PROJECT 0210 SESSION 1 RV 095 CRV

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP96-00789R003700640001-1
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
S
Document Page Count: 
3
Document Creation Date: 
November 4, 2016
Document Release Date: 
October 27, 1998
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
April 18, 1988
Content Type: 
REQ
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PDF icon CIA-RDP96-00789R003700640001-1.pdf266.61 KB
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Approved For Release 2001/03/07 : CIA-RDP96-00789R003700640001-1 SECRET/NOFORN - HANDLE VIA SKEET CHANNELS ONLY PROJECT SUN STREAK (U) WARNING NOTICE: INTELLIGENCE SOURCES AND METHODS INVOLVED ---------------------------------------------------------------------- PROJECT NUMBER: 0210 SESSION NUMBER: 1 DATE OF SESSION: 14 APR 88 DATE OF REPORT: 18 APR 88 START: 1331 END: 1448 METHODOLOGY: CRV VIEWER IDENTIFIER: 095 1. (S/NF/SK) MISSION: Advanced training. The purpose of this session was to allow the viewer to experience a novel Al (that associated with the death and mutilation of animals), and to understand how such AI's impact upon (and possibly limit) the degree of conscious site/event awareness. 2. (S/NF/SK) VIEWER TASKING: 095 was provided with only the target coordinates, initially. After the expected AI, the viewer was instructed (in Stage 4) to "try and get behind the AI to see what is` causing it". 3. (S/NF/SK) COMMENTS: 095 is currently undergoing ERV training. It has been approximatedly 3 weeks since the last CRV session and 095 (still an inexperienced CRV source) is a little out of practice; per 095, "I feel a little rusty". 4. (S/NF/SK) EVALUATION: VW7' (095 acquired the site/event and became acutely aware of the AI's negative influence upon perception- objectification of data). SG1J CLASSIFIED BY: DIA-DT Approved For Release 2001/03/07 : CIAb*R-bb789iz0640001-1 ' :riDYllet 21 _,,Viutilati, 'sychics Rele decades. Despite reports and investigations into this continuing horror story - with its weird~~fattaa,l QUW nII ~' M' Wsptes and precise surgery - we are 001 3Wear xiS ( r~ fi tors. The saga is an unresolved morass of baffling data, grim evidence, and complex as well as conflicting theories involving rumours of UFOs, pagan or military cults, scientific or governmental conspiracies, secret experiments, and so on. In a bold effort to 'see' beyond this impasse, New Jersey researcher Peter A. Jordan conducted an experiment: asking psychics to study photos of a case he investigated himself and to give a psycho- metric reading. These impressions, whose relevance you will have to decide for yourselves, is here published for the first time. Peter Jordan is a free-lance writer and lecturer on ufology and psychic research, and founder/director of the Association for the Study of Unexplained Phenomena (ASUP), Flushing, NY. PREFACE Five years of research into the unexplained has taught me several valuable lessons. Above all else, however, I have learned that the most spontaneous and instinctual methods of re- search often lead to the brightest discoveries. Whether investigating a putative haunting, or analyzing the spectacular claims of a UFO con- tactee, I could not escape the conviction that an investigation guided purely by intellect was empty. I quickly . learned, -to--- appreciate moments of intuition which came across my path, and to grab hold of them as vigorously as I did the familiar logic of the philosopher's trade. With each new case I explored, the less I discarded as meaningless and irrelevant, and the more I came to view as symbolic and vital. In a sense, I was reborn. As was the case with the venerable Sufis, I yearned, for greater progress in the-co-evolution of , Science and Spirit, and searched for sins of . an impending- "paradigm shift." I had been disappointed before. There would be no such drama, Only more struggle. On account of this, struggle, I have developed new eyes. For that, ,I am grateful. It is with these new eyes that I am able to dream. After extensive investigation, Valdez said that the origin of the strange prints "could not be determined." Like many other ranchers affected by the mutilation phenomenon, Gomez was hopeful that a good, "logical" explanation would be found for the anomalous events in Dulce. Un- fortunately, the mystery stubbornly refused to respond to reason, thus prompting a wave of vast speculation. Gomez was told by some that his.-cows-hadsucum-bed to--natural-predation," and that the so-called "surgical incisions" were, in fact, produced by the sharp teeth of either foxes, badgers, coyotes, or magpies. Others pointed their fingers. at local "cultists," linking the mutilations to "clandestine , pagan rituals," a claim widely made in other mutilation areas throughout the United _ States. Still others. argued that the government was conducting secret tests on our livestock, using the repro- -ductive organs as "bio-indicators" for monitor- ing the effects of fallout and other possible environmental hazards. Predictably, a small per- centage conveniently used the bioindicator theory to nourish their own extraterrestrial hypothesis, simply replacing the word "govern- ment" with the words "alien superpower."UFO enthusiasts found this particular theory appeal- ing, since, they reasoned, it helped to explain the absence of any leaks in the curtain of secrecy surrounding the mutilation phe- nomenon. Gomez was not impressed, however, with much of this speculation. He denounced the predator theory as "nonsense," claiming that predators are physically "incapable" of per- forming incisions as precisely as in the mutilations, and also thought it "unlikely" that any government agency would go through such "expense and trouble" to conduct research that could more easily be accomplished by purchas- ing the cattle directly from him. At this juncture, Gomez is willing to give a small measure of credence to the popular cult and alien theories, though, he admits, "the motive, q,~cale, is still very unclear." "No matter gkttW'4 oobbk at it," says Gomez, "1 can't find a INTRODUCTION In June of 1979, 1 became actively involved in the investigation of unexplained cattle mutila- tions. My primary source of information at that time was New Mexico State Police Officer Gabe Valdez, who kindly furnished me with a set of photographs taken on the ranch of Manuel Gomez, a rancher living in the northwest town of Dulce. Gomez, according to Valdez, had been the hardest hit in New Mexico by the mutilators, having lost 6 of his cows since 1976. The photographs I received from Valdez, in addition to depicting the alleged "surgical in- cisions" of the classic mutilation, also showed a series of odd, circular tracks discovered in the vicinity of the carcasses. 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