Page 7   The Signal Line T H E    M A T R I X   Volume 1, Issue 6  :  June 21, 2002
Meditation Training
The Matrix Technical Remote Viewing Newsletter - Contents
Articles
Meditation TrainingFront Page
Meditation TrainingTRV University
Meditation TrainingThe Real X-Files
Meditation TrainingSpontaneous Psi Events
Meditation TrainingGestalts - Unwrapping The Package
Meditation TrainingLife After Death: The Mystery Unveiled

The Signal Line
Meditation TrainingMy Last "I Bet You Can't Remote View it" Bet!
Meditation TrainingRemote Viewing & Prayer
Meditation TrainingRemote Viewing Missing People
Meditation TrainingGen II CD
Meditation TrainingChandra Levy Murder Mystery
Meditation TrainingPSI TECH Viewer Solves Another Crime
Meditation Training"Poor Man's Nuke" Plan Averted in Chicago

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Meditation TrainingWhat is TRV?
Meditation TrainingHow Can I Learn TRV?

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The Signal LineTM Weekly E-zine

The following articles originally appeared in PSI TECH's The Signal Line weekly e-zine. To receive weekly e-mail updates about Technical Remote Viewing and PSI TECH activities, click here.

My Last "I Bet You Can't Remote View it" Bet! by John L. Turner, M.D.
Remote Viewing and Prayer by Kimberly Snow
Remote Viewing Missing People by PSI TECH Staff
What Is That CD In Your Gen II TRV Kit? by Dane Spotts
The Chandra Levy Murder Mystery by PSI TECH Staff
PSI TECH Remote Viewer Solves Another Crime by PSI TECH Staff
Poor Man's Nuke" Plan Averted in Chicago by PSI TECH Staff


My Last "I Bet You Can't Remote View it" Bet!

By John L. Turner, M.D.

April 26, 2002

       In December 1996 I was at the mid point of my TRV training with Joni Dourif. Prior to training, I had studied the history of RV in depth and had followed PSI TECH's recommendations by reading Sheldrake's The Presence of the Past. I was pleased to be able to experience remote viewing during the training, just like it was advertised. However, the day my wife Nora lost her small medication bottle, and Joni said she could easily "remote view" the location, I laughed and doubted her. In fact, I bet her that she could not do it!

       Finally, after enough laughter from me, Joni asked for pen and paper. I gladly gave it to her as we had a bet on. I watched her begin with two random four-digit numbers attached to "the target location of missing medication bottle."

       Joni quickly finished the initial stages and produced a sketch of a rectangular device, a transparent window of some sort and what appeared to be a piece of spongy material. Then I watched in awe as she analyzed the drawing, went to the kitchen sink, fixated on the dish washing sponge. About a foot away from the wet sponge was the toaster oven with a glass lift-up door.

       "I wonder.." said Joni as she peeked behind the toaster. There was the missing medication bottle!

       Not only did I lose the bet, but also I had to endure Joni's laughter directed at me. I did not doubt Joni's TRV competence after that.

Dr. John L. Takeuchi Turner
Neurological Surgeon




"Mr. W.D./cause of current pain problem"

By John L. Turner, M.D.

After Dr. Turner's Technical Remote Viewing training, he performed the following diagnosis on a patient using TRV as a significant aid:

Background Information:

Mr. W.D. is a 58 year old male who was first seen on April 10, 1996 for complaints of left leg pain, left foot numbness and weakness. He failed to respond to conservative treatment. CT on 4/11/96 scan revealed a soft tissue mass in the left lateral recess at the L4 level of the lumbar spine. MRI on 4/12/96 clearly showed an extruded disc fragment at the L4-5 disc level with cephalad migration to the left. The L5-S1 disc had a mild bulge.

4/18/96: Left L4-5 hemilaminotomy with microdiskectomy and excision of free fragments.

A disc bulge was palpated at L4-5 of mild to moderate degree. Since the MRI had clearly shown a superiorly migrated fragment, laminotomy was performed superiorly and several disc fragments were teased from the ventral surface of the dura. There were no fragments extending along the L5 root. The disc space was entered and only small pieces of disc material could be removed.

Post-operative course:

Mr. W.D. improved and returned to his home state with mild persistent weakness of dorsiflexion of his left foot and residual numbness. He was reinjured when falling from a Captain's boat chair followed by a twisting injury when working in the engine compartment of his boat. Repeat MRI scanning with and without contrast agent showed scarring and extruded fragment at L4-5 and an increase in the bulge at L5-S1. His left leg pain had returned.

12/9/96: Left L4-5 hemilaminotomy, medial facetectomy, L5 neurolysis with removal of disk fragments. Left L5-S1 hemilaminotomy and microdiskectomy.

Considerable scar tissue was found as expected at the L5-S1 level with small fragments of disk embedded and extruded within the scar tissue. This required performing a medial facetectomy and foraminotomy to free the L5 root. At the L5-S1 level, which appeared to be transitional, a hard bulging disk was found. There were no other pertinent operative findings.

Post-operative course and inclusion of Remote Viewing:

Following surgery, his leg pain was completely relieved. He complained of back pain during the first post-operative week. This slowly led to fluctuating leg pain, left greater than right. Some days, he would be pain free. He remained afebrile and the incision remained intact and normal in appearance.

He was sent for physical therapy with heat, massage and ultrasound with minimal relief. Caudal epidural steroid blocks did not change his pain. On 1/11/97 he complained of bilateral anterior leg pain and bilateral calf pain. There was no evidence of deep vein thrombosis. Straight leg raising was negative.




Medical Technical Remote Viewing Session

By John L. Turner, M.D.

The viewer perceived the origin of pain within the brain and the source of pain in the lumbar (low back) region. Stage six sketch showed a 'tubular structure' with a helical flow pattern and an obstruction to the flow by a 'reddish-brown' material. This material appeared to be of fluid consistency.

1/13/97: Examination and MRI:

Patient was afebrile, back and incision appeared normal. Patient describes an area in the left paralumbar area that when pressed upon, would cause a radiation of pain to his left leg.

1/14/97: Repeat MRI:

An isolated pocket of suppuration or, perhaps, cerebrospinal fluid can be seen 2 cm below the skin surface and extending to the level of the L5 nerve root. Needle aspiration yielded 4 cc of reddish brown material. The patient was taken to the operating room where a loculated area of reddish-brown pus was found as expected. Cultures showed growth of coagulase-negative Staphylococcus and the patient was started on appropriate antibiotics and twice daily wound packing and irrigation. He has made a good recovery with the wound healing by second intention.

Discussion:

This represents a case of post-operative infection which was a diagnostic delema due to atypical symptoms and a fluctuating course of shifting pain in the back and both lower extremities. The surgical incision gave no clues about the loculated deep infection. A remote viewing session focusing on anatomic features revealed obstruction of flow due to an abscess cavity which communicated with the epidural space and may have impeded normal flow of cerebrospinal fluid. The RV findings did not suggest a recurrent herniated disk, but rather, a reddish-brown fluid as the etiologic agent. This was confirmed by MRI scanning, needle aspiration and surgery.

Remote Viewing shortened the delay in diagnosis and decreased medical costs of continued physical therapy in this patient with an unusual presentation of post-operative infection.

John L. Turner, M.D., F.A.C.S.


Related Articles:

04/19/02 - April The Matrix Technical Remote Viewing Newsletter
05/13/98 - Live TRV Demonstration Video
10/10/01 - Remote Viewing "Blind" Vs. "Front-loaded"
01/04/02 - How Optimum Trajectories Can Affect One's Future
02/15/02 - Technical Remote Viewing and Law Enforcement
02/01/02 - TRV Reveals Terrorist Plots
04/05/02 - Lost For Days and Found in Minutes
03/29/02 - Fifteen Minutes Solves Energy Problem Using Technical Remote Viewing
03/08/02 - Imagine if You Could Do This...
11/16/01 - Videotape Training Vs. Classroom Training
12/07/01 - Exposing the Truth About Remote Viewing



Remote Viewing and Prayer

By Kimberly Snow
May 03, 2002

      In past issues of The Matrix and PSI TECH's ezine, The Signal Line, we have discussed the fundamentals of what the Matrix is, how it operates and how we access it to retrieve data. The main comparison we have made to what the Matrix is would be similarities to Jung's theory of a Collective Unconscious, a central "data bank" where all the information on everything that was, is and will be exists as patterns of information. Since we are all tapped into this source at all times, through our own personal unconscious, we are part of the Matrix, changing it on a daily basis through our thoughts and actions.

      For the past 25 years up until his death in 1998, Eugene D'Aquili, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania Medical School, had been researching prayer and meditation and the experience of "oneness" and connectedness that is felt when one has a transcendental experience through the deepest states of meditation and prayer. Andrew Newberg, a physician and fellow in the Division of Nuclear Medicine, also at the University of Pennsylvania Medical School, had been D'Aquili's associate for ten years. In 1999 their findings were published in The Mystical Mind: Probing the Biology of Mystical Experience. A re-editing of their findings was recently published, entitled Why God Won't Go Away: Brain Science and the Biology of Belief.

      The experiments they conducted were performed on the brains of Tibetan monks and Franciscan nuns while in deep states of prayer. A special radioactive dye was injected into their bloodstreams, which then traveled to the brain and locked onto brain cells. This showed the researchers the patterns of the blood's flow in the brain at the moment of the monks' and nuns' transcendental experiences. D'Aquili and Newberg were then able to see which parts of the brain were being utilized, and exactly what was happening during the process.

      What they found was that during prayer, the frontal lobes are highly active, increasing beyond their normal state. This is the area of the brain that controls your state of attention. It is well known that prayer "experts" around the globe, such as the Tibetan Monks, are intensely focused and in a state of high attention when they pray.

      The second thing that was occurring was a decrease of activity in the posterior parietal areas of the brain. This is the part of the brain that gives you your sense of self, separates everything "outside" of you, from you, and gives you a sense of individualism. Also it is the part responsible for spatial orientation.

      Newberg writes of the posterior parietal areas of the brain, "What if the area was working as hard as ever, but somehow the act of meditating had blocked its flow of sensory input? We were fascinated by this possibility."

      "Would the orientation area," he continued, "interpret its failure to find the borderline between the self and the outside world to mean such a distinction doesn't exist? In that case the brain would have no choice but to perceive that the self is endless and intimately interwoven with everyone and everything the mind senses. And this perception would feel utterly and unquestionably real."

      People from all over the world, from all cultures and walks of life, when describing their experiences during deep prayer or meditation, have many similarities. The most significant and common similarity is that feeling of connectedness with an ALL, a transcendence of the sense of individual, and a merging with a collective force in the universe in which we are all a part of a whole. It would appear as if by connected with this All, life takes a new meaning for them. They slough off the idea that they are lonely isolated individuals ruled by their all-knowing egos, and emerge anew, seeing the world as a rich and diverse place in which they are somehow connected.

      So how does this relate to TRV? Well, when I first read about the prayer study, I immediately considered the theory of The Matrix, and the effects that TRV has on many of our trainees. One of the most exciting things that we hear when they first start practicing TRV is that they suddenly feel as if the old boundaries of what they knew about the world and their place in it suddenly changes dramatically. The universe becomes a much vaster place, and they feel connected in ways they never before experienced. TRV proves that there is a collective source "out there" that we are all part of and that we can tap into whenever we please. With the knowledge that we are actively participating in its dynamic nature, comes a sense of oneness that we previously were not able to understand or tap into.

      With this new understanding also comes a sense of humility, as the rapacious ego of our individual consciousness is left at the door along with the rest of our conscious clockwork while we TRV. We seem to abandon our sense of separateness, close the door on the part of the mind that tells us "Look at me! Let me think this through for you! I know everything!" and instead let go and trust in the process of TRV, letting our unconscious tap into the collective source. That is where truth is found. That is where we can reach true knowledge untainted by our limiting sense of self. In a way, it is much like the spiritual transcendence that the monks and nuns say they feel while in deep prayer.

      We are reluctant to describe TRV as "an experience", because it is inherently "an attention management skill." TRV is an active conscientious act that activates and controls an innate passive ability. There is no praying or meditating involved to TRV. It is simply a tool for the mind which allows us to access information. However, TRVers do find that their frames of reference shift dramatically. Their priorities begin to change, from that of feeding the ego, to that of searching and finding answers to the age-old questions, "Why am I here?"

Related Articles:

04/26/02 - My Last "I Bet You Can't Remote View it" Bet! by Dr. John Turner
04/19/02 - April Issue of The Matrix Newsletter
02/15/02 - Is the Veil Lifting?
01/18/02 - TRV Is "Site-Specific." What Does That Mean?
01/04/02 - How Optimum Trajectories Can Affect One's Future
03/08/02 - Imagine if You Could Do This...
10/10/01 - Optimum Trajectories
10/10/01 - Remote Viewing "Blind" Vs. "Front-loaded"



Remote Viewing Missing People

By PSI TECH Staff
May 10, 2002

      You are sitting on your porch drinking lemonade, watching your child ride her bike. It is a beautiful day, the sun is shining, and each time she passes by she gives you a freckled grin and waves. You get up and go into the house to answer the phone. You are not gone long. Five, maybe ten minutes. When you come back out, you can no longer hear the familiar rattle of training wheels. You run out into the street, call her name; look left, then right. The street is empty. Your child is gone. In that instant a hole begins to form in your heart. Black and fathomless, and with each day your child is missing, that hole grows larger.

      There is nothing worse than losing a child. Except one thing. Losing a child and not knowing where they are, not knowing whether they are alive or dead, in pain or suffering. All across the country hundreds of children disappear everyday. And not just children. People. From all walks of life. When all conventional investigative methods fail, the family members who are left behind feel a sense of hopelessness. But there is one more method that can be applied to assist in these cases. It is unconventional but it is real. It is called Technical Remote Viewing (TRV) and it is being employed by families and investigators worldwide.

      When PSI TECH is contacted to help with a missing persons or abduction case, time is of the essence. It is often a race against the clock. The first thing we do to begin is a TRV probe to determine basic facts that help us plan the best course of action. We do not assume anything about the target, regardless of the available evidence or the conclusions drawn by others. The reason many conventional methods of investigations have failed is because they have assumed things about the data at hand. TRV never deals with assumptions, but always starts with a clean-blank slate. The process of TRV downloads direct knowledge, unbiased data onto that blank slate. The initial probe determines if the missing person (the target) is dead or alive and then begins to paint a picture with descriptions of the target's surrounding environment.

      Discovering if the target is alive or dead is one of the first and simplest things to ascertain. Utilizing a team of several viewers who initially work the target in the blind is optimal. However, they inevitably discover the nature of their targets as they experience the emotions present at the site. The data is often times gruesome, and leaves the viewers with a piercing sense of the tragedy. The project manager is tasking the viewers and collecting all the data to piece together the picture. Each viewer presents different pieces of the puzzle and when racing against the clock, it can be a monumental task.

      If we determine that the person is alive, and being held against his/her will, we use techniques which are designed to narrow down locations. We race to provide information that can assist the police in locating the individual. These cases are particularly stressful, as having the knowledge that the person is alive and possibly in danger adds a desperate element to the search.

       If we determine that the victim is deceased, the next step is to find out the cause of death. We do not automatically assume murder. The death could have been an accident or it could have been deliberate. The person could have run away from home but what were they running from? The person could have committed suicide or could they be lost? These are just a few examples of the wide range of possible scenarios. PSI TECH's remote viewers learn to draw their conclusions strictly from the data that the Remote Viewing has provided.

      In the case of Maddie Rae Clifton, only two PSI TECH viewers performed initial probes and after only forty-five minutes were able to determine that the child was dead, and submerged, trapped beneath a metal grate or grid. We faxed this preliminary information to the Sheriff. The following day, she was found underneath a neighbor's waterbed. She had been murdered.

      When we discover that the cause of death was murder, we then turn the viewers' attention to the murder event itself. We ascertain the nature of the murder and the description of the perpetrator/s. We can tell fairly easily if the perpetrator was a family member or familiar to the victim. We can look at the perpetrators current location and document their daily routine. We also need to find out where the body is located. This kind of work requires unlimited patience and determination.

      Finding the exact location of a target presents its own unique set of difficulty. Most times we are dealing with homogenous terrain and typical types of buildings and vehicles: waterways, bridges, lakes, holes in the ground. We have to find out which vehicle, which waterway, which building, which city or town. We employ advanced techniques to pin point unique geography and significant features. This is the hardest part of our operation. This is the point where patience and experience is essential for success. This is where most mistakes are made due to lack of thoroughness or rush to judgment. When the data reveals a particular city, the search then begins to be narrowed, where in the city? If the data points to train tracks and water, which train tracks? Which body of water? Working from the general to the specific, the search continues until a precise site is pinpointed.

      Another problem that occurs is if the location of the missing person is changed frequently. Viewing a target on the move is a difficult task. It is then that we go back and investigate "the disappearance event", We look at motive and intent. In long term searches, the remote viewers can learn more about their targets character and minds then the target knows about themselves. Then it becomes easier to determine their next move. This is how we located the Unabomber for the FBI.

      Remote viewing missing people, particularly innocent children, is never easy. It takes hours and hours of work, and involves painstaking summaries and analysis. PSI TECH remote viewers are very capable and healthy people because they are required to deal with additional emotions and lingering data. We learn to deal with our personal feelings like policemen or firemen. The remote viewers perceive the emotions of not only the victims, but also the perpetrators, as well as their own emotions. Even though remote viewing the target tragedy is experienced very much like an absorbing movie, the effect does take its toll. But it is also rewarding. It is hard to inform a family that a missing person is deceased but it brings closure for them. Most of the time the loved ones instinctively know the truth and the information we provide comes as a relief. The most rewarding of all is gathering session data which indicates a victim is alive and then successfully tracking them down. We have had many successes finding run-away teens.

      Unfortunately we can not work all the cases presented to us. It takes hundreds of man-hours for the handful of cases we do work. An important part of our mission at PSI TECH is to develop pools of highly trained professional remote viewers. These individuals from all parts of the world are then able to expand work in this area. Not everyone can do this. It requires rigor and discipline beyond what an average person is willing to invest. For the dedicated few that do want to acquire this skill and use if for public service such as finding missing people, we are here for you too.

Related Articles:

04/26/02 - My Last "I Bet You Can't Remote View it" Bet! by Dr. John Turner
04/19/02 - April Issue of The Matrix Newsletter
02/15/02 - TRV Student Session Helps Police Locate Stolen Item
01/18/02 - TRV Is "Site-Specific." What Does That Mean?
01/04/02 - How Optimum Trajectories Can Affect One's Future
03/08/02 - Imagine if You Could Do This...
10/10/01 - Optimum Trajectories
10/10/01 - Remote Viewing "Blind" Vs. "Front-loaded"



What Is That CD In Your Gen II TRV Kit?

By Dane Spotts
May 17, 2002

       Enclosed with every Gen II Training System is a very powerful CD called "TRV Mind Prep." We haven't talked about it much because it is not a requirement for staying in TRV structure, however, it can be a potent adjunct to a remote viewer's arsenal of mind tools. And when used before a session, can substantially improve one's ability to grab-on to the target signal, as well as zap stress and improve other aspects of your life.

      So what is this mysterious audio technology, how does it work, and what impact can it have on your TRV sessions and your life?

THE BRAIN SUPERCHARGER TECHNOLOGY- LIKE TAKING A VACATION IN 28 MINUTES

      Pop the Brain Supercharger CD into your player, put on your headphones, and punch play. A few moments later you're transported into another time and place. Your body becomes extremely relaxed. Your arms and legs feel numb. You may experience a lucid dream and feel as though your mind and body are in two separate places. What's happening is the technology on the CD has altered your consciousness. Using a special combination of sound frequencies and special audio effects, your body becomes extremely relaxed as your attention is driven inward. Words can hardly describe the experience but it's like taking a 2 week vacation in 28 minutes.

      I named it the Brain Supercharger™, because of the powerful effects it had on the brain. Just as certain forms of music affect your mood, certain sound frequencies played in precise combinations will alter mind state and unfold a deep meditative awareness similar to that achieved by Zen Monks and fire-walking yogis.

      Here's how it works. Your brain produces wave-like ripples of electrical energy that correspond to certain states of consciousness. The four kinds of brainwave frequencies: Alpha, Beta, Theta and Delta are really descriptive tags for different wave speeds. Delta is the sleep state. Theta is akin to a deep meditative state. Alpha is like taking a catnap. And Beta is your daily rock and roll.

      The special Neuro-Entrainment Matrix™ on this soundtrack is composed of certain tones and sound effects designed to drive the brain into a psycho-physical state that matches the "theta" wave pattern. The result is a blissful feeling of deep relaxation. But this is more than just a way to relax. Training your brain to enter these "theta" states can have enormous benefits. Users have reported reduced stress, enhanced creativity, peak experiences, and feelings of psychological well-being. 20% of the users have reported spontaneous out of body experiences.

A WINDOW INTO THE MIND

      First, this is not New Age music, guided meditation, or hypnosis. What it is, is a combination of sound effects and audio engineering beyond anything ever created in the mind development field. As I report in my book Super Brain Power, researchers believe the "theta" mind state opens a window into the unconscious. Dr Lawrence Cory, author of a double blind study on the Brain Supercharger technology reports, "Daily usage seems to have a profound effect of the mental functioning of the listener…the Brain Supercharger appears to alter the personality of its users is essentially positive and life-enhancing ways."

ZAP STRESS & BOOST BRAINPOWER

      If this were only a tool for zapping stress and boosting brainpower, it would be awesome enough. But there's more. Much more. Because this amazing mind development technology has also been used to reprogram negative behavior and self-defeating beliefs. And, from our initial experiments, can set up the perfect mind state for TRV. That is why we began including it with all the Generation II TRV training kits.

      How can it do all this? Researchers believe that people who enter the "alpha-theta" state acquire super-receptivity to new information, and a greater ability to "re-script" material on a subconscious level.

      Simply listening to this soundtrack (those of you who have used it, can attest to this) automatically alters your mind-state and opens a window into your unconscious. Then, using a special behavioral mindscripting technique, (silent affirmations recorded at the threshold of conscious perception) these mindscripts direct positive programming into the mind, by-passing the conscious mind which puts up road blocks. Because your mind-state is at peak receptivity while in this "Theta Window," this new programming has a better chance to stick.

      So, the Brain Supercharger is not only a stress zapper and a brainwashing tool. It's also a TRV mind prep system all rolled into one. No wonder the CIA purchased several of the Brain Supercharger programs for what I assume was research purposes.

      For those of you who have the TRV Generation II training system and have not yet had a chance to experiment with this very powerful mind tool, I invite you to get out those headphones and CD players, and plug in.

To find out more about the Brain Supercharger technology and how it was developed, read "Super Brain Power: 28 Minutes to a Supercharged Brain" or go to…

SUPER BRAIN POWER
28 minutes to a supercharged brain
In this Book+CD combination, you will learn about the Brain Supercharger technology, how it was developed and used by thousands worldwide to zap stress, boost brainpower and unfold... (more)
The Brain Supercharger - Mind Lab
The ultimate brain supercharger collection
12 of the all-time most popular Brain Supercharger titles plus 12 bonus booster soundtracks give you 24 different programs to plug your brain... (more)
The Mind Power Library
5 breakthrough technologies on 35 CDs total
5 breakthrough technologies on 35 CDs total Includes the Brain Supercharger - Mind Lab (12 titles), Millionaire’s Mind (2 CDs), Triggers-Motivation (6 CDs), The Photographic Mind (8 CDs),... (more)


The Chandra Levy Murder Mystery

By PSI TECH Staff
May 24, 2002

      On Wednesday, police investigators announced that they had positively identified the remains of Chandra Levy, who disappeared in April of last year. Identification was made through the examination of dental records. Her remains were discovered in Rock Creek Park, 4 miles from her residence in Washington DC.

       Wednesday's finding shifted the status of the case from that of a missing person to that of a death. Police said they had no idea how the 24-year-old Levy died.

       Almost one year ago on July 11 of 2001, PSI TECH announced its preliminary report on the Chandra levy case. The report stated that Ms. Levy was dead and that her death was not an accident. PSI TECH found that her body was located in a swampy, dark, desolate and spacious, high, place in a forest with trees. We described pathways nearby and that occasionally horns could be heard but that birds were the main silence breakers. We selectively announced some of this data on the radio but we gave investigators all of it. (Selected data released to the public)

Here is a sample of the data from these sessions: Sketch and Corroborating Data

      The precise location of a dead body can be extremely difficult to pinpoint because they are often located in places such as the area where Chandra's body was ultimately discovered. PSI TECH Remote Viewers can describe the immediate surroundings of the body location and point to the general area of that locale, which state or town, but the difficulty lies in determining exactly where that crevice, hole, structure, body of water or barrel is located. We are dealing with homogenous terrain where there are many similar features.

       On July 12, 2001, Dane Spotts and Joni Dourif announced on a syndicated national radio show their peliminary results. The week following the broadcast, PSI TECH shifted its focus to reconstructing Chandra's "Death Event." Even though we had already determined her death was not an accident, we needed to focus precisely on the death event itself to see if there was another person involved or not. We concluded that there was indeed another person involved. We immediately began looking for "key evidence." On July 19th, we determined that Chandra was murdered and the key evidence was a red car, like a minivan, with tinted windows, turning around, and a slender man with short hair who stood about 6 feet 1" tall, as the peliminary data for key evidence in Chandra's death event." Here is one session reflecting some of this data.

Sketch and Data For Key Evidence

       The next step was to look specifically at the person responsible for Chandra's death so, we focused the targeting on the murderer and looked for key evidence. We described a tall, young aspiring, muscular (upper arms) man, perhaps in his mid to late 20's, who idolizes somebody else. We sketched his face. Here is one such rough sketch and description for you to see.

Sketch and Data Collected

       The case remains unsolved. As of this moment Chandra Levy's death has not been classified as a homicide. We are hopeful that with the new forensic evidence provided by the discovery of a body that the detectives on the case will bring about the arrest of the perpetrator(s) in the very near future.

Related Links:

Map of area
Missing Person "Chandra Levy" Interim Summary Report
TRV Special Applications: Solving Murders & Abductions



PSI TECH Remote Viewer Solves Another Crime

May 31, 2002

      A corrupt deputy. A blackmailed firearms dealer. The perfect set up. A gun is paid for in full by the customer, then shipped to the dealer, who is being black mailed by the deputy. The dealer is supposed to then give the gun to the customer in that area. If it is a good one, the dealer tells the customer that the sheriff has confiscated it, giving some bogus reason, and then gives the gun to the deputy. The gun never makes it to evidence. The deputy's plan is working just fine, until one day they take a gun from the wrong guy; a maverick who possesses a skill that they don't. In this maverick's world there are no secrets.

      Sound like a script to the next summer blockbuster? It isn't. It's real, and one PSI TECH trained remote viewer was thrown right in the center of it.

      A few months ago someone stole a collectible firearm from Kevin, a PSI TECH Generation II Training Course remote viewer. Kevin owns a gun shop, and one of his customers had purchased from him an antique Colt 1911A1 .45 semi-automatic pistol. A beauty indeed. Since it is illegal for a firearms dealer to ship a gun directly to a customer, the customer paid for the gun, and Kevin then shipped it to the customer's nearest gun dealer, two states away. The customer waited for his local dealer to get the shipped Colt pistol to him. It never arrived. This dealer talked to the questioning customer once, telling him that the Sheriff's Department had confiscated the gun, but nobody would return the customer's phone calls when he tried to investigate further.

      Kevin knew that the dealer and the deputy had the gun. The problem was that he had no evidence, nor any way to get it back from them. It didn't help matters that the dealer and the deputy lived two states away. For 10 days after the gun was stolen, Kevin called the dealer numerous times each day. Not once did they come to the phone or return any of the messages that he left on the answering machine. He also asked his local police to call on his behalf, which they did, several times. None of their calls were answered or returned either. When he checked the evidence logs at the Sheriff's office, he found that the gun was never logged in. The situation seemed hopeless. He had no evidence and since they did not seem to feel any need to return his or his local police's phone calls, Kevin decided to utilize his new found skill. It was time to bring out the big guns, so to speak. It was time to unveil the truth. It was time to TRV.

      But how would one cue the target? He knew who had the gun, so there would be no point in TRVing the perpetrator of the crime. He knew where the gun was, so location was a moot point. It didn't matter to Kevin how the gun was taken. Kevin just wanted the firearm returned. He needed a confession or something that would make the dealer give it back. Something on the dealer that he could use that would cause the dealer to send back the gun, no questions asked. What he needed was a secret.

      Cueing the session as [dealer's name]/most significant secret, he began to TRV. He had never met the dealer before, nor ever talked to him. What he got was not only unexpected, but if true, would be very embarrassing to the dealer. From the session, which included data such as alcohol, drinker, restricted, boxed in, restrictions, restricted movements, fear turned to aggressiveness, in trouble, payoff, running, and fighting back, coupled with all of the rest of the data and the sketches, Kevin analyzed the secret as a series of DUI's which the dealer had committed, that were written off by the deputy in return for the stolen guns. The data indicated that the dealer was angry about the set up, but that there was nothing he could do about it unless he wanted to end up in jail. It was blackmail.

      Kevin showed the entire session to the local police investigator that was helping him. It was time to confront the dealer. This time it was decided that the police investigator would do the talking. When they called, they got the answering machine, as usual. The investigator began to leave a message on the phone, that they had discovered that the dealer was a drinker, and that he was in trouble because of it. This time the dealer picked up the phone as soon as the investigator started detailing the data that Kevin got in the "most significant secret" session.

      Extremely nervous, the dealer danced around the conversation, stuttering, half-heartedly denying a detail here and there. Kevin and the investigator assured him that they would make his secret known if the firearm was not immediately returned. They also let him know that they would never say a word, nor press any charges, if the firearm was back in their hands the next day.

      Putting them on hold, the dealer soon returned and assured them they would have the firearm. The very next day the antique Colt 1911 semi-automatic pistol arrived via Fedex. Which only goes to show you: There are no secrets with TRV.


Related Articles:

04/19/02 - April The Matrix Technical Remote Viewing Newsletter
02/15/02 - TRV Session Leads Police Investigators to Location of a Stolen Cash Register
03/29/02 - Fifteen Minutes Solves Energy Problem Using Technical Remote Viewing
11/16/01 - Videotape Training Vs. Classroom Training
05/13/98 - Live TRV Demonstration Video


Bin Laden's "Poor Man's Nuke" Plan Averted in Chicago

June 10, 2002

      Today it was announced that officials have captured a U.S. citizen with suspected ties to al Qaeda who allegedly planned to explode a radioactive "dirty bomb" in the United States. Al Muhajir was captured May 8 as he flew into O'Hare International Airport in Chicago, Illinois, from Pakistan.

      On October 6, 2001, PSI TECH issued a preliminary report on future terrorist activities on U.S. soil based upon data obtained via Technical Remote Viewing. In that report, PSI TECH's remote viewing data indicated that "The Chicago area was singled as a near-term attack site." On October 15, 2001, PSI TECH issued a follow up report containing information on the potential of an attack involving a radiological "dirty nuke." Dirty bombs are not traditional nuclear weapons, but a conventional explosive laced with radioactive material that can kill victims in the immediate area and spread highly toxic material to humans, causing mass death and injury.

      US Attorney General John Aschcroft stated, "We have disrupted an unfolding terrorist plot to attack the United States by exploding a radioactive dirty bomb," adding that the government's suspicions about Mujahir's plans came from "multiple, independent, corroborating sources.

      Once again, using Technical Remote Viewing, PSI TECH and its task force of skilled remote viewers have accurately foreseen a terrorist attempt on the United States, retrieving data not only on the type of weapon, but also the location. For more information, see the links below.


      CNN news article: U.S. authorities capture 'dirty bomb' suspect.
      Ashcroft statement: Ashcroft statement on 'dirty bomb' suspect.



Related Articles:

10/15/01 - PSI TECH Special Report: "Poor Man's Nuke" or Radiological Bomb Scenario
10/06/01 - PSI TECH 911 Project Preliminary Report on Terrorism
11/29/01 - Confirmation of PSI TECH's 911 Preliminary Report
02/01/02 - TRV Reveals Terrorist Plots


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