Joseph McMoneagle was born on January 11,1946 and is a retired US Army Chief Warrant Officer.
19 Facts About Joseph McMoneagle
Joseph McMoneagle was involved in remote viewing operations and experiments conducted by US Army Intelligence and the Stanford Research Institute.
Joseph McMoneagle was among the first personnel recruited for the classified program now known as the Stargate Project.
Joseph McMoneagle's interests include near-death experiences, out-of-body travel, and unidentified flying objects.
Joseph McMoneagle enlisted in the Army in 1964, at the age of 18, to get away from the family turmoil.
Joseph McMoneagle was severely injured in a helicopter accident in Vietnam.
Joseph McMoneagle was involved in intelligence work for 15 years.
At his retirement Joseph McMoneagle earned his Legion of Merit for his last ten years of service, including five years of work in SIGINT and five years in the RV program.
Joseph McMoneagle retired from the Army in 1984, but continued work as a consultant at Stargate until 1993.
Joseph McMoneagle became a speaker at the Monroe Institute, where he had previously been sent as part of his RV training.
Joseph McMoneagle then ran an RV business aimed at the corporate world called Intuitive Intelligence Applications, Inc His services included that "he can help a wildcatter find an oil well or a quarry operator know where to mine".
Joseph McMoneagle believes he has remote-viewed into the past, present, and future and has predicted events.
Joseph McMoneagle worked with Dean Radin at the Consciousness Research Laboratory, University of Nevada, Las Vegas to seek patentable ideas via remote viewing for a "future machine" Radin conceived.
Joseph McMoneagle says he has worked on missing person cases in Washington, San Francisco, New York and Chicago, as well as employing remote viewing as a time machine to make various observations such as the origin of the human species.
In 1994, Joseph McMoneagle appeared on an ABC network television special Put to the Test.
In 1995, Joseph McMoneagle defended the Stargate program in an interview for the Washington Post.
Joseph McMoneagle co-wrote an episode of the psychic science fiction show The Dead Zone.
In 2002, Joseph McMoneagle started receiving regular coverage on Nippon Television's prime-time Chounouryoku Sousakan show, during which he performed remote viewings related to unsolved police cases.
In 2004, in Jon Ronson's Crazy Rulers of the World documentary, Joseph McMoneagle was interviewed and vividly described his technique for traveling "out of body" to Communist China to remotely view a trigger mechanism in a military nuclear weapons laboratory.