Approved For Release 2001/03/07 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2500070013-4 TOPICAL SEARCH - COMMENTS The topical search consists of-'@Jh'& conduct of a i:pmo-te 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. Request you conduct a topical search and provide available information, if any, for the period ending 2400 hrs, 22 October 1993 (Friday). Targets may include but are not limited to acts of God, accidents/catastrophes, political/military events, events related to criminal justice, significant human accomplishments, and etc. Approved For Release 2001/03/07 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2500070013-4 Approved For Release 2001/03/07 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2500070013-4 SESSION INFORMATION A. TARGET DATA: Task/Target No. 93-209-T session No. 01 B. PERSONNEL DATA: Source No. 049 Monitor's No. NA Beacon/Sander No. NA C. SESSION DATA: Date Task Received 18 OCT 93 Session Date 18 OCT 93 Start Time 1430 Stop Time 1520 Method Used ERV Aids/Distractions (PIs) Sinus headache Pre-session Hunches (AVs) None Date Summary Returned 19 OCT 93 D. EVALUATION DATA: Viewer's Estimate Low, low, low Evaluator's Estimate E. SESSION SUMMARY: The following perceptions, albeit limited, were acquired during this project session: - The leadership of a small, but significant, country will1l, change hands. This change will occur as an orderly transfer of power from either a parent to child or a grandparent to a grand- child. - There will be further fire fights between the Somalis and the U.N. forces. one encounter in particular will involve a previously unused weapon type. - A very large fire will occur along a coastline. This fire will be extraordinarily bright and its main attribute will be the intensity by which it will burn. - There will be a series of unexplained phenomena occurring within the southwestern U.S. towards the end of the month. Maybe the Chaco Canyon (northwestern New Mexico) region. Approved For Release 2001/03/07 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2500070013-4 Approved For Release 2001/03/07 : CIA-,RDP96-00789ROO25-00070P.1.374 CPYRGHT .8outhern California wildfires Approved For Release 2001/03/07 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2500070013-4 ASSOMATED PREss A resident of Altadena, Calif., cries as her neighbor's house bums. Seasonal Santa Ana winds with gusts up to 70 mph fueled several blazes throughout the region, forcing many people to flee and causing extensive damagp. The fast-moving fires destroyed scores of homes and scorched thou- sands of acres of land, which was tinder-dry from a rainle@s summer. Article, Page 3A. Approved F CPYRGHT t@M'6c2(M!V03fW.: CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2500070013-4 THE Bmsh fires lip ftoto 0 0 S. Caffoada Gustsfan blazes; damage extensive Los Angeles Times LOS ANGELES - Fed by flerce, dry Santa Ana winds and ht$h tem- peratures. brush fires explocled over five Southern California counties 'yesterday, damaging or destroying 'more than 200 homes, threatening thousaAds of others and charring more than 65,000 acres. The Infemos hit hardest In the affluent communities of Emerald Bay in Laguna Beach, 40 miles southeast of Los Angeles, and Alta- dena, 10 miles northeast of Los An. geles. No deaths were reported, but at least 14 firefighters and nine civil- tans were reported Injured in 13 sep- arate blazes, fire officials said. Damage was expected to exceed hundreds of millions of dollars in one of the most devastating brush @ fire outbreaks in memory. In exclusive Emerald Canyon, names blamed on a suspected "copy- cat arsonist" destroyed more than 100 homes, many of them multimil- lion-dollar estates. Schoolchildren were evacuated and Pacific Coast Highway was closed as firefighters there fought desperately against stiff afternoon winds to halt the 10-mile swath of flames. By late afternoon. California Highway Patrol officers and local police were manning hoses because fire departments were over- stretched. At least' 50 other homes were damaged or destroyed by an early- morning fire that spread rapidly through 4,000 acres in the affluent foothill community of Altadena, au- thorities said. Only hours after that blaze broke out in the nagged Eaton Canyon, authorities arrested a tran- sient who was booked on suspicion of unlawful use of fire. The man apparently was camp- ing in the hills and his campfire touched off nearby brush, a Los An- geles County Fire Department spokesman said. Other major fires charred 21,000 acres between Thousand Oaks and the Pacific Ocean, 45 miles north- west of Los Angeles: about 3,000 acres in Escondido, 30 miles north of San Diego, where homes were threatened and officials at the San Diego Wild Animal Park worked frantically to move endangered Call- fornia condors and other species; and about 750 acres In the Orange County communities of Anaheim Hills and Orange 40 miles southeast Approved For Release 2001/03/07 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2500070013-4 of Los Angeles, where nearly 30 homes were damaged. Gov. Pete Wilson declared a state of emergency and flew into Burbank Airport, meeting other elected offi- cials at a fire command center in Pasadena. Officials said winds are expected to Increase today and to- morrow, and no rain is forecast for the next seven days. Many of the most serious fires re- mained out of control late last night as smoke darkened the skies and white ash fell like snowflakes. In Laguna Beach, where property damage was most severe, the fire broke out just before noon, quickly jumped a ridge and spread south. Dozens of homes were engulfed in the seaside community of Emerald Bay, where home values. reach $10 million and more. Laguna Beach Unified School District officials im- mediately evacuated three schools. In downtown Laguna Beach, resi- dents crowded onto rooftops and lined the Pacific Coast Highway to gaze at flames snaking down the hills toward the ocean. Traffic came to a virtual halt. Overhead, helicopters dipped 150 allon "Bambi buckets" in the PaciAc. then headed back to drop the contents on the homes burning in the canyons. The Altadena fire, which began near dawn, caught many residents still asleep or eating breakfast as it raced through expensive neighbor- hoods pushed by 50 mph gusts. The fire covered mote than 1, 000 acres by 10 a.m., climbing canyon walls and spreading embers through the air. fire officials said. In Ventura County, R day-old ar- son fire swept across 21,000 acres of Santa Monica Mountain back coun- try to the Pacific Ocean. But despite the enormous acreage burned, only four homes were lost, In the brush-covered hills of northeastern San Diego County, a fire that erupted shortly after mid- night burned across 6,000 acres, de- stroying six homes and five other buildings near 1,800-acre Wild Ani- mal Park In theSan Pasqual Valley. A few hardy foursomes declined to leave the Eagle Crest Golf Course west of the park, even though flames came within a few dozen yards of the back nine. "The safest place to be in a fire is In the middle of a golf course " Said assistant pro Bill Hughes. "br'een grass doesn't bum." ASSOCIATED PRESS A Fire Department helicopter drops water in hard-hit Altadena, Calif. A[proved For Reje4nffAOE/aW. Oki CPYRGI Ousted BWIM(h official sepks help after coup BUJUMBURA, Burundi - The, ousted prime minister of Burundi ap- pealed yesterday for forei n milltary@ intervention to re Mer and re- establish democracy in this Central African nation. Sylvie Kinigi's appeal came amid signs that the military coup was be- ginning to weaken in its fourth day. Along with suppressing Burundi's In- fant democracy, the coup has raised the specter of renewed fighting be- tween the Hutu and Tutst tribes, one of Afflea's goriest ethnic rivalries. The military has acknowledged that President Melchior Ndadaye, the country's first freely elected leader, was killed shortly after the National Palace was stormed on Thursday. Wire z,tovillittillu-mitu.o.-mauem-iorixieauringeiannghtin in Mogadishu. The gunman claimed that he took the weapon from a U.S. Army Ranger durinj a baftle Oct. 3. (See artiefe, 5A.). Approved For Release 2001/03/07 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2500070013-4 TASKING SHEET SOURCE NO: 079 DATE: 18 OCT 93 SUSPENSE: 19 OCT 93 1000 HRS 1. PROJECT NUMBER: 93-209-T 2. METHOD/TECHNIQUE: Method of Choice 3. BACKGROUND: This is a topical search to be conducted in accordance with existing protocol. 4. ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS OF INFORMATION: Conduct a topical search for the period ending 22 Oct 1993. 5. COMMENTS: None. Approved For Release 2001/03/07 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO2500070013-4