CIA put psychics to the test to '˜replicate Lockerbie bomb'

Newly available declassified documents appear to reveal US Central Intelligence Agency tests to see if a psychic could replicate key aspects of the Lockerbie bombing.
Parts of Pan Am Flight 103 were reconstructed as the CIA tried to find out what happenedParts of Pan Am Flight 103 were reconstructed as the CIA tried to find out what happened
Parts of Pan Am Flight 103 were reconstructed as the CIA tried to find out what happened

The Evening News revealed last week how some 13 million pages of files were released online for the first time – including CIA interest in Edinburgh paranormal research.

Now it has emerged the 930,000 files also include asking a subject to describe a photo of the reconstructed baggage carrier which held the plane’s bomb.

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Filed under “special access required”, the notes are headed: “Warning notice: Intelligence sources and methods involved.”

Pan Am Flight 103 was brought down over the village by the device on December 21, 1988, killing all 259 passengers and crew on board and a further 11 people on the ground.

The CIA’s psychic tests relating to Lockerbie were carried out on June 7, 1990 at an unknown location and filed under Project Sun Streak, successor to the controversial Stargate project.

Another released CIA document outlines Sun Streak’s mission as “dealing with the use of psychoenergetics in the collection of intelligence information”.

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It describes “Psychoenergetics” as psychokinesis – physical actions performed by mental powers – and perceptions which cannot be explained by non-sensory means, such as telepathy.

Parameters of the Lockerbie test outline using “tangibles and intangibles of more than one word”, as well as “probing sketches”.

What follows is 22 pages 
of photocopied scrawled notes and drawings together with a typed account of the session.

The subject first describes the “target” as a “cylindrical shape that is clear and see-through” with “something inside it that seems to be moving through it and out the other end”.

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Included in the test papers is a newspaper article which includes a photo of the 
reconstructed baggage container.

The article refers to the cassette player in which Semtex explosive was hidden.

“The stuff inside it is light, smooth, stringy, air, and it is moving down, making a ‘whoosh’ sound,” continue the typed notes from the session kept by the CIA.

“It is speeding up as it goes down and out. It makes me want to throw up.”

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Describing the cylindrical shape in a box, the account goes on: “There is a bomb in the box and it explodes.

“It makes me think of a bomb blowing up a person. I can see red, fire and jagged flames. Something about the target makes my eyes burn.”