
Over the next seven years, Iraq continued to obstruct the inspection teams' investigations, including refusing access to key sites and blocking UNSCOM from removing remnants of missile engines for in-depth analysis outside Iraq. In November of 1996, Iraqi escorts on board an UNSCOM helicopter try to physically prevent the pilot from flying the helicopter in the direction of its intended destination. On September 17, 1997, while seeking access to a site declared by Iraq to be "sensitive," UNSCOM inspectors witness and videotape Iraqi guards moving files, burning documents, and dumping ash-filled waste cans into a nearby river.
On February 23, 1998, Iraq signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the United Nations, pledging to accept all relevant Security Council resolutions, to cooperate fully with UNSCOM and the IAEA, and to grant to UNSCOM and the IAEA "immediate, unconditional and unrestricted access for their inspections.
In the Spring of 1998 PSI TECH was asked to
identify Iraq's hidden bio weapon facilities
again. On March 2nd, PSI TECH sent a report
to the White House and DIA detailing the
location of a clandestine Iraqi biological
warfare agent production facility within a
nitrogen fertilizer plant, located along
the Tigris River, northwest of Mosul,
in the vicinity of Zumma. In the report,
PSI TECH stated, "This "boiler room"
operation is producing Anthrax or
Clostridium perfringens." "We assess the Zumma
area site to be the largest
currently operating BW production facility in Iraq."
Five days later, on March 7, the Associated Press reported the following:
"BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - In a rare trip outside the capital, Iraqi President Saddam Hussein today toured the district of Mosul in northern Iraq, the official Iraqi News Agency said. State-run television showed crowds shouting "With our blood and souls we will defend you, Saddam." Also today, a U.N. team led by American Scott Ritter finished its second day of inspections aimed at uncovering Iraq's weapons of mass destruction. The Iraqi News Agency said the team carried out three surprise inspections that "went ahead in a normal manner according to procedures agreed upon by the two sides."
On August 5, 1998, Iraq's The Revolutionary Command Council and the Baath Party Command decided to stop cooperating with UNSCOM and the IAEA until the Security Council agrees to lift the oil embargo as a first step towards ending sanctions.
After a continuous program of harassment, obstruction, deception and denial, UNSCOM concluded that it was unable to fulfill its mandate and the inspectors were withdrawn in December 1998.
Allies Build Case Against Iraq
Last Tuesday, the British government issued a 50 page dossier on Iraq. Based on the UNSCOM report to the UN Security Council in January 1999 and earlier UNSCOM reports, the British assess that when the UN inspectors left Iraq they were unable to account for
up to 360 tons of bulk chemical warfare agent, including 1.5 tons of VX nerve agent, growth media procured for biological agent production (enough to produce over three times the 8,500 litres of anthrax spores Iraq admits to having manufactured),
and over 30,000 special munitions for delivery of chemical and biological agents.
The dossier contained the following statement:
"Intelligence rarely offers a complete account of activities which are designed to remain concealed. The nature of Saddam's regime makes Iraq a difficult target for the intelligence services."
Iraq's regime and hidden weapons of terror are indeed difficult to penetrate. But there is one intelligence collection technique that Saddam cannot hide from. There is one tool that can penetrate any bunker, any factory and any mind - Technical Remote Viewing ®.
PSI TECH remains dedicated to its mission of providing adjunct intelligence information, when called upon, for the protection of the world.
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