Nick Clancy
Nick Clancy was a CIA officer whose job for several years had been to conduct technical penetrations of embassies in Africa, southern Europe, and the Middle East.
Nick Clancy was a CIA officer whose job for several years had been to conduct technical penetrations of embassies in Africa, southern Europe, and the Middle East. He worked closely with Ken Kress and was involved in the testing of Pat Price's remote viewing abilities.1
Clancy was present during Price's three preliminary tests for Staff D, designed to assess Price's suitability for a high-stakes operation involving a Chinese Embassy basement. He witnessed Price's remarkable accuracy in describing the layout of the Chinese Embassy in Africa, including details like a poorly lit hallway that Clancy himself had experienced during an operation. He was so shaken by Price's accuracy that he described the evening as an "eight-martini evening."1
However, Clancy also witnessed Price's temporal displacement during a remote viewing session of a North African embassy, where Price described the building as a dormitory or hospital from an earlier time period, complete with beds and injured people, and without a large iron gate that existed in the present. This incident highlighted the complexities and potential pitfalls of remote viewing across time.1
Sources
- Schnabel, Jim. Remote Viewers. Dell, 1997. ↩
Local network
Nick Clancy's direct connections. Click any node to navigate, drag to pan, scroll (or pinch) to zoom. + 2‑hop expands the neighborhood one level further.