|
November
11, 1989
KLAS-TV in Las Vegas,
Nevada has been airing a UFO special during the evening news which began on Monday dealing
with the UFO mystery and cover-up. The series, began its coverage with a history of UFOs
beginning in the late 1940s and moving forward through the numerous sighting reports to
the cattle mutilations, which was aired last evening. As promised at the close of last
evening's show, George Knapp, a news anchorman for Channel 8 in Vegas, stated that a
scientific person would be featured on tonight's program who has claimed to work at Area
51, the government's super-secret test range at Nevada Test Site at Mercury, Nevada.
Indeed, quite a story was told by Robert Lazar, a physicist who claimed that he had worked
on a project at Area 51 involving flying disks provided by alien intelligences.
Both Lazar (formerly known only as "Dennis") and Lear have appeared on Channel 8
- Lear appearing on numerous occasions together will Bill Cooper discussing Lear's famous
'ET Hypothesis.' On a past KLAS-TV report, Lear was shown to have traveled to locations
appearing to overlook the test site which purportedly provided a good view of the objects
as they flew into the night sky. Lear attempted to shoot video of an object as it
maneuvered through the night sky during last summer, however nothing was captured on the
tape of a substantive nature. Lear also relates that his group was harassed by a Lincoln
County sheriff following his attempts to take the pictures.
Below is a transcript of the program that aired this evening. All paragraphs out of quotes
are the narrator of the segment. We were as accurate as possible on the transcription,
however there are a couple of places where comments were edited out due to inability to
understand what was being said.
We've been working on the story for some time....UFO researchers claim that there is a
secret government within our government. Now this may be hard to believe coming from the
UFO perspective, but we have learned that Watergate and the Iran Contra scandal that
factions within our government can and do pursue their own hidden agendas outside of the
law; outside the control of the Congress or the knowledge of the American people. This is
exactly the type of operation that we hear about tonight. It's a chilling scenario with
worldwide implications that may have its roots right here [Las Vegas, Nevada].
Area 51, that mysterious
corner of the Nevada Test Site, is no longer considered a secret. The fact that secretive
things go on here isn't evident; even to the Soviets who make daily spy flights over the
facility to take a peek at what's going on. These photos, never before shown in public,
are about as close as anyone will ever come to seeing what the place looks like again. The
dry bed at Groom Lake, the corrugated buildings, a three-mile long runway and some highly
sophisticated radar and detection equipment. Its been known by many names over the years -
Dreamland; The Ranch; The Skunk Works. If ever there was a place to test the secret new
technology, this is it. And that's exactly what has been done here for decades.
Area 51 is where Francis Gary Powers and the other U-2 pilots were trained in the 50s.
And, where the U-2 itself was developed. The SR-71 spy plane that spotted Soviet missiles
in Cuba in the early 60s were also developed at 51. 51 is where Stealth technology was
nurtured, where Star Wars devices are still tested, and where all manner of CIA [unknown]
business has been plotted and refined. It's the perfect place for secret things, but of
course, that's no secret. 51 is ringed by the forbidden vastness of the Nevada test site;
by the looming Groom Mountain and by sparsely populated desert expanses. But the people
that do live out here have no love lost for the military, but they're conservative,
patriotic and they mind their own business.
Interviewer questioning a nearby
resident of Area 51: "Ever see something that you can't explain?"
Resident: "Sure, lots of
times."
Interviewer: "Care to elaborate?"
Resident: "No." (Laughter).
On any given night at the Rachel Bar and Grill, you might find three or four people who
work at Area 51. They are among the flowing Budweiser and the cowboy hats. You might find
them, but they are not going to talk to you. Not about the things that they have seen over
the mountain. A steady trickle of curiosity - seekers flows through here; strangers, drawn
by strange stories of lights in the night sky. Their questions also go unanswered. No one
who has worked at Dreamland has ever publicly acknowledged what so many people have
suspected for years: That alien technology is being tested in the Nevada desert.
The speculation first
surfaced in documents obtained by UFO researchers. Documents about something called
Project Aquarius. The document allegedly prepared for an organization called MJ-12, states
that a program to fly recovered alien spacecraft was established in 1972 and is continuing
in Nevada. The National Security Agency has confirmed it does have a Project Aquarius but
denies that it has anything to do with flying saucers. NSA will not say what Project
Aquarius is.
Speculation was heightened in
1984, when the Air Force seized nearly 90,000 acres around Groom Lake. The action was, by
most accounts, illegal. During Congressional hearings about the land grab, Congressman
John Siberling grilled the military about the legal authority used in the action and was
told the authority was at a much, much higher level than the Air Force. Siberling asked
what authority is higher than the laws of the United States? The Air Force official said
he could respond, but only in a closed briefing.
In 1987, when the Air Force
sought to renew its stranglehold on the Groom range, news articles once again mentioned
the talk about alien spacecraft and subsequent articles in national magazines quoted
un-named sources about things of alien origin flying in Nevada. Things that would make
film-maker George Lucas drool. Despite the speculation, no one who knew Area 51 from the
inside ever talked publicly about the saucer story.
Bob Lazar: "Well, there's several
uh, actually nine uh flying saucers, flying disks that are out there of extraterrestrial
origin."
The live interview with the
shadowy "Dennis" drew international attention. Portions were broadcast by radio
in six European countries, and in a nationally televised TV special in Japan.
Despite numerous inquiries and "feelers," "Dennis" has remained
anonymous until now. His real name is Robert Lazar. A young scientist with eclectic
interests. The choice of "Dennis" was an inside joke - he says that's the name
of his superior at Groom Lake. It wasn't a joke to Dennis.
Lazar: "He called right after and
said, 'Do you have any idea what we're going to do to you now?' and I said no, and he hung
up the phone."
Lazar's story is by any standard, fantastic. He says he's telling it in order to protect
himself. He said he was hired towork in area called S-4 which is a few miles south of
Groom Lake. At S-4, he says, are flying saucers, anti-matter reactors and other working
examples of technology that is seemingly beyond human capabilities.
Lazar: "Right. This stuff came
from somewhere else. I know it is hard to believe, but it is there and I saw it. I know
what the current state-of-the-art is in physics and it can't be done."
Checking out Lazar's credentials proved to be a difficult task. He says he holds degrees
in physics and electronics, but the schools that we contacted say they've never heard of
him. He says he also worked as a physicist at Los Alamos National Labs where he worked
with one of the world's largest particle
beam accelerators, a half-mile long 'behemoth' capable of generating seven-hundred million
volts. Los Alamos officials told us they have no record of Robert Lazar ever working
there. They were either mistaken or were lying.
A 1982 phone book from the
Lab lists Lazar right there among the other scientists and technicians. A 1982 news
clipping from the Los Alamos newspaper profiled Lazar and his interest in jet cars. It,
too, mentioned his employment at the Lab as a physicist. We called Los Alamos again, and
an exasperated official told us he still had no records on Lazar. EG&G, which is where
Lazar says he was interviewed for the job at S-4, also has no record. It's as if someone
has made him disappear.
Lazar: "Well, they're trying to
make me look non-existent to the places that I called...."
Interviewer: "Explain. Called
where?"
Lazar: "Well, the schools that I
went to; the hospital that I was born at; past jobs, and nothing comes up with my name on
it."
He smiles, but out of futility, knowing the whole thing must sound ridiculous. According
to Lazar, his employer was the United States Navy. He says he and other government
employees would gather near EG&G, fly to Groom Lake, then a very few people would get
into a bus with blacked out or no windows and drive to S-4.
Interviewer: "You get off the
bus, what do you see?"
Lazar: "A very interesting
building. Its got a slope of probably about 30 degrees which are hangar doors, and it has
textured paint on it, but it looks like sand. It's made to look like the side of the
mountain that it is in, whether it's to disguise it from satellite photographs or
what...."
He says he was never told exactly what he would be working on, but figured it had
something to do with advanced propulsion. On his first day he was told to read a series of
briefings, and immediately realized how advanced the propulsion really was.
Lazar: "The power source is an
anti-matter reactor. They run gravity amplifiers. There is actually two parts to the drive
mechanism. It's a bizarre technology. There is no physical hookups between any of the
systems in there. They use gravity as a wave using wave guides that look like
microwaves."
It took awhile, Lazar says, before he actually saw one of the flying disks, however there
were hints everywhere.
Lazar: "Right. They had a poster,
and it looked like a commercial poster, like it was lithographed, like you could buy it at
K-Mart or someplace, but they were all over the place and it had the disk that I coined
the term 'the floor model' which lifted off the ground about 3 feet out at the area, in
the Dry
Lakes area, and the caption on it said 'They're here.' These posters were all over the
place."
Later, he got to see the real thing.
Lazar: "When I was led in, it was
the first time that I saw the 'floor model' in the hangar sitting down, and I was told
they could have walked me in the front door but they purposely wanted to walk me by it. I
was told not to say anything and to keep my eyes forward and walk past the disk to the
office area. And I did. And as we went by it, I just kinda stuck my hands on it, just to
run it alongside the thing and uh ....After that I got to see actually lift off the ground
and operate."
Interviewer: "You actually got to see more than one?"
Lazar: "Yeah. The hangars are all connected together. There are large bay doors
between each one. There were nine total that I saw, each one being different. Like they
had the assortment pack."
Security at S-4 was oppressive Lazar said, and his superiors used fear and intimidation
almost as a brainwashing tool.
Lazar: "They did everything but
physically hurt me."
Interviewer: "They put a gun to
your head?"
Lazar: "Yeah."
Interviewer: "You mean they
actually put a gun to your head?"
Lazar: "They did that even in the original security briefing. Guards there with
M-16s. Guys there slamming their fingers into my chest, screaming into my ear, they were
pointing weapons at me. Like I said, it's not a good place to work."
That fear factor would surface later. Lazar agreed to undergo a polygraph exam as part of
this report. Polygrapher Ron Clay asked about the technology that Lazar had seen.
Polygrapher: "Did you knowingly
lie when you had actually seen anti-gravity propulsion in operation?"
Lazar: "No."
The results of this exam were inconclusive. Lazar appeared to be truthful on one test;
deceitful on a second. Clay recommended that a second examiner be brought in. Polygrapher
Terry Tabernetti (sp?) runs a corporate security operation and is a former Los Angeles
police officer. He put Lazar through four tests and concluded there were no attempts to
deceive. Tabernetti sent his test results to a third polygrapher who agreed the results
appeared truthful. The charts were then sent to a fourth examiner who did not agree
suggesting that Lazar might be relating information he'd learned from someone else.
The polygraphers concurred and decided they would not issue a final statement on
truthfulness until more specific testing can be conducted. And that's where it stands.
Tabernetti believes the difficulty in determining Lazar's truthfulness stems from the fear
that was drilled into him.
Lazar: "Well, I am telling the
truth. I've tried to prove that. What's going on up there could be the most important
event in history. You're talking about contact, physical contact and proof from another
planet, another system, another intelligence. Thats got to be the biggest event in
history, period. And, it's real and it's there. And I had an extremely small part in it.
I'm convinced that what I saw is absolute proof of that. There is no way that we could
have created those disks. There is no way we could have made the disks, the power
supplies, anything that goes with it."
Lazar says he has no intention of going on any UFO lecture circuit. He is not looking to
do any additional interviews. In fact, he was not too crazy about doing this one. He did
it after certain unfavorable things started happening in his life, and he did it because
he feels that whoever is running the show up at S-4 is perpetrating a fraud on the
American people and the scientific community.
|
|