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David Morehouse -True Adventures of a Psychic Spy 4/6
http://www.nexusmagazine.com/psispy2.html

The True Adventures

of a Psychic Spy

Former military intelligence remote viewer David Morehouse continues his
extradimensional insights, and exposes the US Government's cover-up of Gulf
War crime.
Part 2

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Extracted from Nexus Magazine, Volume 4, #6 (October-November 1997).
PO Box 30, Mapleton Qld 4560 Australia. [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Telephone: +61 (0)7 5442 9280; Fax: +61 (0)7 5442 9381
>From our web page at: www.nexusmagazine.com


©1997 All Rights Reserved
by Uri Dowbenko
An Interview with David Morehouse
Remote Viewing Technologies
64 Whitman Street, Suite 1A
Carteret, NJ 07008, USA
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]




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No ordinary whistleblower, David Morehouse, author of Psychic Warrior:
Inside the CIA's Stargate Program, is an accomplished military professional
with a distinguished service record. A highly decorated and respected
third-generation Army officer, Morehouse holds an M.A. degree in military
art and science, as well as a Ph.D. from LaSalle University.

Commissioned as an infantry Second Lieutenant, he went from officer school
to Panama, where he was a platoon leader and attained the rank of Major.
After spending time in the Army Rangers, he left in 1987 for a series of
highly classified special access programs (SAPs) in the US Army Intelligence
Support Command (INSCOM).

While in Jordan on a routine training operation, Morehouse was accidentally
shot in the head-or, more accurately, in the helmet. His extrasensory
abilities were opened up, and this seemed to precipitate recurrent episodes
that could be called "psychic". He then became a prime candidate for
induction into the top-secret Operation Stargate, a joint DIA/CIA program at
Fort Meade which utilised "remote viewing" as an "intelligence" operation.

During his military career, Morehouse won numerous meritorious service and
commendation medals, as well as paratrooper wings from six foreign
countries. After he left the remote-viewing program in 1991 he was assigned
as Battalion Executive Officer to the 2nd Battalion, 5065th Parachute
Infantry Regiment of the 82nd Airborne Division.

Soon after, Morehouse decided to expose the Stargate operation and its
technology with the hope that the potential beneficial and peaceful uses
could be brought to the public. However, Morehouse soon realised that
getting out of a covert operation is not as easy as getting in. In fact,
getting out alive became his ultimate survival exercise.

What happened? In order to discredit him and his exposé, the Army tried to
court-martial him on trumped-up charges. In December 1994 Morehouse resigned
his commission.



THE LIFE OF A WHISTLEBLOWER

So what happens to whistleblowers in the US Government?

In the case of David Morehouse, false charges were filed against him. The
tyres on his car were "cut to blow", slashed to cause a crash at freeway
speed. He and his family were harassed by anonymous phone calls, and phone
conversations were bugged. His house was filled with gas and almost blew up;
his daughter nearly perished from the fumes. Morehouse's real-life story
takes another weird turn, as he describes it in his own words:

"When I was in the hospital I had a call from a woman doctor thanking me for
coming into her life. She said that because of me she was forced to leave
government service, but now she's happy for it. This is a woman doctor who
had 18 years in the service.

"They ordered her to diagnose me as a paranoid schizophrenic and delusional.
She refused to do it. 'Then diagnose him as a malingerer,' they told her.
She refused. She was a tenacious psychiatrist, the head of the ward.

"She stood there the day they strapped me to a gurney and put me in a plane
that took me six hours away from my family, down to Fort Bragg where I sat
in a facility which was for alcohol abuse. So I had to go to alcohol abuse
classes though I wasn't an alcohol abuser, and I was given a dixie cup of
medication twice a day to keep me quiet and dumb.

"They finally removed me from my support group. They took me away from my
family because now, instead of my wife driving 15 minutes to come to the
hospital, I was in Fort Bragg, North Carolina. They would dress me up, drug
me and take me drugged into the courtroom for Article 805 hearings, where I
would stand up and almost fall over. I couldn't even hear. It was like
standing in an empty water tank and hearing people talk. And they made me
endure that. Their final coup de grâce was that they discharged me and
required me to write the Family Caring Manual."

Then an orchestrated campaign to discredit Morehouse was started, with
anonymous letters being written to the book publisher and the movie
production company that bought the rights to his book, Psychic Warrior.



CIA HARASSMENT AND DISINFORMATION

After his decision to go public, David Morehouse was subjected to plenty of
CIA harassment and character assassination. He says that one of the primary
character assassins was a man by the name of John Alexander, the subject of
a glowing report in Wired magazine in 1995.

"Depending on who you talked to, John Alexander was, early in his career, a
Special Forces officer in Vietnam," says Morehouse. "He commanded a
Montagnard battalion which essentially meant he advised them. Somebody else
would say he was a member of the Phoenix project in Vietnam [the notorious
CIA assassination program].

"When he came out, he worked with the intelligence community and he never
left. So this is an SF guy who went intel and never went back. You have a
guy who's been connected with the Company [the CIA] for a great deal of
time.

"I met him through Ed Dames who was his friend. John Alexander used to meet
with Ed Dames in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Ed Dames was convinced that there
were aliens underground in New Mexico. And so began an abuse of tax
dollars-buying plane tickets to Albuquerque whenever he wanted.

"Ed Dames was part of Torn Image and he would fly out there. He would meet
with John Alexander who would hand him a photograph and try to do some
remote viewing.

"With the exception of Jim Schnabel and Ed Dames, John Alexander has no
friends in the remote-viewing community. Most think he's a shyster except
for guys like Russell Targ and Hal Puthoff, who are still drawing government
paychecks. They were both laser physicists, the original takers of Central
Intelligence Agency money to work for remote-viewing projects.

"Three guys accessed the Freedom of Information Act before my book came out:
John Alexander, the retired Colonel still working for the CIA, Jim Schnabel
and Joe McMoneagle. Except for Joe, they actively went after me. They posted
my name and Social Security number on the Internet. They publicly called me
a criminal, taking unsubstantiated allegations from the government and
posting it on the Internet."

Have they done this to anybody else?

"Never," says Morehouse.



MILITARY INTELLIGENCE: AN OXYMORON

"There are reams and reams of documents that show that this [RV] phenomenon
exists," says Morehouse. "A great deal of it is classified. Ed May claims
that he has it all. He's a physicist who heads up the Cognitive Sciences
Research Laboratories. It's a research facility for remote viewing and other
paranormal phenomena that deal with the mind. He claims he's not on the
government payroll, but he still carries a top-secret clearance."

Continuing the CIA-orchestrated harassment, Ed May brandished documents at
Morehouse prior to a talkshow on which they would both appear. He threatened
Morehouse against reopening his court-martial case, saying that they'd take
him to Federal court and prosecute him for violating his security.

May also allegedly told Morehouse, "There are people out there that can get
to you."

"Such is the case with all these guys: Jim Schnabel, John Alexander and Ed
May," says Morehouse. "Ed May works for the CIA. He told the Gordon Elliott
show that he was the owner of the military remote-viewing training program.
I never saw this guy or heard of his name while I was working there."



A BATTLE OF NERVES

So why did it get so personal?

"You have a credible third-generation Army officer whom superior officers
labelled as 'destined to wear stars', someone who came out of a Ranger
battalion and stepped into the intelligence community," says Morehouse
referring of course to himself.

To undermine his credibility?

"Yes, fabricating stories about me and my wife, for instance," continues
Morehouse. "There isn't an author around who spends days, literally days,
posting user groups. There were hundreds of postings made by Schnabel. Then
John Alexander got into the fray and started doing the same thing. Then they
started writing anonymous letters to Interscope, which bought movie rights
to the book, and St Martin's Press, the publisher.

"And then there's Paul Smith. He actually said this to a reporter: 'What I
told Dave is that if he would stop talking about the unit, we would get him
a medical discharge.' Paul Smith was one of the remote viewers from the unit
still working for DIA."

So why did it take so long for Morehouse to resign?

"I thought I was going to face the charges and beat them," he says. "We
looked at everything the government had. I didn't know we would be ambushed
with the other charges. That's when I got the phone call that came at night,
from a brigadier colonel friend of mine who said, 'You still have friends.
We're holding the door open, but we can't hold it open forever. This is
bigger than us. You better get out.'

"That was the first clue that I had about their scheme. I had nobody that
investigated on my behalf. I had the entire Criminal Investigation Division
coming down on me. They looked at every fragment of my past. They
interviewed every person they could find who knew me. Why? Because I was
getting ready to tell a story about a top-secret government organisation."

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