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Date: 2/17/2000 1:33:00 AM
I represent a small team of "CCIA"s, ("Crime and Criminal Intelligence Analysts") who are interested in the missing person's case you presented on the unsolvedmysteries.com website. Our team is presently undergoing post-graduate training in the field of "Remote Viewing", (psychic intelligence collection) by former members of the US Army's remote viewing unit The work of our team focuses on criminalistics applications of remote viewing. In other words, we attempt to use these methods, developed by and for the US Army Security and Intelligence Command, to solve crimes that have resisted solution by conventional investigative means. We are especially interested in working on cases involving homicides, serial sexual crimes, and missing persons cases where there is a high probability of foul play. The case you have described, involving Julie Newman, fits the profile we have established for cases on which we apply Remote Viewing methods, in terms of age-range of the unsolved case -- between one and three years since occurrence, as well as the presence of one or more suspects fitting into a typical victim/suspect profile. We charge no fees of any kind for our services, seek no publicity before, during, or after our involvement in the case, and make no guarantees as to results. We do not work directly for private citizens or organizations, but would, after agreeing to accept an assignment, establish contact with the law enforcement agency of jurisdiction in the case, and attempt to form working relationship with that agency. Only after making this cooperative relationship, something we are able to do routinely because of the high-ranking law enforcement officials who advise and/or participate in our activities, do we begin active operations in investigating a case. All contact between our team, the source of the case, the law enforcement agencies involved, and any other parties, will be routed through a single team representative, in this case, me. The identities of the remote viewers actually working on the case will never be disclosed, and interim and final reports in connection with our findings will obscure the identities of the remote viewers assigned, making them in unamenable to subpoena. Ultimately, our product will be turned over the law enforcement agency of jurisdiction, and will serve only to provide them with investigative leads. Typically, no part of our team's product will result directly in prosecution of any party, although, in the past, they have lead to identification and prosecution of a suspect. The one requirement we make of a client -- the source of our case information -- is that they agree to provide us with as much "feedback" as we request. In other words, our remote viewers work very hard to access and provide information useful in the investigation of the crime. Often we produce a large body of information ancillary to the crime, the crime scene, suspects, witnesses, and the vitcime and his or her life and environment. As intelligence analysts we know that often this information, especially when it is aggregated and analyzed as a whole, reveals a useful picture of the crime, the victim, and its perpetrator. Sometimes, the information we request will confirm extremely peripheral aspects, but, by doing so, will give the team members confidence in their viewing work and other data obtained in the viewing process. This, too, has a great deal of importance since telepathic and clairavoyant phenomona are enhanced by positive feedback. Accordingly, we need to be able to acquire detailed information, sometimes about aspects of the victim and his or her life that may, on the surface, seem irrelevant or tangential. Our methods focus not only on the victim, but on the suspect, potential accomplices, the location the victim was last seen, the location to which the victim was travelling, and the mode of that travel, as well. Very often, where one of these "targets" of our inquiry does not result in sufficient information, we will find that another "target" element will reveal dispositive data. In the case of missing person Julie Newman, should you be interested in requesting our involvement, we would need you to provide the following additional information: a) name and contacting information of the case source (in this case, you); b) the exact date, place, and to the extent possible, the time the missing person was last confirmed seen; c) the identity of the former boyfriend; d) the identity of the blind date; e) the location and identity of the people with whom the victim was last seen; f) the location to which the victim was travelling, the vehicle travelled in, and the most likely route that would have been taken; g) the names of any law enforcement agencies known to be involved in this case, the names of any law enforcement officers responsible for the investigation of the case, and the current status of the case, as well as its disposition, if known. Finally, we need at least one photograph, most close in time to the date of the possible crime, of the victim and the boyfriend. Photographs of any of the other parties in the case, as referenced in the questions above, as well as the mode of transportation, probably a car, if one is available. As stated, most important is that you provide a photograph of the victim and boyfriend. If you wish to request our involvement in your case, or have questions, please contact me at my email address: ursinius@earthlink.net. I hope we can be of help. Yours truly, /s/ Brian Siccoles for The Interregnum Group |
Date: 7/27/2000 11:29:00 AM
From Authorid: 12823
good luck ![]() |
Date: 3/8/2002 3:49:00 PM
From Authorid: 16376
www.unsolvedmysteries.com/usm146854.html ![]() |
Date: 3/8/2002 3:49:00 PM
From Authorid: 16376
oh and good luck ![]() |
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