Back when I was writing for UFO Magazine, I decided to take a look into the phenomenon of remote viewing, to see what it might have to tell us about the UFO phenomenon. I'd read a book by a professor named Courtney Brown who made all sorts of claims for special knowledge, obtained through remote viewing, of UFOs and aliens. As I looked into remote viewing, I quickly discovered that the US military had been very interestd in the topic for some twenty years, having developed a military program at Ft. Meade, Maryland, to do psychic espionage. At the same time, scientific research was being done down at Stanford, at SRI, to see if remote viewing could be taught to ordinary people with only slight abilities in that area. (It turns out you need some talent to start with, though everyone supposedly has a little ability.) Joe McMoneagle was involved in both aspects. It turns out, he was one of the most talented of the military remote viewers and also one of the best scientific subjects. Some of his remote viewing sessions are almost like photographs. One of his most famous sessions was one where he remote viewed the campus at Lawrence Livermore; his remote viewing drawings are as if he'd been there in the body. There's lots more to say about this topic, research being done also at Princeton, as part of the Engineering Anomalies Research Program headed up by Robert Jahn and Brenda Dunne, but McMoneagle's personal testimonies are good places to start. And when I interviewed him for UFO Magazine I struck gold. Not only was he a great remote viewer, unlike Courtney Brown, but he'd remote viewed UFOs during some of his military sessions (and lived to tell the tale).