Over at his Cosmic Spoon blog, Daryl ‘Daz’ Smith has posted a story about his involvement in a remote viewing (RV) investigation (with ‘The Aurora Group’) of the Nina Reiser murder case. The details of the RV investigation were catalogued in a well put together report, which you can download as a PDF file:
The main thrust of this report is to follow the history of the disappearance of this young woman named Nina Reiser, including the efforts to find her, both conventional and with remote viewing, the trial that resulted, and the surprising aftermath.
We will present the story as it developed. You will see the deployment of remote viewing by a professional team and get a good sense of how a remote viewing project unfolds. Both verbal and graphic data from remote viewing sessions will be included. We will present the large amount of relevant data that a team can produce while not consciously knowing what the objective (or target) is. We will also show some of the challenges such a project faces and difficulties that arise as the remote viewing data is received by the project manager. We will include the considerable amount we got right, and an important facet that we got wrong.
This report shows the blind remote viewing work of a small dedicated team of remote viewers and an outside dowser as they try to piece together this complex missing person case, that has now transformed into a murder and recovery case. The remote viewers work together using differing methods and styles and are located all over the world.
For anyone interested in remote viewing, it’s well worth taking a look at – it’s done very professionally, and gives a good feel for the different methods used, the results (both ambiguous, and suggestive) and the difficulties in employing remote viewing as an effective tool in cases such as this, due to the lack of specific information.