BATTLE OF LOS ANGELES - REMOTE VIEWING INVESTIGATION

4 months ago
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On February 25, 1942, two days after a Japanese submarine surfaced and shot 16 shells at an oil field 12 miles west of Santa Barbara, California, radar stations picked up an unidentified object over Santa Monica Bay at 2:25 a.m. The region’s antiaircraft batteries--the largest at Ft. MacArthur--went fully into action, blindly firing nearly 1,500 rounds into the suddenly search-lighted skies.

The Times wrote the next day: “At 5 a.m. the police reported that an airplane had been shot down near 185th Street and Vermont Avenue. Details were not available....” Five persons died in the “air raid,” three in car crashes and two from heart attacks.

To this day the real story of the “Battle of Los Angeles” remains unknown. The Japanese deny that their warplanes ever flew over Los Angeles; official U.S. wartime records are inconclusive. Although some residents claimed that they had seen a globular or triangular craft in the sky, military officials blamed the whole thing on jittery nerves and a meteorological balloon. No bombs were dropped, or shots fired from the air.

So, what really happened that fateful night? What was the military shooting at in the sky? Jessica was tasked with this coordinate remote viewing target and discusses the data here with Dr. Dennis Carroll. For full access to the raw remote viewing data, join Patreon here: https://Patreon.com/thecryptidhuntress

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