PSI TECH Spot Report: Egypt Air Flight 990 - November 11, 1999


Interviewer: The country has been gripped, CNN went into full time coverage when the EgyptAir 990 went down. Originally they thought it went straight down from 33,000 feet down to ker-smash in the ocean in 36 seconds. Now we have learned, through radar data, and the retrieval of the black box, that this aircraft, for some absolutely mysterious reason, went from 33,000 feet down to 16 and up to about 23, and then to the ocean. In other words, it did what the FAA called a controlled descent. They actually used those words. And came down from 33,000 feet, something you just don't do, in a commercial airliner without notification of ground control, and that sort of thing. And then plunged into the ocean. It actually also climbed from that altitude just prior to the plunge. So, there's…the auto pilot disconnected. There's all kinds of mysteries surrounding what the hell happened to EgyptAir 990. You've looked at it. What have you found?

PSI TECH Remote Viewer: Well first I'd like to express my condolences to those who lost loved ones aboard that flight, Art. And as many of your listeners know, we've got, we have a good example of the way that we attack a problem like this on our web site. You remember the letters and the reports that we sent to the NTSB on TWA flight 800..

Interviewer: Of course.

PSI TECH Remote Viewer: Where we said that the air driven pump in system three, that is the right inboard engine, that pump shattered and the shrapnel punctured the fuel tank - that it was indeed a mechanical error.

Interviewer: That's absolutely what you said. Yes.

PSI TECH Remote Viewer: And the full report along with our diagrams and descriptions is available on our web site as well as media that you can view if you're interested in it.

Interviewer: And that is, by the way, the most conventionally bought explanation for what happened. So, okay. That was flight 800, now this one.

PSI TECH Remote Viewer: Now this one. So, the way we as Technical Remote Viewers, the way that we attack the problem is to simply look for this pattern of information, cause and effect, know what the effect is. The effect is a crash, a crashed aircraft. We're looking for the cause. And those two patterns of information are directly linked in the collective unconscious. So, it's an easily searchable term and it doesn't take a lot of skill to ferret out the answer. So EgyptAir flight 990 crashed and we're looking for the cause of that crash. That's how we search this. After about forty-five minutes of work we have an answer. The answer is that there was a very violent altercation in the cockpit, Art. One of the crew members, or it could have been a flight attendant, it was not a passenger, attacked the pilot from behind. It was a very violent altercation that followed. Part, members of the crew tried to hold down a single individual, but the individual got up again and started, and essentially went postal in the cockpit. That is why, when the cockpit voice recorder is retrieved….

Interviewer: Wow.

PSI TECH Remote Viewer: …you'll hear that on the recorder. That should be retrievable as soon as the seas reach lower levels because…

Interviewer: All right… here's a question for you. And this calls for speculation, unfortunately. If that's what occurred, will they, assuming they recover the cockpit voice recorder, would they release that, or not?

PSI TECH Remote Viewer: Actually, that's an interesting question. And I think that the answer is yes because you're dealing with the safety of passengers. If something breaks on an aircraft, the airline industry needs to know that, and people need to know that so that fix occurs.

Interviewer: Of course.

PSI TECH Remote Viewer: If something is wrong with a crew member, in this case, I know a little about the crew member. This individual was not balanced, felt very offended at something, and that's as much as I know. I did not go into the individual's mind or backtrack to his home life. It was a male. I think that….

Interviewer: It was a male?

PSI TECH Remote Viewer: It was a male that attacked the pilot from behind, yes. Either a crew member or possibly a flight attendant. It was not one of the passengers. The passengers were oblivious to this until the plane descended.

Interviewer: Wow. I don't know what to say to that. That's….

PSI TECH Remote Viewer: Well, it will come out. I'm pretty sure they've got a lock on the cockpit voice recorder. So if they retrieve that, it's going to have to come out. And the reason it would have to come out is because, simply, to better screen crew members in the future for stability, you know, emotional/mental stability.


  03/22/02 Remote Viewers Uncovered it First.
  03/21/02 (Reuters) U.S. Blames Co-Pilot for EgyptAir Crash.
  03/21/02 NTSB EgyptAir Flight 990 Final Report.
  08/11/00 (APB News) Report Implicates Egypt Air Co-Pilot, Experts Say.
   01/20/00(AP) Probers: EgyptAir Crash Deliberate
   11/17/99(Fox News) Questions About Crew In EgyptAir Crash Probe
   11/16/99(The New York Times) Crew Member Suspected of Crashing Jet
   11/16/99(CBS) FBI To Lead Flight 990 Probe
   11/16/99(Reuters) EgyptAir Crash May Become Criminal Probe
   11/15/99(ABC) FBI Asked to Take Over Probe as Co-Pilot Suspected of Sabotage
   11/14/99(AP) EgyptAir Voice Recorder Recovered
   11/13/99(AP) Pilots Mystified By EgyptAir Crash
   11/12/99(CBS) Flight 990 Mystery Deepens
   11/11/99PSI TECH Reveals Cause of Flight 990 Crash (where you are now)
   11/11/99(CNN) Weather suspends search for second Flight 990 'black box'
   11/10/99(CNN) 'Black box' data: No thrust reverser deployment, no supersonic speed

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