PSI TECH Remote Viewer Solves Another Crime
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 blackmailed 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.











