Approved For Release 2001/03/07: CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2300460001-6 SESSION INFORMATION A. TARGET DATA: Task/Target No. session No. B. PERSONNEL DATA: Source No. monitor's No. Beacon/Sender No. c. SESSION DATA: Date Task Received session Date Start Time Stop Time method Used Aids/Distractions (PIB) Pre-session Hunches (AVS) Date summary Returned D. EVALUATION DATA: Viewer's Estimate Evaluator's Estimate E. SESSION SUMMARY: 92-104-T 01 049 NA NA 16 SEP 92 17 SEP 92 U94U 1028 ERV Sore neck back None 17 SEP 92 M There were perceptions of three events: 1. The first will involve a very large transport truck. It is not the typical tractor trailer, or "semi", which are common. This vehicle is much larger and is designed to transport either extremely large, or extremely heavy, objects. The "trailer" section of the truck is multi-sectional and feels complex. At any rate, the perception is of this vehicle losing control while on a hill. A smaller vehicle will become lodged beneath the "trailer" portion of the truck and be dragged. The truck will then plow uncontrollably into an intersection which will be very crowded with vehicles. 2. A major breakthrough associated with weather will occur. It will be associated with the movement of a violent or powerful weather phenomenon. 3. The third perception is one of a very large die-off of a particular grazing animal species. These animals are reminiscent of North American elk: they are found in both wooded and grassy ranges. The results will be devastating for the local population of these animals. Approved For Release 2001/03/07: CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2300460001-6 Approved For Release 2001/03/07 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2300460001-6 TASKING SHEET SOURCE NO: 9 DATE: 16 SEP SUSPENSE:-18 SEP 22- -1200 HRS 1. PROJECT NUMBER: 92-104-T 2. METHOD/TECHNIQUE: Method of choice. 3. BACKGROUND: See attached comments regarding the conduct of a topical search. 4. ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS OF INFORMATION: ---- Conduct a topical search for period ending 18 Sep 92. 5. COMMENTS: Optional Coordinates: 3121211132999 Approved For Release 2001/03/07 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2300460001-6 Approved For Release 2001/03/07 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2300460001-6 TOPICAL SEARCH - COMMENTS: - The topical search consists of the conduct of a remote viewing session directed against targets whose outcome is in future time. It is predictive in nature and normally addresses targets of distinctive high interest and public notoriety. - Targets may include but are not limited to significant events, accidents, catastrophes, significant political/military events', significant human accomplishments or any other type information that would likely be on front page news. - This project will be initiated Thursday, 20 Feb 92, and will be performed on a regular basis every Thursday for the next month. This project could be extended. - All inputs are due COB, each Thursday. - The "future time window" may be any time between 1 to 6 days following the Thursday session. Approved For Release 2001/03/07 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2300460001-6 Approved For Release 2001/03/07 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2300460001-6 TASKING SHEET SOURCE NO: DATE: 16 SEP 92 SUSPENSE:-18 SEP 92- -1200 HRS- 1. PROJECT NUMBER: 92-104-T 2. METHOD/TECHNIQUE: Method of choice. 3. BACKGROUND: See attached comments regarding the conduct of a topical search. 4. ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS OF INFORMATION: ---- Conduct a topical search for period ending 18 Sep 92. 5. COMMENTS: optional Coordinates: 312121/132999 -- Approved For Release 2001/03/07 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2300460001-6 Approved For Release 2001/03/07 CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2300460001-6 TOPICAL SEARCH - COMMENTS: - The topical search consists of the conduct of a remote viewing session directed against targets whose outcome is in future time. it is predictive in nature and normally addresses targets of distinctive high interest and public notoriety. - Targets may include but are not limited to significant events, accidents, catastrophes, significant political /military events, significant human accomplishments or any other type information that would likely be on front page news. - This project will be initiated Thursday, 20 Feb 92, and will be performed on a regular basis every Thursday for thenext month. This project could be extended. All inputs are due COB, each Thursday. The "future time window" may be any time between 1 to 6 days following the Thursday session. Approved For Release 2001/03/07 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2300460001-6 CPYRGHI, @5Q A"a"el @Nation ,rug ming 4oney Laundeting 4hqn;pted, DEA Says By Sharon LaFraniere wwmffton PW Staff Wrker eral drug enforcement offi- 'Ved said yesierday they have dis- s% rou the money.-laundering wig ed ,ruf tthe of the leading Colombian cocaine 1 I by,arrestipg ji@qre than 150 cahe pie in six countries and seizing pet n rly $42 million in illegal drug r, its. p f nj rug Enforcement @ Administra- tiop officials said the three-year unpercover effort was the first in- st4nce of international cooperation on a drug-money4aundering case ano !he firs@ time authorities uncov- er" enough eyidence to link the C4ombian Cali @ drug cartel to the Si4flian Mafia. LIT ong those charged were sev- C PYR G HITel op money managers for the Cali I cocaine-trafficking organiza- e e in ti -according to the DEA. Tom -400' Cl rd, a DEA supervisor in San Cl flo s Ji who coordinated the inves- D ti ion, estimated that thd cartel tj ati al st employs dozens of other top tI ney managers. But a DEA n 8 kesman said, "we have taken a s CORRECTIONS The date of a walk-through i tour of the Corcoran Gallery (of Art's exhibit "Cavaliers i and Cardinals: Nineteenth Century French Anecdotal Paintings" with curator Eric Zafran was incorrectly re- ported in a Style article yes- terday. It is Oct. 29 at 7 p.m. . An article Saturday about California's adoption of leg- i islation outlawing employ-; iment discrimination on the i 'basis of sexual orientation 'failed to include New Jersey' y j'among other states-with sim- I ilar laws. Drug Enforcement Administration chief Robert C. Donner, left, traces money laundering ioutes used by t Ihe Cali cartel. real bite out of their hide with these At the suggestion of cartel oper- seven guys." atives, he said, undercover agents In Rome, a top-rankingset up fake leather'goods Italian busi- police official nesses, leasing said the arrests warehouses in would damage the allianceHoustoni Fort Lauderdale, between the Miami, Colombian cartel Chicago and New and the Sicilian York. The cartel Mafia. "We have members shipped carried out many a token amount of operations with merchandise but the Americans pretended to ex- but this is the biggestport much more. and most signif- That generated icant," said policefalse paperwork official Achille they could then use 'Serra. to justify their Colombian bank de- After Attorney posits of illegal General William drug profits, Clifford P. Barr authorizedsaid. the investigation in September 1989,Clifford said it Clifford said, took a year to es- DEA agents establishedtablish the phony a phony corporation, an- investment consultingother year to win firm named the trust of the Trans Americas cartel and a third Ventures Associ- to actually run the ates. Undercover operation. 4Very agents relied slowly, they came on informants to introduce-theto trust us," he "firm" said. to the Cali cartelJust before the as an efficient arrests, under- col- lector of drug cover agents arranged profits. to receive to ar- cocaine shipments "Our whole purposethat were then was range the collection.seiz,6d. Three of Junds," hundred kilos of Co- said Clifford. caine is still "We Jold 0em, "on its way on -we. a boat had. the capability,he sa . . , to collect an - . 4 -,. y. where in the world;_JVndercover agents We told them were abl@ to we had representatives: convince the .-jn@ other-@ seven alleged money brokers to leave C61ombia for meet- CPYRGHT ings and parties in San Diego, Costa Rica and Italy. DEA Administrator Robert C. Bonner said that while some were arrested abroad, he ex- pects all seven to be tried in the United States. Bonner said 112 arrek_4' took place in the United States, 29 in Italy and the rest in Canada, Eng- land, Spain and Costa Rica. Italian police officials said one defendant, who had 12 different identities, de- vised some of the cartel's more in- genious methods of smuggling drugs into Europe. Italians identi- fied rive bogus organizations that helped the cartel launder money, including one posing as an animal rights group, police said. About. 70 of those arrested in the nited States were "cell heads and V cell membersP-worker bees in the cartel, according to Clifford. The rest were more significant players, he said. Spe@iql correspondent CJare Pedrick contri6ied to this' iefiortfrom Italy.1 Approved For Release 2001/03/07: CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2300460001-6