
February 22, 2000: Remote Viewing - Beverly Jaegers
The Art Bell Archive · Arthur William Bell III
September 7, 20242h 38m
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Show Notes
Art Bell welcomes Beverly Jaegers, founder of the U.S. PSI Squad, the only known group of trained psychic investigators who assist law enforcement pro bono. A third-generation police family member and professional journalist, Jaegers describes how she learned her skills not through natural ability but by studying Soviet-era research into human cognitive abilities during the Cold War.
Jaegers recounts her verified prediction of the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster five years before it occurred, describing a malfunctioning wraparound ring on a booster rocket. She details the coffee futures case where her remote viewing of a crop failure led an investor to earn nearly two million dollars. She also walks through serial killer investigations where she pinpointed body locations on utility maps and provided suspect sketches to police.
The discussion expands into whether remote viewing can peer through time, the differences between male and female intuitives, and the ethics of using psychic ability for financial gain. Jaegers firmly rejects the notion that profiting from trained sensitivity carries any cosmic penalty, comparing it to any other developed skill. Art asks about the nature of consciousness after death, and Jaegers confirms her belief that life continues in some form based on her field investigations.
Jaegers recounts her verified prediction of the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster five years before it occurred, describing a malfunctioning wraparound ring on a booster rocket. She details the coffee futures case where her remote viewing of a crop failure led an investor to earn nearly two million dollars. She also walks through serial killer investigations where she pinpointed body locations on utility maps and provided suspect sketches to police.
The discussion expands into whether remote viewing can peer through time, the differences between male and female intuitives, and the ethics of using psychic ability for financial gain. Jaegers firmly rejects the notion that profiting from trained sensitivity carries any cosmic penalty, comparing it to any other developed skill. Art asks about the nature of consciousness after death, and Jaegers confirms her belief that life continues in some form based on her field investigations.