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Mormon Remote Viewer makes a big splash with The Pentagon

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George De Vaus
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"David Morehouse entered the military remote viewing unit in 1998. His application was reviewed by Paul H. Smith, who was also a Mormon. Smith felt that Morehouse would make a good addition to the program. However, in 1994, a complaint was filed against Morehouse, which lead to the filing of a court marshall against him. The charges consisted of assault, communicating a threat, sodomy, adultery (with his enlisted driver's wife among several others), larceny, and multiple conduct unbecoming charges. At this time, Morehouse checked himself into Walter Reed Army Medical Center. He and his lawyers claimed that his participation with remote viewing drove him "over the edge." Morehouse's literary agent began telling stories about Morehouse and herself being harassed by government personnel. Morehouse's defense strategy was to expose the existence of the military's classified remote viewing program, which would have been potentially embarrassing to many in the U.S. government. He was allowed to resign from the military with a less than honorable discharge. He authored the book, "Psychic Warrior", which is regarded as being highly fictionalized. Later, Morehouse received a Doctorate via an unaccredited mail-order school.

More On Morehouse...

Ed Dames brought Dave Morehouse into the DIA's Remote Viewing unit during its latter days and worked with him for a short period until he discovered Morehouse's unsavory past and fired him from the ranks of PSI TECH. Morehouse went on to try to change the history about remote viewing in a book that Jim Marrs was writing about the PSI SPY unit. Morehouse left his wife to move in with the literary book agent who had put together the book deal to be released by Random House. However, when Dames (who was then living with Joni Dourif) discovered that Morehouse had manipulated the story by transposing himself into the role of Dames and then portrayed Dames as "the bad guy" - Dames had the book stopped in the galleys. The Random House deal to write the story had originally been struck between Jim Marrs and Ed dames. But Morehouse didn't give up, he then wrote a spin-off version and called it "Psychic Warrior" which eventually got published by Saint Martins Press. He severely dramatized the story in order to try to get a movie deal but the book was only about 20% factual. In reality, Morehouse was court marshalled out of the army on sodomy & theft charges subsequently there was no movie deal in the cards for Mr. Morehouse! "

http://www.remoteviewer.org/remoteviewing/morehouse.htm


"Speak what you think now in hard words and tomorrow speak what tomorrow thinks in hard words again, though it contradict every thing you said today."
-Ralph Waldo Emerson

 
Posted : 01/11/2008 11:31 pm
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