From: Dick Farley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

To:  Dr. Harold Puthoff
      Dr. Ron Pandolfi
      Dr. Kit Green
      Dr. Eldon Byrd
      Dr. Edgar Mitchell
      Dr. Jack Sarfatti
      Dr. John Alexander
      Mr. Uri Geller
      Mr. Leon Jaroff (former Science Editor, Time Magazine)
      Mr. Phil Klass (CSICOP; Aviation Week & Space Technology Mag.)
      Mr. Ira Einhorn

Subject: The published article below, about James Randi and most of you guys!

Request: Please comment or clarify any errors, mis-statements in the 
following article about Uri Geller, James Randi, Puthoff, Targ, Byrd, et al. 
I had nothing to do with the referenced article but desire to quote from it 
in one I am doing. An online correspondent who is a "digger" into these 
topics sent this to me; he is not the author of it. I will, of course, 
forward any of your comments to him, if you authorize, so that the record can 
be corrected or your own comments can be included in opposition. And if any 
of the article is libelous or otherwise false, have you or do you intend to 
take any action against the author and web service in response to it?

The information is relevant in light of Steven Greer's and Steven Bassett's 
pushing for a new UFO Disclosure iniative on Capitol Hill, especially so if 
Greer's most recent press release is accurate in that he is generating 
interest in the "UFO cover-up." It is obvious that, whatever "retail UFOlogy" 
is hiding, the transgressions against the National Command Authority and 
allegedly significant cohorts of US citizens will be a focus of Congressional 
(particularly in the new Senate) hearings into all of this. If as some of us 
suspect the actual issue is at least partially about arms control and weapons 
development "outside the charter" of the Pentagon or intell community, or is 
into weapons systems which would violate existent treaties (ABM, space, 
etc.), the Senate and House committees will be more interested in traitors 
than "aliens."

And conspiracy is a federal felony. Plea bargains usually mean "ratting out 
your friends," so the issue will become which one of you guys (if any) will 
"break" first.

I can add a couple of items to the following narrative. The trial of James 
Randi in the case of his being sued by Dr. Eldon Byrd took place in 
Baltimore, MD, and Eldon did in fact win. Because James Randi persuaded the 
jury that he was "destitute," the court awarded $1.00 to Dr. Byrd. And Uri 
Geller reportedly paid at least part of Dr. Byrd's legal fees in that case. 
My source for this was Dr. Byrd himself and the local newspaper, The 
Baltimore Sun. During the trial, Dr. Byrd stayed frequently at the home of 
Dr. C. B. "Scott" Jones, where I also stayed frequently when I was in the 
Washington area working for Dr. Jones and his Human Potential Foundation as 
its director of project development, in the period of August 1991 through May 
1, 1994. So Eldon and I have had ample opportunity to discuss this, and he 
was indeed a victim of whatever gambit Randi and his backers were 
perpetrating against "psi."

As for Andrijah Puharich, and the part of his life after Ossining (as 
referenced). He did indeed move to what is euphemistically called "a farm" in 
North Carolina. But it was actually an estate owned by an heir to the 
Reynolds fortune (that's tobacco), where Puharich lived until his death. He's 
actually still dead. And buried near there.
He had a couple of "little aunties" living with him as caretakers, being a 
couple who had a low profile in the "psi believers" community, who helped 
keep Puharich weird, according to some of Andrijah's friends in the 
intelligence community who liked him.

And I have it on good authority, including from one of the psychics reputedly 
who were contacted by Puharich in his last-ditch attempts to reconnect with 
"The Nine," that he indeed made such attempts. This psychic was a former 
member of Shirley MacLaine's inner circle, who while she lived in Las Vegas 
was part of the psi game in a big way "to the stars." She later went to work 
with Dennis Weaver as liason to the Clinton-Gore White House for Weaver's 
"Institute for Ecolonomics," or so said Weaver's newsletter and the former 
psychic's web site. (Citations upon request.) I might add here that this 
psychic told me she had known immediately of Puharich's death, as various 
manifestations of PK happened in her presence at that moment.

She spent some years "in hiding" after she broke with Shirley MacLaine, but 
later decided to surface and "what the heck" work in support of ET 
"contactees" who'd been downloaded with new technologies, which through 
Weaver's operation she hoped to bring into contact with investors and to help 
promote government and public interest in such innovations as these might 
help "save the planet." Sound familiar?

And whether Daniel Sheehan is indeed helping Steven Greer introduce Earth to 
a civilization of "peace-loving aliens" here to help transform our planet 
into Ecotopia, or perhaps to fend off the divisive "Orion energies" of rugged 
individualistic startrippers who prefer freebootery and piracy to living "as 
one" under auspices of "The Hive," it is more interesting and more 
politically pressing that corrosive cover-ups be less so. In that spirity, 
gentlemen (and surely you are all honorable men ;-) that I send this on.

All replies confidential if requested in advance. Otherwise, "on the record," 
guys. If this stuff is inaccurate or misrepresents you, please... let's fix 
the misperceptions.

Hey, it's what I do, OK? Just a simple country journalist... 
After all, it's YOU who've been playing "The Circle Game."

Dick Farley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
National Affairs Correspondent
The American UFO Newsletter
Washington, DC  USA
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In a message dated 5/26/01 4:10:42 AM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:

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>  Subject: The True Story of Geller vs. Randi
>  Newsgroups: sci.skeptic
>  View complete thread (2 articles) Date: 2000/06/30
>  
>  The True Story of Geller vs. Randi
>  
>  Check this out.  It contains things that Randi and the skeptics never told
>  you about the history of Geller vs. Randi.
>  
>  (http://www.psyzone.freeserve.co.uk/geller1.htm)
>  
>  URI GELLER
>  
>  A Thorn in the Side of the Establishment
>  
>  A story by Wallace James with real events and real people.
>  
>  'One thing I must state in no uncertain terms:
>  I am probably one of Uri Gellers greatest fans.'
>  (James Randi, The Magic of Uri Geller, 1975)
>  
>  PART ONE
>  
>  In the beginning: Uri Geller demonstrates his psychic powers in a 
night-club
>  in his home country Israel. He bends metal, copies drawings by remote
>  viewing, causes broken watches to restart, and he also reads minds.
>  
>  Later, the conjuror-cum-escapologist James Randi will claim that Mr Geller
>  was
>  presenting a standard conjuring act. This claim, like every other claim 
made
>  by
>  Randi, appears discredited by what happened next.
>  
>  ENTER DR. ANDRIJA PUHARICH
>  
>  Dr. Andrija Puharich was sent from the United States of America to Israel 
to
>  witness a psychic demonstration by Uri Geller.
>  
>  Dr. Andrija Puharich was a veteran of the notorious CIA sponsored MK-ULTRA
>  mind control programme. And, according to the American journalist Steven
>  Levy:
>  
>  'The details of his [Puharichs] assignment are clouded in a murkiness he 
has
>  come to wear like some exquisite garment. In any case, his activities have
>  raised the perception among many that under the auspices of the US
>  government, Puharich had been involved in actual experiments in
>  parapsychology and psychedelic drugs.'
>  
>  Also, investigative author Alex Constantine says, about Puharich;
>  
>  'He was conversant in psychoactive weapons, and his "pet subjects" were 
mind
>  control and the telepathic effects of extra low frequency (ELF) waves. 
Alas,
>  he had breached the CIAs code of silence by speaking openly of "weapons
>  systems...that we have no defence against...." Shortly before Puharich
>  vanished, his Ossining home was torched and destroyed. He told Einhort [a
>  former intelligence associate] that the CIA was responsible.'
>  
>  That was 1978. However, according to Dr. Eldon Byrd (e-mail, February 
1997),
>  Puharich did not vanish, he simply moved house from Ossining to Devotion,
>  North Carolina, where he lived until his death a couple of years ago. Dr.
>  Byrd adds, 'He was only semi-reclusive and not in hiding and he did not
>  disappear.' Still, if the CIA had torched my house I think I would move, 
and
>  fast.
>  
>  If Uri Geller was indeed performing a common conjuring act, would Dr.
>  Puharich, given his background, have been sent from New York to Israel to
>  see Gellers demonstration? I doubt it. So we must presume, or at least
>  suspect, that Geller had something that interested certain parties in
>  American intelligence.
>  
>  Puharich soon had Geller's confidence. Geller had no reason not to trust
>  him. He hypnotised Geller, apparently to see if there were any dormant
>  experiences that might explain his paranormal abilities. Lo and behold, a
>  robotic voice emanated from above Gellers stomach saying that it 
represented
>  9 beings from a distant planet called Hoova, and that they travelled in a
>  space ship called IS. The hypnosis session was audio-taped. Alas, the tape
>  dematerialised and the evidence was lost.
>  
>  More sessions took place, and more information about these mysterious 
beings
>  and young Geller was revealed. The only problem being that the evidential
>  tapes seemed to insist on dematerialising!
>  
>  Nonetheless, the young Geller was convinced. However, if such a story got
>  out
>  it would surely damage Gellers future? So what did Dr. Puharich do? Well, 
he
>  not only publicised the story - soon after, he wrote a book called Uri: A
>  Journal of the Mystery of Uri Geller. More of that in a moment.
>  
>  STANFORD RESEARCH INSTITUTE
>  
>  ENTER - PUTHOFF & TARG
>  
>  During this time, Puharich arranged for Geller to be tested at Stanford
>  Research Institute in America. Geller was not the only psychic being tested
>  -
>  ex-Burbank Commissioner of Police, Pat Price, also underwent tests. Prices
>  claim was to Remote Viewing.
>  
>  The two senior researchers were Dr. Harold Puthoff and Dr. Russell Targ.
>  Randi
>  would later claim that both scientists were incompetent. They have pretty
>  good
>  credentials for incompetents:
>  
>  According to Alex Constantine:
>  
>  '...officers of the Central Intelligence Agency and the National Security
>  Agency participated in a series of unusual experiments run by Stanford
>  Research Institute (SRI) to verify claims that certain people have psychic
>  abilities. The results SRI reported were astonishing....Targ and Puthoff -
>  who have disavowed working for the CIA - have in common credentials in
>  advanced laser technology.'
>  
>  'Puthoff, a high-ranking Scientologist, is the inventor of the tuneable
>  laser. Targ once designed a microwave plasma generator. Twilight zone
>  studies often front for the development of intrusive machines that interact
>  with the cortex.'
>  
>  Both Geller and Price proved remarkable under controlled laboratory
>  conditions.
>  So much so that the two research scientists prepared a paper that they
>  submitted to Nature magazine.
>  
>  In his book The Magic of Uri Geller, James Randi (whom we will meet 
shortly)
>  makes many incredible statements that at first read like a comedy script.
>  Here
>  is just one example, in relation to one of the tests carried out by Puthoff
>  and
>  targ during which a die (of dice) was secured inside a metal box and the 
box
>  shaken. Geller was to divine the number on top of the die:
>  
>  'We are not told whether, as is quite possible, Targ was the one who
>  carefully
>  monitored Geller during the test. If this is so, we must consider the fact
>  that
>  Targ is extremely nearsighted and wears very heavy glasses. [Randis
>  emphasis]
>  Therefore, under those circumstances, Geller could easily have gotten away
>  with
>  a quick peek inside [the box].'
>  I challenge you to read that again with a straight face. It would appear
>  that
>  Randi is completely unaware of the purpose of glasses, despite constantly
>  wearing a pair.
>  
>  Pat Price was not interested in publicity - Uri Geller, on the other hand,
>  was
>  a born showman. He loves to demonstrate his powers publicly as an
>  entertainment, and his charismatic charm made him instantly likeable.
>  
>  PROBLEM 
>  
>  Before the Puthoff and Targ paper was published in Nature, Geller, rather
>  presumptiously, stated to the media that he has been tested at the
>  prestigious
>  Stanford Research Institute and they have proved in the laboratory that his
>  psychic powers were genuine. On the 23 November 1973, Geller appeared in 
the
>  U.K. on The Dimbleby Talk-In. He was an overnight sensation.
>  
>  [AUTHORS COMMENT] I saw that show and have yet to see a conjuror bend a
>  spoon
>  or fork in the way Geller did that night, and I have seen some of the best.
>  Randi managed to simulate the Geller effect on the misnamed TV series 
"James
>  Randi Psychic Investigator" (1991), but he used a spoon that could not be
>  touched by anyone but him.
>  
>  The year is now 1974. The Stanford paper appears in Nature magazine on 8
>  October.
>  
>  SOLUTION
>  
>  The Debunking Network is activated.
>  
>  First, Puharichs book (URI) about "Geller and the aliens" was rushed into
>  print. This seriously damaged Gellers credibility - whether the claims of
>  the
>  book were true or not.
>  
>  Second, a conjuror-cum-escapologist by the name of James the Amazing Randi
>  suddenly had massive press and television coverage. Randi was a founder
>  member
>  of (another case of the misnamed) the Committee for Scientific 
Investigation
>  of
>  Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP), the most influential skeptic group in 
the
>  world, headed by Paul Kurtz; the same Paul Kurtz who is a director of the
>  sinister Secular Humanist Organisation.
>  
>  It is worth noting that Pat Price - who shared the top psychic billing in
>  the
>  Nature paper - was ignored by the debunkers. This is just as well, because
>  Pat
>  Price conveniently died in 1975 - natural causes.
>  
>  GET GELLER .... AT ALL COSTS!
>  
>  With the backing of CSICOP, the Science Establishment, the Roman Catholic
>  Church, other religious zealots, the Secular Humanist Society and other
>  interested groups, Randi as a front personality initiated an immoral and
>  amoral
>  campaign. Not only Geller was in danger - anyone seen to be in agreement
>  with
>  him became a legitimate target.
>  
>  This involved fabrication, ridicule and slander. When Randi slandered 
Geller
>  in
>  a Japanese publication by calling him a psychopath and a social disease, as
>  well as accusing Geller of being responsible for the suicide of an American
>  scientist, Geller sued Randi through the Japanese courts. It was no 
surprise
>  when Geller won his case. And YES, Geller DID win the case.
>  
>  In an interview with Twilight Zone magazine, Randi, still an active member
>  of
>  CSICOP, asserted that the U.S. Naval scientist Dr. Eldon Byrd was a
>  convicted
>  child molester. Byrd had carried out tests on Geller, the results of which
>  supported Gellers psychic claims.
>  
>  Randi was forced to resign from CSICOP once the scandalous accusations were
>  printed. The accusations were false and Byrd subsequently sued Randi. He 
too
>  won his case in a trial before a jury. However, because Byrd did not 
receive
>  any payment for damages, Randi declared that he had won the case and not
>  Byrd!
>  Before you believe Randi please check the court records.
>  
>  As the litigations against Randi mounted, and having been ostracised by
>  CSICOP,
>  panic set in - he needed money and he needed it fast. He still had many
>  friends
>  on CSICOP, but, under the circumstances, they could not be seen giving him
>  financial assistance.
>  
>  A leading conjuring journal Magic ran separate interviews with Geller and
>  Randi. These appeared in the December 1991 and January 1992 issues
>  respectively. To the surprise of many, the subsequent response by the
>  majority
>  of Randis fellow conjurors supported Geller. This caused the amazed Randi 
to
>  desperately respond. In the March issue of Magic, Randi submitted a begging
>  letter in which he opened by saying;
>  
>  I should like to respond to the "letters" column of the February issue. Im
>  grateful to the minority of your readers who supported me, but Im rather
>  puzzled and alarmed by the rest.
>  
>  A fund was set up and appeals placed in the leading conjuring journals. The
>  following example was submitted to the letters column in the April 1992
>  issue
>  of Magic:
>  
>  Send donations to: The James Randi Fund, c/o Robert Steiner, PO Box 659, El
>  Cerrito, CA 94530. 
>  
>  Another fund was set up for the gullible - those wishing to send money
>  direct
>  to Randi:
>  
>  3555 West Reno Street, Suite L, Las Vegas, NV 89118.
>  The latter fund is in fact the address for the comedy-magic duo, Penn &
>  Teller.
>  
>  I wonder what happened to the $270,000 dollars given to Randi by the
>  MacArthur
>  Foundation?
>  
>  (http://www.psyzone.freeserve.co.uk/geller2.htm)
>  
>  PART TWO - FINAL PART
>  
>  CONCLUSIONS?
>  
>  It is now more than two decades since the CIA operative Andrija Puharich
>  fetched Uri Geller from Israel. That Geller has made a success of his life
>  is
>  almost as remarkable as some of his phenomena.
>  
>  So what conclusions can one draw?
>  
>  Perhaps Uri Gellers psychic powers are a reality. Why else would a CIA -
>  black
>  budget - funded programme investigate an Israeli psychic? Claims by CSICOP
>  that
>  the conditions were not controlled lack foundation when you look at the
>  facts.
>  Claims by Randi that the video is actually a reconstruction made after the
>  real
>  tests was instantly demolished when the camera operator testified and 
proved
>  that this was a lie.
>  
>  Randi then changed tact. He next claimed that the film was edited to erase
>  the
>  cheating. Here we see how the pseudo-sceptic, when confronted with 
something
>  they cannot explain, change course and accuse the scientists of
>  collaborating
>  in a grand deception.
>  
>  In The Skeptics Handbook of Parapsychology, Randi further asserts that
>  Geller
>  demanded the laboratory conditions be such that it suited him - the
>  mice-running-the-experiment procedure he calls it. How does he know this? 
He
>  further claims that Geller was allowed to touch and pick up a box 
containing
>  a
>  die, something that Puthoff and Targ deny. Randi says, we now know that not
>  only did he touch it, he was also the one who shook it to randomize the
>  die...
>  Again, who told Randi this?
>  
>  The truth is Randi knows nothing about the SRI procedures because he was
>  never
>  consulted before, during. or after the proceedings. Why would they consult
>  James 'The Amazing' Randi? He tried desperately to gain access to the
>  building
>  during the series of tests, but was denied entry every time. But, soon
>  after,
>  he was under instructions to destroy Gellers credibility. At that point in
>  time, the truth became redundant, and it has been suppressed or manipulated
>  ever since.
>  
>  The claims by Randi and his fellow debunkers do not stand up to 
examination.
>  In
>  fact almost every one can be demolished after investigating the facts. That
>  is
>  the reason Randi has never stopped the harassment of Geller. If Geller is a
>  fake, he would have been exposed and discredited years ago. That Randi has
>  failed to expose just one of Gellers demonstrations as fraudulent, and he
>  has
>  had over 25 years in which to do so, says it all.
>  
>  I must mention one other claim (again from the Skeptics Handbook) that
>  surely
>  shows up Randi as the myth-maker that he is. He is discussing a TV
>  demonstration at which he only managed to get in by disguising himself -
>  apparently the organisers had banned him.
>  
>  According to Randi,
>  
>  Geller made little attempt to cover his moves, and the trickery was very
>  evident to us. He goes on, But Geller saw to it that a team from BBC-TV 
that
>  was there to capture metal-bending on film, missed doing so. They ran out 
of
>  film seconds before the "move" was made.
>  
>  I challenge you to accept that. If Geller was indeed able to predict the
>  very
>  second that a camera would run out of film he would have proved his psychic
>  abilities there and then! Randi seems to treat his readers like idiots.
>  
>  I have seen Mr. Geller, only recently, demonstrate a prediction of one of
>  four
>  geometric ESP symbols that appeared to be a blatant psychological force. I
>  know
>  that because I am a conjuror. However, because it looked like a trick does
>  not
>  mean that Geller employed such a subterfuge.
>  
>  When Uri Geller appeared on BBC 2s Best of Magic, some conjurors cited this
>  as
>  the required proof that Geller was indeed a conjuror! Really? I would say
>  that
>  it could have been a risky career move, but nothing more. If a Member of
>  Parliament can appear on the same series with a Book Test that must have
>  bored
>  the nation to death, then why not a psychic? At least the Geller 
performance
>  was well done.
>  
>  Mr. Geller recently attended a stage show in London, a psychic-spoof based
>  on
>  the Geller-Effect. After the show, he went back-stage to congratulate the
>  three
>  conjurors who presented the show. While there, he asked them if they had
>  seen
>  him bend a spoon. They had not, so he offered (note he offered and was not
>  coerced) to bend a spoon. The three conjurors are experts in their field - 
I
>  have known two of them for over 20 years and can personally vouch for their
>  knowledge and sleight of hand ability. Not one of them detected any
>  trickery.
>  Not one of them is able to say how Mr. Geller caused the spoon to bend. 
They
>  still think it was a trick, but cannot say how it was a trick. When I asked
>  one
>  of them, Chris Power, about the event, he said, "I can see now how people
>  think
>  Geller is genuine."
>  
>  Uri Geller has been tested in no less than 17 different laboratories -
>  Stanford
>  is remembered more that the others because of the CIA-instigated smear
>  campaign
>  that followed the Geller publicity. Here are two further examples:
>  
>  Dr. George Owen of the of the New Horizons Research Foundation in Toronto
>  pronounced Gellers abilities as paranormal and totally genuine (Strange
>  Talents, Parrallel, 1995):
>  
>  Dr. Eldon Byrd of the US Navy Research Center in Maryland, stated that
>  Geller
>  had bent metal under observation in ways that cannot be duplicated. This is
>  why
>  Randi smeared Eldon Byrd (see part 1) and lived to regret it (Strange
>  Talents,
>  Parrallel, 1995):
>  
>  WILL THE REAL PRINCE IBIS PLEASE STAND UP!
>  
>  When Randi states, as he likes to, that he is a charlatan, liar, thief and 
a
>  fake,' he is not joking. However, he always states that these are terms 
that
>  define a conjuror. Is there perhaps a hidden meaning? Well, yes.
>  
>  Perhaps he would explain how he came to terms with his early career?
>  According
>  to Marcello Truzzi in a science paper dated 1996, and titled, Reflections 
on
>  the Sociology and Social Psychology of Conjurors and Their Relations with
>  Psychical Research. In it Mr. Truzzi states:
>  
>  'Even arch-debunker James Randi, at the beginning of his career, worked in
>  carnivals as the apparently psychic Prince Ibis, wrote a horoscope column
>  (cf..
>  Anonymous, 1987)...
>  
>  '...In 1950 the Toronto press reported his saying he could predict the
>  future
>  (Wessely Hicks, Toronto Star, 1950, under the heading, He Sees the
>  Future)...
>  
>  ...that he possessed "a combination of telepathic, clairvoyant and 
prophetic
>  powers" and "he first became aware that he had Extrasensory Perception when
>  he
>  was nine years old" (Wessely Hicks, Toronto Star, 1950, under the heading,
>  Snoops on Minds').
>  
>  Randi actually provides copies of the latter two newspaper articles in his
>  book
>  The Magic of Uri Geller (Ballantine Books, 1975). Randi was 22 years old at
>  the
>  time and went under the name of Jim Zwinge (his real name). He states that
>  he
>  made these claims so that he could later announce that he was a fraud and 
to
>  demonstrate how easy it is to trick a gullible public. The problem is he 
did
>  not do this. As far as I have been able to gather, Jim Zwinge never 
declared
>  himself a fraud after these two articles were published. Does Randi expect
>  us
>  to believe that he was a anti-paranormalist crusader at the age of 22?
>  
>  Perhaps James Randi is suffering from a guilty conscience. However, I doubt
>  that very much. I think he lost his conscience to Prince Ibis in 1950, when
>  he
>  needed the money and would do anything to get it........even if that meant
>  cheating (charlatan) the public out of their hard earned money (thief) by
>  falsely posing (fake) as the very thing he constantly says he despises - a
>  clairvoyant - who had developed ESP at the age of nine (liar).
>  
>  copyright 1997 Peter Duffie
>    
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