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- DATE OF UPLOAD: December 27, 1989
- ORIGIN OF UPLOAD: KVEG Radio; Las Vegas, Nevada
- CONTRIBUTED BY: Robert B. Klinn/ParaNet Director of Research and
- Investigations
- =================================================================
- Below is the transcript of the Billy Goodman Happening Show
- as it aired on December 20, 1989. Robert Lazar was the guest of
- Billy Goodman.
-
- ==================================================================
-
- 12/20/89
- Billy Goodman
-
- Goodman:
- What exactly does Area S-4 mean?
-
- Lazar:
- I really don't know. It might be referred to as "Site" 4 --
- that might be what the "S" is for, but I really don't know.
- There are THREE S-4's in all of the Nevada Test Site. The
- nuclear test site itself is a small area, and it has "sites"
- or "areas" 1 to 29 or 30. The S-4 there, I think, is a
- nuclear reactor. There's an S-4 just south of the Tonopah test
- range. And there's an S-4 -- the one that I worked at -- just
- south of Groom Lake.
-
- Goodman:
- Bob Lazar, while working there as a Government scientist, saw
- not only one but as many as nine flying saucers. And he's
- telling the whole world about it. He wants everybody to know
- that in fact there are flying saucers out there. Last time
- you were here, you never really told us what are their plans
- with these flying saucers. Do you have any idea WHY we have
- flying saucers at this point?
-
- Lazar:
- I guess it's just essentially research. The idea is to back-
- engineer them, to go back and find out how they can be duplicated
- using earthly materials and technology.
-
- 606:
- Is it possible these machines travel in time back and forth?
-
- Lazar:
- It's certainly possible. Certainly, when you create any
- artificial gravitational field, you technically move in your
- own time. So technically, you do slip forward when you create
- your own intense gravitational field.
-
- 606:
- BACK in time too?
-
- Lazar:
- Theoretically, that's possible. Exactly how you would do that,
- I don't know off the top of my head.
-
- 606:
- So that could be used like a time machine, right?
-
- Lazar:
- Essentially yeah, that is --
-
- 606:
- For time travel?
-
- Lazar:
- -- that is possible.
-
- 606:
- Wow! That's really something!
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah, that's science-fiction-like.
-
- Fritz, Westlake, California:
- Billy, it is sizzling again on the West Coast. Bob Lazar,
- thank you very much for coming on again. You must come on.
- This has got to go nationwide. The cat is out of the bag.
- I'm sure those little gods in S-54 are listening in, and
- believe me, it's your best security to come on. If anything
- happens to you, we're all behind you, Bob Lazar -- everybody.
- This is like a snowball going down the hill and will become an
- avalanche, and ignorance will be wiped out. We've got to know
- the truth -- for once and forever. They are here! Let's find
- out why they are here and who they are and what their purpose is.
-
- Lazar:
- Well thank you!
-
- Fritz:
- Okay Bob, we're all behind you. Billy, keep that show going!
- It's the Number One show in America in talk shows.
-
- Goodman:
- Well, thank you very much Fritz. He did explain to you why we
- have flying saucers, right?
-
- Fritz:
- Well, I know why they are here. The general public has to become
- aware; they're just wakening up. It's like a film being lifted
- from their eyes. I mean, they've been laughing for forty years!
-
- Goodman:
- Wait a minute Fritz. You know why they're here? Why are they
- here, Fritz?
-
- Fritz:
- Well, first of all, it's a conditioning process.
-
- Goodman:
- Okay, you got it.
-
- Fritz:
- We are in a quarantine because we are so ignorant; our ignorance
- keeps us from meeting them. Big brother reaches out the hand and
- says, "Come over, little brother, let's have the cosmic connection,"
- but we have to become a world together -- earthlings.
- We are about 170 nations -- 170 languages; we have to come together.
- When we have a spokesman, then we will meet on equal ground.
-
- Tim from Pasadena:
- When you looked into the saucer, how does the hatch work? How
- does it seal up, and what are all of the mechanics involved?
-
- Lazar:
- The hatch -- or whatever it was -- was completely removed; there was
- just an opening in the side of the craft.
-
- Tim:
- Did the opening have any kind of sealing around it or a lip?
-
- Lazar:
- I really don't remember. 'Cause I was so interested in looking
- inside, I didn't really catch a strong glimpse of the sealing
- mechanism or any other thing around it.
-
- Tim:
- When you were previously on Billy's show, you said you looked into
- one, and it was all smooth like it had been a wax casting.
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah, exactly.
-
- Tim:
- Now, was that the only one you looked into?
-
- Lazar:
- No, it was the only one I looked into. The other ones I just saw
- from a distance, so I don't know any detail about them.
-
- Tim:
- And the one you looked into, was that the "Sport Model"?
-
- Lazar:
- Yes, exactly.
-
- Tim:
- And that's the only one you saw fly as well?
-
- Lazar:
- Right.
-
- Tim:
- What was your work there?
-
- Lazar:
- Like I said before, it was essentially to back-engineer the
- propulsion and power system.
-
- Tim:
- So you weren't really involved in the mechanics of the craft
- itself?
-
- Lazar:
- No, not at all.
-
- Tim:
- But mostly just the Element 115 and all that kind of stuff you
- were learning about?
-
- Lazar:
- Right.
-
- Goodman:
- What is gravity?
-
- Lazar:
- Gravity is a wave. It's a force, essentially, just like
- electromagnetic waves are a different type of force. I really don't
- know a good way to describe gravity.
-
- Goodman:
- Einstein and other scientists really don't have an answer for what
- gravity is, do they, totally; they don't really understand it
- totally, do they?
-
- Lazar:
- No, no, not at all. In fact, I don't think we understand
- ANYTHING about gravity.
-
- Goodman:
- Why don't we just float away ourselves? What keeps us down
- on the planet?
-
- Lazar:
- That is the attractive force of gravity.
-
- Goodman:
- Some people say it presses down, but it doesn't, does it?
-
- Lazar:
- No, it doesn't. It's an attractive force. It's like, on
- an atomic scale, the strong and weak nuclear forces hold the
- atoms individually together.
-
- Goodman:
- Is your actual title government scientist or physicist?
-
- Lazar:
- You could use either one.
-
- Goodman:
- You are no longer a government scientist or physicist, right?
-
- Lazar:
- Not employed by the government.
-
- Goodman:
- But you are continuing in the scientific field. What do you do?
-
- Lazar:
- I design and build advanced radiation detection equipment,
- mainly alpha radiation equipment for essentially use in
- detecting plutonium for national laboratories.
-
- Lee Samuels:
- How long has that craft been on this earth?
-
- Lazar:
- I really don't know. I don't even know how long it's
- been down at S-4.
-
- Samuels:
- Do you know where it originally landed?
-
- Lazar:
- No, you got me on all that stuff. They really never keep me
- in as to --
-
- Samuels:
- It could have been here for years?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah. Or it could have been brought in in pieces from
- somewhere else, too.
-
- Samuels:
- Did you see just one craft or a number of craft?
-
- Lazar:
- I saw a number of them.
-
- Samuels:
- Did the other workers talk about it, where it came from,
- or more they towed in, or whatever?
-
- Lazar:
- I don't know. There really wasn't that much conversation
- between everyone.
-
- Samuels:
- Were you by yourself when you were investigating the craft?
-
- Lazar:
- Walking by myself. There were security people around me,
- but when I crawled underneath on the sub-floor to look at
- the gravity amplifiers, I got away from them. But there
- was no one right next to me the whole time.
-
- Samuels:
- Any evidence of LIVE aliens held captive?
-
- Lazar:
- Nothing I could put my finger on.
-
- Samuels:
- Then you didn't get to see any at all then in that sector?
-
- Lazar:
- Nothing I could put my finger on.
-
- Samuels:
- Did the craft have sleeping quarters for aliens? Is it like
- a Star Trek craft? What kind of craft is it?
-
- Lazar:
- No, it's pretty vacant inside. Granted, a couple of things
- were removed; they were sawed off at the base. I don't
- know what they were; I just saw little stumps on the ground,
- so I don't know what was removed. But it doesn't look
- like it had anything like sleeping quarters or anything
- like that.
-
- Samuels:
- Any writing you could detect or any language on the walls?
-
- Lazar:
- No.
-
- Samuels:
- Any panels, like a dashboard on a car?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah. In fact, that was one of the things -- There was more
- than one control panel set up, but it looks like one was
- removed.
-
- Samuels:
- Were these craft all from the same source? Were they all
- identical?
-
- Lazar:
- No. Each craft was completely different in physical
- appearance. I didn't get to look in depth at the other
- craft, but I only fooled around with one.
-
- Samuels:
- I applaud your courage.
-
- Caller (referring to a certain book):
- Have you heard of him?
-
- Lazar:
- I think I thumbed through that book once. I think John
- Lear --
-
- Caller:
- What the heck is an energy grid on our planet?
-
- Lazar:
- I don't know. I don't buy that theory or anything in
- that book. It's a grid outlined over the entire globe,
- and at each intersection there's an energy vortex of
- some kind. I'd rather not comment since I don't buy it.
-
- Caller:
- On TV you mentioned something about a time warp and a
- folding over. What did you mean by that?
-
- Lazar:
- Right. It's how gravity, whether produced artificially
- or naturally, distorts time and space.
-
- Caller:
- I read about Nicola Tesla questioning Einstein's theory
- of relativity. He says that energy DOESN'T come from
- matter. Where does it come from if it doesn't come
- from matter?
-
- Lazar:
- That's a strange question. It can be EXTRACTED from
- matter. But it can be extracted by other means, too.
- I really don't understand that [question].
-
- Tom from Los Angeles:
- How can UFOs be kept secret for 40 years?
-
- Lazar:
- I did pose that question to some people at S-4, and the
- answer that I got was that it's the easiest thing TO keep
- secret because of the subject matter.
-
- Tom:
- Is that because it's tied in with a lot of parapsychology-
- psychic-type stuff -- National Enquirer?
-
- Lazar:
- Maybe so. There is so much disinformation made so available
- to the public via the tabloids and things like that that
- any true information getting out is assumed to originate
- from those sources.
-
- Tom:
- Carl Sagan is a "people" scientist; he's brought science
- down to the general public. What about getting him involved
- in this somehow?
-
- Lazar:
- I imagine he's fairly open-minded. I've never met him.
-
- Tom:
- He's one of the biggest UFO debunkers.
-
- Lazar:
- He's going to need his own proof, as everyone should require.
- It's impossible to make an absolute believer out of someone
- that hasn't had hands-on experience or has seen something for
- themselves. That's the way any scientist is going to look
- at it.
-
- Tom:
- How far is Zeta Reticuli?
-
- Lazar:
- I think it's around 32 light years.
-
- Tom:
- Do these ships travel faster than light?
-
- Lazar:
- It's an irrelevant question because they get around it
- because they're not in a linear mode of travel. Since they're
- distorting time and space, there's no true time reference.
- And since velocity is distance over time, when you begin to
- fool around with time, you really can't state a true velocity.
-
- Tom:
- Re the SETI program -- the search for radio signals --
- couldn't some of these observatories or telescopes be aimed
- at the places where aliens supposedly come from?
-
- Lazar:
- RADIO waves and frequencies along that band aren't utilized;
- it's GRAVITY wave communication, and a radio-telescope isn't
- going to pick up anything of that sort.
-
- Goodman:
- The way you got to see this UFO was not planned by anyone
- wanting you to see it, right? You were walking with security
- and you went into a doorway. How did you describe that before?
-
- Lazar:
- It may have been planned by them. I had no advance warning of
- it. I had been brought in a separate door the whole time, and
- one specific time I was just led into the area where I worked --
- through the hangar doors, which I had never been in before --
- walked directly by the craft, and began to slow down by it,
- and they said, "Just keep walking; keep your eyes forward," and
- it was just like that.
-
- Nothing was said, and I just went and sat down in an empty room.
-
- Goodman:
- You went and sat down in an empty room after you saw it?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah, waited for this guy that I worked with, Barry, and then
- we went to work on some of the work we were assigned to.
-
- Goodman:
- What was some of the work that you actually did? What did
- you actually do at S-4? When you had an assignment, what would
- it have been, for example?
-
- Lazar:
- Most of the time I worked there I was being briefed and being
- brought up to date on what had been done before. Most of
- the hands-on bench work was with the anti-matter reactor
- itself: being shown how it operated, giving demonstrations,
- and things of that sort.
-
- Goodman:
- There was practically no communication with your fellow workers?
-
- Lazar:
- Right. They kept that to an absolute minimum. They were on the
- buddy system: you always worked with someone, and that's the
- person you communicated with, and there was really no cross-
- talk between groups.
-
- Goodman:
- When you went there for the initial interview, you said at
- the time they actually had a gun at your head --
-
- Lazar:
- No, that was at the security briefing.
-
- Goodman:
- Security, wherever that may be --
- The initial interview when you went to work at S-4 I'm talking
- about, that's not when the gun was at your head?
-
- Lazar:
- No.
-
- Goodman:
- When you went there, what was your understanding about what
- you were going to be doing?
-
- Lazar:
- Some high-technology work, and I assumed they were talking
- about some sort of gravitational propulsion system.
-
- Goodman:
- Were you excited about that?
-
- Lazar:
- Oh yeah, very much so, because there was some talk about
- that because it was something that I was interested in,
- something they KNEW I was interested in, and that was the
- hint that I got.
-
- Goodman:
- And did it come to fruition? Did what you were told you were
- going to do actually happen?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah.
-
- Goodman:
- For what period of time?
-
- [Goodman goes right into NEXT question.]
- How long were you actually there before you let people know
- what was going on up there? How many months or days or whatever?
-
- Lazar:
- Probably a couple of months.
-
- Goodman:
- Every time you went there you literally had to fly up, land at
- Groom Lake, take a bus that was blacked out at the windows --
-
- Lazar:
- Right.
-
- Goodman:
- -- and no communication on the bus. What were you thinking as
- a young man. You're a very young man; let's face it.
-
- Lazar:
- I'm not that young.
-
- Goodman:
- Well, you're a very young man; I think you are. Anyway, what
- were you thinking? Were you just saying, well this just goes
- with the territory and I'm just going to go along with this?
-
- Lazar:
- Oh yeah, you bet! I would have done that and much more just
- to be involved with the project.
-
- Goodman:
- Ah! The excitement was just being there, being a part of
- what was going on behind the scenes. The secret part about it?
-
- Lazar:
- Oh sure. I would have taken a LOT more crap than they had
- dealt out.
-
- Goodman:
- Can you picture it? He's in his thirties, sitting on a bus,
- and accepting the fact, Okay, I'm going to work this morning,
- not talking to his compadres on the bus, is looking straight
- ahead, blackened-out windows, not driving on asphalt, all dirt
- roads. . . Didn't you ask yourself why they didn't do anything
- about the dirt roads?
-
- Lazar:
- It was a good dirt road. A lot of the roads around there are
- dirt, in fact almost all are.
-
- Mark in Los Angeles:
- Previously, you described the central column of the propulsion
- device as being a wave guide. There was a disk toward the
- bottom of this thing down near the anti-matter generator that
- spins. What is that disk made of --
-
- Lazar:
- There's no spinning disk.
-
- Mark:
- What is the disk made of? Is it a capacitor?
-
- Lazar:
- A disk? The wave guide extends down, and it widens out and
- sits on the curved portion of the reactor. The bottom of the
- reactor is a plate, but nothing rotates or moves; it's all
- connected together.
-
- Mark:
- Is that plate a capacitor?
-
- Lazar:
- No.
-
- Mark:
- Well, what is it made of?
-
- Lazar:
- Metal. That's the only way I can describe it; I don't know
- what kind; it's [electric-] --
-
- Mark:
- Did anyone determine the kind of metal it was?
-
- Lazar:
- Not to my knowledge.
-
- Mark:
- I understand that part of the propulsion system involves a
- very large capacitor -- which is usually the entire lower
- surface of the disk -- that can make use of something along the
- lines of the [Bifield] Brown Effect. Do you know what
- the components of the dielectric material in that capacitor
- are?
-
- Lazar:
- Well, if the bottom of the disk is one plate of the
- capacitor, then the dielectric material would be the air --
- if you're going to look at the earth as another plate of
- the capacitor. But as far as the capacitor being integral
- to the actual craft itself, no, I found no evidence of
- that.
-
- Mark:
- I understand there's an antenna section in this device; what
- is the resonant frequency that that operates at?
-
- Lazar:
- The resonant frequency of the gravity wave I do know, but
- I don't know it off hand; I just can't remember it.
-
- Mark:
- Can you give me a ballpark, like 2,000 kilohertz?
-
- Lazar:
- I really don't remember. It's a really odd frequency.
-
- Mark:
- Is it measured in kilohertz or gigahertz or megahertz?
-
- Lazar:
- I really don't remember.
-
- Mark:
- When you first started to go public and were meeting with
- people at John Lear's house, I understand that there were
- a number of witnesses at those first meetings. One of them
- claims that you did say that you had seen an extraterrestrial
- while working inside one of those saucers, trying to back-
- engineer the propulsion system, and that you had been
- looking out through a doorway or through a porthole in the
- side of the device and that you had actually seen an
- extraterrestrial walking around on the outside of one of
- those devices.
-
- Lazar:
- Devices meaning disks?
-
- Mark:
- Yes.
-
- Lazar:
- No.
-
- Mark:
- So you're saying you've never seen an extraterrestrial at
- S-4.
-
- Lazar:
- I really don't want to get into that.
-
- Mark:
- The reason I ask is because someone else is claiming that
- you have.
-
- Lazar:
- Well, stated the way you did, no I didn't. And I never did
- look and see an extraterrestrial. As the story goes, and
- the reason I never bring it up, is because I thought I saw
- something once -- walking at a glance -- and that's all there
- is to it. And I won't stand on that fact because it was
- just a fleeting glimpse; when I came back, whatever was
- there was gone; it could have been a million things.
-
- Mark:
- I have a contact that claims that you were responsible
- for determining that Element 115 was not in fact necessary
- to operate an anti-gravity propulsion device in the earth's
- magnetic field. Is that true?
-
- Lazar:
- No, it's the exact opposite.
-
- Caller:
- Why are you going public? There's obviously a lot of other
- staff on the project that senses a great degree of loyalty.
-
- Lazar:
- The straw that broke the camel's back was, after I left
- the program I became concerned about what happens now. I
- made a routine request for my birth certificate, which I
- needed just for I.D. purposes, and I was told that it
- doesn't exist, I wasn't even born at that hospital. I sat
- on that for about a week and just wondered, and then I
- began to inquire at previous jobs and also at other schools,
- and that information was also gone. And I got the idea that
- soon someone was going to disappear, so that's when I contacted
- the TV station and essentially let everything out.
-
- Caller:
- But you left the program under very amicable circumstances?
-
- Lazar:
- No, that's a long, involved story that I really don't want
- to get into.
-
- Caller:
- Are you afraid of any repercussions from the govenment?
-
- Lazar:
- Oh yeah, I was really concerned at one time.
-
- Caller:
- Less so now?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah, less so now, but you still keep in the back of your
- mind . . .
-
- Caller:
- If anything would happen to you now, that would cause such an
- uproar in itself, the last thing they would do would be to go
- anywhere near you.
-
- Lazar:
- Exactly. As someone said on the media somewhere, if there're
- following me now, it's to make sure nothing happens to me.
-
- Caller:
- Did you witness any working models of the vehicle that were
- operational?
-
- Lazar:
- I only saw one operate. I saw one at close range while I
- was at the area and then at extreme distance -- about 15
- miles, when I brought some friends up to look at it.
-
- Caller:
- Using the technology that's being used, the craft are very
- agile, aren't they?
-
- Lazar:
- Oh yes, very, in one specific mode of travel.
-
- Caller:
- In one direction at a time?
-
- Lazar:
- No. There's two modes of travel. There's a low-speed mode
- and a high-speed mode. I don't remember what they called them;
- they had a specific name for them.
-
- Caller:
- What was the size of the staff working on the project?
-
- Lazar:
- 22 people that I knew of, in the area that I worked in. How
- extensive the rest of the facility was, I don't know.
-
- Caller:
- I understand you were frustrated at the size of the staff.
- You thought it should have been larger?
-
- Lazar:
- Oh yeah! Much!
-
- Caller:
- More could have been learned about the program more
- quickly?
-
- Lazar:
- Sure! I mean, 22 people, c'mon!
-
- Caller:
- Do you think we understand enough about the alien propulsion
- technology to build our own vehicles, using this technology --
- or are we even close? Do we know what's going on?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah, we know what's going on, but the problem is substituting
- earthly materials, and there's no easy way getting around that.
-
- Caller:
- How is Element 115 involved in the construction of the vehicles?
-
- Lazar:
- Everything seems to come down to 115. It's a super-heavy
- element. It seems that as you get into the heavier elements --
- and I'm sure this property extends into as-yet-undiscovered
- elements in excess of atomic number 115 -- that the ATOMIC
- gravity wave inside the atoms holding things together begins
- to extend outside of the atomic structure itself, and it's
- this wave that can be tapped off in quantity -- small quantity,
- actually. This wave can be amplified, contained, and used
- for a useful purpose.
-
- Goodman:
- Are your radiation detectors for nuclear power plants?
-
- Lazar:
- Not nuclear power plants; weapon . . .where they use
- plutonium.
-
- Goodman:
- Like the latest flight above us now?
-
- Lazar:
- The Galileo?
-
- Goodman:
- Yeah.
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah.
-
- Goodman:
- Are you involved with that, Mr. Lazar?
-
- Lazar:
- Not directly. Someone may have used our probes to
- detect --
-
- Number 37:
- Are they flying these vehicles within our city areas at any
- time?
-
- Lazar:
- I really don't know. I was only witness to a couple tests.
- I don't know how far they go. I think they're very careful
- with them. I personally don't think they're whipping them
- around the solar system because I don't know how profficient
- they are at operating them.
-
- Number 37:
- Do you read any UFO literature in book form?
-
- Lazar:
- Nothing in book form. I occasionally get handed little tidbits
- here and there and glance at them, but no, I don't delve
- into reading.
-
- Number 37:
- You mentioned some stuff on the Billy Meiers case. Have
- you read any of that information because you had mentioned
- that you had seen some pictures?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah, I looked at the, what caught my eye was certainly
- the -- whatever that book's called -- Contact From the Plaeides
- or something -- but it's essentially a picture book; there's
- really no text in it. One of the craft in there looks strikingly
- similar to the one I call the Sport Model.
-
- Number 37:
- What did you think of that similarity? Did that puzzle you?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah, because originally I had kind of discounted the Billy
- Meiers stuff, but that craft looks AMAZINGLY like the one that
- I worked on. And another thing, somewhere in that book they
- had a picture of a grassy field with three round indents in
- the ground. Now that would coincide with the three gravity
- amplifiers in the bottom of the craft and the imprint that
- they do make, so that kind of makes me believe that that
- really did occur.
-
- Number 37:
- You said you didn't necessarily share the same views of
- Bill Cooper and John Lear as far as the big picture
- was concerned?
-
- Lazar:
- I'm not exactly sure what each individual story is.
- John Lear has a specific story; Bill Cooper has a specific
- story. I do agree with both of them in the fact that,
- yeah, there's alien craft here and so on and so forth.
- John Lear thinks there're here to use us for food. I
- don't exactly remember Bill Cooper's story. But the little
- intricate parts here and there -- I just haven't seen any
- evidence MYSELF of it. I don't know what these gentlemen
- have found out on their own.
-
- Caller 37:
- From everything you know about it, do you believe there is
- a possibility there are benevolent creatures in the universe?
-
- Lazar:
- Oh sure.
-
- Goodman:
- How would you describe this picture?
-
- Lazar:
- It's an interesting picture. It looks like a formation of
- four and a formation of two flying saucers.
-
- Goodman:
- That picture came in a box delivered to the Vagabond Inn.
- No name, no nothing. Just a note:
-
- "This picture was taken from the 29-1/2-mile marker on the
- day that I had the best time of my life, thanks to you,
- Billy Goodman Happening."
-
- That's all.
-
- Lazar:
- There's even a distortion in the cloud behind a couple of
- them; that's really interesting.
-
- Goodman:
- That is right up there where people have gone. Bob mentioned
- the same thing that I said when I saw that: "Boy, that's
- a DAYTIME shot."
-
- Look at the smile on Bob Lazar's face!
-
- Lazar:
- It would be interesting to magnify it to some degree.
- Very interesting. They're glowing the color that the
- crafts glow.
-
- Goodman:
- I don't know who you are out there, but I thank you very,
- very, very much, because that is absolute, positive proof
- that they are up there in the sky having a good time.
-
- Do you think that they're flown by alien beings, or are
- WE -- the military -- doing it?
-
- Lazar:
- I think that the ones that we're testing . . . the one
- that I was involved in I think is being flown by the
- military. Whatever else is going on I don't know.
-
- Was that picture taken over Area 51?
-
- Goodman:
- That's right. And it looks like it. Recognize the peak?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah. Of course, that's a daytime photograph. And I was
- told that all the testing was done at night. And, I mean,
- that's interesting.
-
- Goodman:
- You described, when you went inside one of these little
- puppies, that there were very, very small seats, almost like
- a kindergarten type.
-
- Lazar:
- Right. Exactly.
-
- Goodman:
- So we have to have some small guys doing it -- jockeys
- or something?
-
- Lazar:
- No,no. You could squeeze into it.
-
- Paul:
- Do these craft appear to be shuttle craft, not the main
- craft?
-
- Lazar:
- I don't know how you'd differentiate between the two?
-
- Paul:
- In most instances, people speak of them joining up with
- another craft and then going out of the atmosphere. Could
- the models you've seen be classed as shuttle craft in
- that respect?
-
- Lazar:
- I really don't know.
-
- Paul:
- They wouldn't carry a big fleet of people?
-
- Lazar:
- No, definitely not. They are small, I'm guessing right in
- the mid-30-, 40-foot range, somewhere in there. And as far
- as carrying a lot of cargo or beings or whatever, no, there's
- not a whole lot of room there. So possibly there is a larger
- craft that they join with, but I didn't see any.
-
- Paul:
- Are there more engines than there are craft at S-4?
-
- Lazar:
- That's a good question. There's nine craft. I really don't
- know.
-
- Paul:
- It would be something to explain how in the hell we got more
- engines than we do craft. There's got to be some kind of an
- agreement or somebody helping us.
-
- Lazar:
- Right. There's certainly more fuel than there needs to be.
-
- Paul:
- Since they have released you and taken away your scientific
- livelihood, I hope you go on the national circuit, 60 Minutes,
- the Carson show, everything you can get on, and milk it for
- every dime you can get.
-
- Lazar:
- [laughs]
-
- Paul:
- You have a right to do that since they interrupted your career.
- But the important thing is to get this stuff into the hands of
- the scientific community, that can do some good with it.
-
- They've been toying with it for years and nothing's come out of
- it. We can't get anywhere. We've got to get it out of the
- hands of these power-mongers.
-
- Lazar:
- I agree one hundred percent.
-
- Paul:
- I think that's why you took people up there in the first
- place. You were tired of their games.
-
- Wesley Crumb, Charleston, Illinois:
- It's a great privilege to get a chance to speak with you.
- I greatly admire your courage in coming forward. I saw a
- copy of the KLAS program you did. When I first heard about
- you I ran up about a $300 phone bill calling New York and
- Chicago, and everywhere. I got a rejection today from the
- Donahue show that they don't want to do a program about you.
-
- Did you go inside all nine spacecraft?
-
- Lazar:
- No, no, just one.
-
- Crumb:
- When you were inside the craft, did you see any indication
- that either through markings on the controls or otherwise
- that these ships were from a different place? Was there
- any writing on any controls or anything?
-
- Lazar:
- No, not on controls and things like that. But I did see
- some evidence of writing.
-
- Crumb:
- When you saw the slight demonstration that was performed for
- you, were you the only person that was there that saw this
- craft operate?
-
- Lazar:
- No, there were several people. I was standing right next to
- the person who was in radio contact with the craft.
-
- Crumb:
- How long did this demonstration last?
-
- Lazar:
- It was a short duration. It lifted off the ground, slid
- over to the left, then back to the right, and set back
- down. It was a very short duration.
-
- Crumb:
- But you never saw who was at the controls?
-
- Lazar:
- No, because when I was brought in, the craft was in the
- hangar. When I came out, it was already out of the hangar
- and sitting on -- well, sitting out away from the hangar
- some distance. So I don't know how it was brought out, who
- brought it out, who got in it. I can only guess.
-
- Crumb:
- Is the entire thing underground -- all nine different
- hangars?
-
- Lazar:
- No, it's not underground; it's just butt up against the
- side of a little mountain, a little hill kind of, but it's
- kind of inside the mountain.
-
- Crumb:
- Do you feel that the billions of dollars that are being
- spent on the space program by the administration is a waste
- of money, as we already have these ships in our posssession?
-
- Lazar:
- No, because look at all the technology that we did get out
- of the space program.
-
- Crumb:
- Was it ever disclosed to you that these craft were on loan
- to us. Is there a chance of them being repossessed at any
- time?
-
- Lazar:
- No, none of that was ever disclosed to me -- anything about
- the origin.
-
- Crumb:
- I heard a rumor earlier this evening that your van was shot
- at recently. Is there any truth to that?
-
- Lazar:
- I don't have a van. I was shot at in my car.
-
- Crumb:
- It got passed on to me from the Video Clearinghouse in
- Yucaipa, and we've been keeping pretty close touch ever
- since this news broke.
-
- I did get a call yesterday from the National Enquirer. They
- might follow up and try and do something for you, Bob.
- The Enquirer is not exactly the best way you want to go,
- but at least it does have some national exposure.
-
- Burt in Burbank:
- You said there's more fuel than necessary at the Test
- Site?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah. I don't know exactly where it is, but there's
- 500 pounds.
-
- Burt:
- 500 pounds of Element 115?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah, and it takes 223 grams per craft, so there's
- definitely an abundance of fuel out there.
-
- Burt:
- Could you quickly describe the underside of these
- ships?
-
- Lazar:
- No, because I only saw from a SIDE view of only
- one craft. The other ones were always sitting on the
- ground; I never saw it. But the underside is
- essentially flat. Now, I never got directly under it
- to look. There might be some features down there, but
- I really don't know.
-
- Burt:
- The reason I ask is because you were talking about the
- three distortions that can come down from the gravity
- engines to distort the graph.
-
- Are you aware of any time distortion within the saucer
- itself while they are running?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah, there has to be.
-
- Burt:
- What about SIZE distortion within the ship?
- I've heard reports that people who have been in
- these that the inside seems much larger than the
- outside would indicate.
-
- Lazar:
- I have heard that too, but I haven't really seen
- any evidence of that.
-
- Burt:
- You were talking about the low- and high-speed modes
- and the control factors in there. Can you describe
- those modes and what the ship looks like each time
- it is going through those modes?
-
- Lazar:
- The low-speed mode -- and I REALLY wish I could remember
- what they call these, but I can't, as I can't remember
- the frequency of the wave --
-
- The low-speed mode: The craft is very vulnerable; it bobs
- around. And it's sitting on a weak gravitational field,
- sitting on three gravity waves. And it just bounces
- around. And it can focus the waves behind it and keep
- falling forward and hobble around at low speed.
-
- The second mode: They increase the amplitude of the
- field, and the craft begins to lift, and it performs a
- ROLL maneuver: it begins to turn, roll, begins to turn
- over. As it begins to leave the earth's gravitational
- field, they point the bottom of the craft at the
- DESTINATION. This is the second mode of travel, where
- they converge the three gravity amplifiers -- FOCUS
- them -- on a point that they want to go to. Then they
- bring them up to full power, and this is where the
- tremendous time-space distortion takes place, and that
- whips them right to that point.
-
- Burt:
- Did you actually bench-test a unit away from the
- craft itself?
-
- Lazar:
- The reactor, yeah.
-
- Burt:
- About how large is this, and could you describe it?
-
- Lazar:
- The device itself is probably a plate about 18 inches
- square; I said diameter before but it is square. There's
- a half-sphere on top where the gravity wave is tapped off
- of, but that's about the size of it.
-
- Amy:
- Are there subjects you won't talk about regarding what
- was going on at Groom Lake at the project?
-
- Lazar:
- No, I don't think so.
-
- Amy:
- Do you have future plans for more publicity?
-
- Lazar:
- There are several networks that are interested.
-
- Amy:
- 60 Minutes?
-
- Lazar:
- That's been mentioned, but I haven't heard anything
- officially.
-
- Amy:
- Would you do it?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah, I'd do a major network thing, sure.
-
- Amy:
- Are you familiar with the movie Hangar 18?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah, I think I saw that when it first came out.
-
- Amy:
- Do you remember any parallels to what you know now?
-
- Lazar:
- I don't remember enough about the movie.
-
- Amy:
- The KLAS-TV program showed a Los Alamos newspaper
- article about you during the time that you were
- at Los Alamos. What paper was that? When was it
- written?
-
- Lazar:
- The Monitor, July 1982, or something like that.
- I think I still have a copy at home.
-
- Amy:
- Did the alien craft create harmful radioactivity
- in the area?
-
- Lazar:
- No.
-
- Amy:
- The woman talked about on the show a few days ago --
- the child and the two women [Cash/Landrum case?] -- and
- they now have cancer. How did that occur?
-
- Lazar:
- I've heard of that before, and that sounds like a
- really poor attempt at us producing a craft -- a
- nuclear-powered craft, really dirty, spewing nuclear
- material all over the place. It sounds something
- that we would make. It really rings human.
-
- Amy:
- Do the aliens appear to be the same physical makeup?
- From your research on the craft itself, can you tell
- if they are similar to us -- by the way it was
- designed?
-
- Lazar:
- Certainly smaller.
-
- Amy:
- But there's nothing other than that?
-
- Lazar:
- Not from the crafts. I read some material pertaining
- to what they call the typical grey. I believe
- them to be that.
-
- Goodman:
- It was interesting when you asked for your birth
- certificate, and you could not locate it. And
- they told you that literally you did not exist?
- They TOLD you this in so many words?
-
- Lazar:
- They said we just have no records here.
-
- Goodman:
- And YOU felt that you didn't exist?
-
- Lazar:
- I felt that that's what they were trying to
- make happen.
-
- Goodman:
- Are you familiar with that type of thing
- being done?
-
- Lazar:
- No, I never heard of it before. I guess
- other people have.
-
- Goodman:
- Did you ever get your birth certificate?
-
- Lazar:
- Nope.
-
- Goodman:
- What about diplomas and things of that nature?
- Was there any record of any colleges you have
- attended?
-
- Lazar:
- George Knapp tracked down one, and they still
- had a record there.
-
- Goodman:
- All the rest are gone?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah.
-
- Goodman:
- Have you called the colleges yourself and asked
- for copies?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah. Yeah. Just like I went and called Los
- Alamos, too, and they said, no, you never worked
- here, and you know, I've been there for years. You
- can present them with the information, look, here's
- my name in the [Los Alamos] phone book, here are the
- people that I've worked with, here is the guy that
- I worked for, this is the project I worked on, and
- all they say is no. I mean it's ridiculous.
-
- Goodman:
- And when you're talking to these people, I'm sure
- there are some that probably are just working there;
- they don't know any different. They are just checking
- the records and saying we don't have anything.
-
- Lazar:
- Right. You can hear them when you call up. They
- are checking on the computer. They will type in
- your name and it won't come up. So that's
- probably all they do know.
-
- Goodman:
- People should realize this -- nowadays especially --
- you could be pulled out -- all of us could -- and
- anything we've ever done. If someone pulls your
- name out of a computer where you've worked before
- or you've had some past, you don't exist because
- the new person or a personnel director going in and
- checking -- you're not there. You have no record
- of that individual.
-
- Lazar:
- Right. It depends on the level that you look into
- it, too. Like I said, George Knapp went out to
- Los Alamos, and that's where he got the telephone
- directory and spoke to someone I worked with out
- there, and so on.
-
- Goodman:
- This mode of travel involved in moving these
- UFOs around: Can you see that being a mode of
- travel for us in the future. You said it only
- took grams of fuel. That sounds pretty good
- to me as far as being efficient. Do you think that
- it's possible that we could be traveling like that
- in the future?
-
- Lazar:
- Well, obviously, THEY do, so I imagine it's possible
- in the future.
-
- Goodman:
- I'm talking about our automobiles. And do you have to
- be off the ground in order to travel like this?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah, I think you do. It's not a very good mode of
- slow-speed travel.
-
- Goodman:
- Something else we talked about off the air. We might
- as well tell the people about it. Some strange things
- are going on in your life. You mentioned about car doors
- being opened. Describe what happened the other night
- when you and your . . . Shelley left the house and you
- came back and the doors were wide open. What do you
- think about all this?
-
- Lazar:
- It's crazy! A friend of mine, Shelley, was over, and
- we went out to a bar to have a, a, well, a buffet. We
- went out, locked the door, checked everything, and we
- came back several hours later, and all the doors were open.
- And nothing was disturbed in the house; nothing was
- taken. In her car that was left in the driveway, the
- seats were moved all the way back like someone big sat
- in them.
-
- I've gone with other friends to a health club that I
- go to. We lock the doors and check them; in fact, I
- usually keep a gun in the car and put my wallet on the
- dash. We've come out and the doors have been not just
- unlocked but actually open -- not even the wallet taken
- or the gun. Certainly kids would have done THAT. It's
- just like someone wants me to know that they're still
- there.
-
- Goodman:
- The last time you were on the Happening, you revealed
- the gentleman's name --
-
- Lazar:
- Dennis Mariano
-
- Goodman:
- -- saying he was threatening you and was the biggest
- problem in your life. Have you had any problems with him since
- then?
-
- Lazar:
- No, not recently, no.
-
- Goodman:
- How would the anti-matter reactor act in a car?
-
- Lazar:
- I don't know if I'd use that in a car. But if you wanted
- to, you could use it as a tremendous electrical power.
-
- Goodman:
- Which goes back to the beginning of time: We were going
- to have electric cars and were convinced we shouldn't have
- electric cars because we were told we would have to plug
- them in along the way.
-
- It wouldn't be necessary -- as they said years ago -- to
- plug in along the way to re-charge the batteries if we had
- something inside to generate --
-
- Lazar:
- Right. Along the same lines, you could make a NUCLEAR-powered
- car, too, running off plutonium.
-
- Goodman:
- If we wanted to get involved with this anti-matter-reactor-type
- or mode of travel, we'd have to have Element 115 --
-
- Lazar:
- Right.
-
- Goodman:
- -- which you had in your possession at one time.
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah, that's one of the things I got. And that was my
- ace-in-the-hole.
-
- Goodman:
- And they got it off you.
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah. We did get it. . . For people that saw the KLAS
- tape, where George Knapp points and says, "It's stored in
- containers similar to this one," well, that WAS one. And
- that's why we put it on there. It was kind of a jab at
- them to say we got it. That was the real ace-in-the-hole
- because if everyone came out and jumped on it and said
- this is all garbage and everything, you know, just to pop
- that out and say, go check this!
-
- Goodman:
- Listen guys out there at Area S-4: I know you're listening
- 'cause we heard this recently. Why don't you get some of
- that somehow to Bob.
-
- Why would that be your ace-in-the-hole?
-
- Lazar:
- Because anyone can verify that it's an element that
- doesn't exist.
-
- Goodman:
- Boy, that would be wonderful if we could just get that.
- Any of you Mercury Workers up there that want to get
- involved, and say that you do want to get involved, that
- might be a great way to help Bob's cause out and to prove
- his story, behind the story.
-
- Bill from Las Vegas:
- Someone previously called in and said that some of the
- Mercury Workers had decided to get behind Lazar. Has Bob
- Lazar ever heard anything in relation to that? Have any
- of the Mercury Workers contacted him, and do any of them
- intend to go public as you have done?
-
- Lazar:
- I don't know what the situation is with those guys, if
- they're for real or not. I've got messages through people
- that someone called once and said there were three of them
- and two of them were captured down at S-4 being tortured.
- And there was another guy out here. And so I really don't
- know what the story is with those guys -- if they're for
- real or not.
-
- Bill:
- Have you had any contact from other scientists that you
- had worked with or any other scientists either at S-4
- or any other scientists that don't work there?
-
- Lazar:
- Scientists that DON'T work there, yeah, that I worked with
- at Los Alamos, sure. But none at S-4, no.
-
- Bill:
- Since you've gone public with this, you've had contact with
- them calling you and wanting to know what's going on,
- etcetera?
-
- Lazar:
- Oh yeah. There were a couple that I gave information to
- as we were going along. And they knew what was going on
- already -- through me.
-
- Bill:
- If you had other people to back you up and support you, it
- might lend more credibility to what you're saying.
-
- Lazar:
- That was part of the idea of getting it on the news, and
- I thought hopefully I would shake the tree and have these
- other guys come forward and all be able to corroborate the
- story and also have 115 under my belt, but that whole plan
- backfired.
-
- Bill:
- This is for them if they're listening: The rest of us
- simply just don't have the guts to do anything,
- apparently.
-
- Lazar:
- I wish they did.
-
- Bill:
- Anything in the works with regard to any national television
- coverage or news media coverage of any sort?
-
- Lazar:
- There's been lots of talk but nothing definite. There's no
- date set for anything, but there's been a tremendous amount
- of interest, national and international.
-
- Bill:
- I heard talk that there's a BIG underground base up there,
- too. Did you know anything about that?
-
- Lazar:
- I've heard that story, but I have no first-hand knowledge of
- it. I haven't been in any tunnels or any underground stuff.
-
- Bill:
- If these aliens that have these UFOs are obviously thousands
- of years advanced in technology, it seems, how in the world
- would it seem that the Government would come in possession
- of these UFOs, if in fact the aliens didn't actually want
- them to have them?
-
- Lazar:
- I don't know. They look in very good condition. It doesn't
- look like they were crashed, that they were retrieved somewhere.
- It really looks like they were given. So I don't know; that
- might be the case.
-
- Goodman:
- Have you ever given thought to the fact that maybe they were
- invited here and they actually landed here and that's why
- they were here?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah, it's possible.
-
- Goodman:
- They could have come right to this area.
-
- Jim from Las Vegas:
- On TV, you spoke of observing a demonstration of this
- anti-matter gravity wave controller device. And you
- made a mock-up copy?
-
- Lazar:
- A friend made one, yeah.
-
- Jim:
- I heard you speak of bouncing golf balls off of this
- anti-gravity field?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah.
-
- Jim:
- And also about the candle, the wax, and the flame
- stood still?
-
- Lazar:
- Right.
-
- Jim:
- And then the hole that you saw appear --
-
- Lazar:
- It wasn't a hole; it was a little disk.
-
- Jim:
- Under what conditions did you see this demonstrated.
- Elaborate on this. And how large was the force field?
-
- Lazar:
- The force field where the candle was?
-
- Jim:
- The force field created by the anti-matter device.
-
- Lazar:
- It was about a 20-inch radius from the surface of the sphere.
-
- Jim:
- Where was this area, just above the device?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah, surrounding the sphere.
-
- Jim:
- Did the sphere surround the device?
-
- Lazar:
- No, the sphere sits in the center of the device.
- It's a half-sphere sitting on a plate, and a field
- surrounds the half-sphere.
-
- Jim:
- And you just place a candle in there?
-
- Lazar:
- No, no, no. That was a separate demonstration. I'm
- just telling you where the field EXTENDS from.
-
- Jim:
- Oh, that's what I'm curious about.
-
- Lazar:
- No, they tap the field off using a wave guide, off of
- the sphere. And this is a completely different setup, where
- they had a mockup small gravity amplifier, and there were
- three focused into a point, and that area of focus was
- probably nine or ten inches in diameter.
-
- Jim:
- They displaced this area or moved this area?
-
- Lazar:
- No, it wasn't displaced; it's just where the field was
- generated.
-
- Jim:
- And in there you put the candle?
-
- Lazar:
- Right.
-
- Jim:
- And that thing can actually bounce golf balls of of it?
-
- Lazar:
- No, no. The golf ball thing, again, had nothing to do with that
- setup. The golf ball thing had something to do with just when
- the reactor was energized, before the wave guide was put on or
- anything. We were just pushing on the field; it was being
- demonstrated to me; and we just bounced a golf ball off the top.
-
- Jim:
- And the candle: Does it melt and the flame stand still in
- this DISK that you're talking about?
-
- Lazar:
- Well, in the AREA, yeah.
-
- Jim:
- You don't have to put it in the center?
-
- Lazar:
- Right.
-
- Jim:
- Just anywhere in the area?
-
- Lazar:
- Well, the actual flame of the candle WAS in the area --
- in the center of the disk.
-
- Jim:
- And you saw this happen?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah.
-
- Goodman:
- You don't show much emotion.
-
- Lazar:
- Maybe that's my nature, but that's what happens after ten
- o'clock if I'm sitting in one place.
-
- Goodman:
- I'm not being derogatory about it. I'm just saying it
- seems like there's no emotion. Some of this stuff that
- you're talking about just gives me chills!
-
- We get mail from people at Jet Propulsion Laboratory and
- McDonnell Douglas. Would you like to work for people
- like that?
-
- Lazar:
- I don't know. I'm kind of used to working for myself. I
- don't know about going to work for . . . especially anything
- attached to the Government again, [look with] distrust . . .
-
- Goodman:
- Off the air, I asked what would you like to see for the future
- and what could you do for humanity? He said we could talk about
- that, but the main concern right now is how he can support
- himself, and I didn't realize you were having difficulty as far
- as that.
-
- Lazar:
- Oh no, not really difficulty, but it's something always
- to look for.
-
- Goodman:
- How could anyone in our listening audience assist you?
-
- Lazar:
- Oh, they really can't. There's several things I did
- before I began to get into the program up there. I used
- to race my jet car. I'll probably start that up again
- this season and expand my scientific business, United Nuclear.
- I'll probably increase that into a sales field and things
- like that.
-
- Goodman:
- Okay, I just thought we could bring that up just in
- case there was someone out there that could use your
- services. What service do you offer, if someone out
- there could use it?
-
- Lazar:
- Someone would have to be fooling around with plutonium,
- and there aren't many people that do that.
-
- Goodman:
- Don't bet on that. You never know.
-
- Caller:
- Was the craft you worked on one that WE made or was it
- one that was brought here by the aliens from another
- planet?
-
- Lazar:
- This is a craft of alien origin.
-
- Caller:
- That was brought here BY them from another planet?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah.
-
- Caller:
- Do we know anything about their way of life? Do they
- speak the same language or what?
-
- Lazar:
- I really don't know. I really know very little about
- that. I'd LIKE to know a lot about that. You assume
- that they mass-produce the craft, so there must be
- some sort of factory somewhere. That means there must
- be workers in the factory. Do they have a social life?
- I mean, the questions are endless. I'd like to know
- myself.
-
- Caller:
- And if they are here on this planet, WHERE are they?
-
- Lazar:
- That's another good question. You got me. I really
- don't know.
-
- Caller:
- If one walked up to my door, what am I supposed to do?
-
- Lazar:
- I don't know. I guess you'll find out really quick if
- they're benevolent or not. But as far as what to
- do, who knows?
-
- Goodman:
- Say you're up in Kansas out in a farmland and you see
- this person that looks really far-out, do you think
- they're just going to wait for them to come to the
- door or do you think they're going to shoot and ask
- questions later?
-
- Lazar:
- Probably shoot and ask questions later --
-
- Goodman:
- That's the problem. Wouldn't that cause all kinds
- of consternation amongst these people if they find
- out one of their people were --
-
- Lazar:
- Well, you have all the stories of the abductee
- reports, about medical examinations; I mean they go
- through a lot of trauma and stuff like that. When it
- came right down to it, if I was confronted by a bunch
- of them -- my car stopped or something to that effect,
- a craft obviously in sight -- yeah, I'd take on
- a hostile attitude really quickly.
-
- Goodman:
- Unless you were told differently --
-
- Lazar:
- Right.
-
- Goodman:
- -- by the Government: these people don't mean to harm
- you; they're going to be landing in your cities, whatever;
- just [kinda act friendly.]
-
- Caller:
- Do you think in the future our President will tell us
- on national television that the UFOs are here, that he
- will make it known to us?
-
- Lazar:
- I doubt it.
-
- Caller:
- You don't think he ever will?
-
- Lazar:
- No, I don't think he could muster up enough to do that.
-
- Caller:
- One of the presidents in the past was supposed to say
- that if he was elected he was going to tell us all about
- it, but he didn't.
-
- Lazar:
- Carter. That tells you something right there, because
- he never got in and denied it. He just got in and didn't
- say anything.
-
- New caller:
- Did you have a badge when you went to work?
-
- Lazar:
- Sure did.
-
- Caller:
- Did it have any designation on it?
-
- Lazar:
- As far as what?
-
- Caller:
- What did it say?
-
- Lazar:
- It's a white badge. It has two -- a light blue and a
- dark blue -- diagonal stripes through it. On the top
- it says MAJ-12. The clearance level is called
- MAJESTIC; I don't know if that was, like I said before
- I don't know if that means anything as far as the
- MAJESTIC-12 documents go, or if they just called that
- clearance that as a nostalgia type of thing. My picture
- was on it -- what else was on it . . .
-
- Caller:
- Did it have both MAJ and MAJESTIC -- both words?
-
- Lazar:
- The only place I ever saw MAJESTIC was on Dennis's
- [Mariano] badge, who was my supervisor, and his badge
- looks slightly different. I don't know if it was an
- older kind or what.
-
- Caller:
- You mentioned you were doing back-engineering, but
- specifically, what was the breakdown of your duties,
- for example, for one day, with respect to, say, what
- your co-workers were doing? What was the breakdown,
- the division of tasks?
-
- Lazar:
- I have no knowledge of what the other people were doing.
-
- Caller:
- But you were not working simply by yourself.
-
- Lazar:
- No, just with one person.
-
- Caller:
- And what was the difference between what you did and
- what he did?
-
- Lazar:
- Well, we were basically in the training phase. He was
- getting me up to date on everything, so we never split
- off, and you know, he went and did his thing, and I --
-
- Caller:
- Did you ever see an analysis or spectrogram of 115?
-
- Lazar:
- Yes.
-
- Caller:
- And what did that tell you?
-
- Lazar:
- Well, that it was an unknown element. Then we did density
- and weight calculations, which are pretty basic, and of
- course it was too heavy for its physical size. It was
- an X-Ray spectrograph. I don't remember what other
- tests we did to it.
-
- Caller:
- How did you know what the times of testing would be to
- go up to the sites to view the object. And do you know
- where it's being tested now?
-
- Lazar:
- Dennis told me the testing times. And of course those
- were the times that I relayed to other people, and we
- went out there. What was the other question?
-
- Caller:
- Do you know where it's being tested now?
-
- Lazar:
- Oh, I have no idea. In fact, if I was them, the last
- place I would test them would be S-4.
-
- Another Caller:
- Are you familiar with Alnico 5 magnetic material we
- use here?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah, it's a common -- I never heard the 5
- designation.
-
- Caller:
- It's a very dense magnet. Is that close to the
- material of 115?
-
- Lazar:
- Oh no, not at all. That's an acronym for aluminum,
- nickel, iron, and cobalt, none of them being anywhere
- near it whatsoever.
-
- Caller:
- Are there portholes on that craft?
-
- Lazar:
- At the very top, there is portholes; they are square,
- though.
-
- Caller:
- But they must be able to see by TV or. . .?
-
- Lazar:
- I don't know. I just saw from the outside. When I was
- inside, I never -- I don't think I really even bothered
- to look up there; I don't recall.
-
- Caller:
- With the gravity generators running, is there thermal
- radiation?
-
- Lazar:
- No, not at all. I was never down on the bottom WHILE
- the gravity generators were running, but the reactor
- itself -- there's no thermal radiation whatsoever. That
- was one of the really shocking things because that
- violates the first law of thermodynamics.
-
- Caller:
- The atomic weight of the 115 material: Is that heavier?
- We know the 115 atomic weight would be different from the
- gravitational weight. Is the gravitational weight of
- that material very heavy?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah.
-
- Caller:
- How does that stuff break off? Do you saw it or does it
- grind up. How do you get to test grams or whatever it is?
-
- Lazar:
- I don't know. I really don't know how that's machined into
- it. I know it is machined, but I don't know if there's
- any special procedures employed.
-
- Caller:
- Does it melt?
-
- Lazar:
- I'm sure it does. And just historically, all heavy elements
- are also toxic. I imagine it is a very toxic thing. What
- else? If you use the standard designations as started at
- 103, its name would be "unuspentium [sp?]." Its symbol --
- if it's going to be plugged into the periodic chart -- would
- be UUP. In fact. I have a friend that gave it kind of a cute
- name; he calls it "unobtainium."
-
- Caller:
- In your wildest dreams, do you think you would be able to
- create any of this stuff on earth -- in order to do the same
- thing?
-
- Lazar:
- In fact, I'm in the process of fabricating the gravity
- amplifier, but then I'm at a tremendous shortage for power.
- So yeah, I have even tried to do that stuff on my own.
-
- Caller:
- Is there any electronics as we know it -- chips or
- transitors?
-
- Lazar:
- No, nothing like that. Because of the tremendous power
- involved, too, there was no direct connection between
- the gravity amplifiers and the reactor itself.
-
- Caller:
- Are the wave guides similar to what we use with
- microwaves?
-
- Lazar:
- Very similar.
-
- Goodman:
- You mentioned all heavy metals are toxic?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah, they seem to be. Lead, radium, plutonium . . .
-
- Goodman:
- Element 115?
-
- Lazar:
- You would just assume it would be toxic.
-
- Caller:
- Is Sector 4 also called Papoose Dry Lake Bed?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah.
-
- Caller:
- Is it also in a place called Emigrant Valley?
-
- Lazar:
- Right. You can see Papoose Dry Lake from out of the
- hangar doors.
-
- Caller:
- In regard to the long-range method of travel, isn't
- a propulsion unit the wrong idea? I feel this device
- is creating a situation where it is diminishing or removing
- the localized gravitational field, and long-distance body
- that they're heading toward is actually PULLING the vehicle
- rather than it being pushed. Am I correct in this?
-
- Lazar:
- The vehicle is not being pushed. But being pulled implies
- it's being pulled by something externally: it's pulling
- something else to IT. IT's creating the gravitational
- field.
-
- Caller:
- Is there any relation to the monopoles which [scientists]
- have been looking for?
-
- Lazar:
- Well, they've been looking for the monopole magnet.
- But then this [the UFO force] is a gravitational force.
-
- Caller:
- Different things but exhibiting similar effects?
-
- Lazar:
- Right.
-
- Caller:
- Last night I saw a four-door Japanese car. On the
- right-side, rear, passenger door there were three
- 9mm bullet holes, about a 12-inch group. Is that
- the vehicle that was shot at?
-
- Lazar:
- No. That's similar to my car, but they missed me.
-
- New Caller:
- Do we give something in exchange for all this information
- they're giving us?
-
- Lazar:
- I really don't know. I don't know what went on behind
- the scenes as far as how we got the technology.
-
- Caller:
- Did they give us the 115 in large quantities?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah, 500 pounds is what I'm told. The way I've
- seen it, it comes in little thin disks close to the
- size of a half dollar.
-
- Caller:
- Did you ever own any, or -- ?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah.
-
- Caller:
- What happened to it?
-
- Lazar:
- It's gone. It was stolen out of my house along with
- some other stuff that I got from there.
-
- Caller:
- [By] the Government?
-
- Lazar:
- That's what I assume; I HOPE it's in their hands;
- I'd hate it to be in . . . A few people did know
- about it -- some UFO-related people -- and I'd hate
- for unexperienced people to be in possession of
- the stuff.
-
- But yeah, that was taken. We did get some film of
- it and some film of it doing some really unusual
- things.
-
- Caller:
- How did you get hired at Area 51?
-
- Lazar:
- I was referred by a well-known physicist to talk to
- someone. And I really don't want to go all into that
- because then I'm pointing fingers at specific people.
-
- Caller:
- Were everyone's mouths shut where you worked?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah, everyone wouldn't let you talk, and it wasn't a
- really happy environment. Everyone was just into what
- they were doing and that was it.
-
- New Caller:
- What year were you working up there?
-
- Lazar:
- Last year.
-
- Caller:
- I heard from someone I know that's a pretty good
- source that a small amount of plutonium, like a picogram,
- might be good for you. Is that true?
-
- Lazar:
- No, not at all.
-
- Goodman:
- What would you use plutonium for?
-
- Lazar:
- To die. In the lungs, it's almost immediate lung cancer.
- It's toxic in itself. The body has a tough time getting
- rid of it. It's just bad news.
-
- Goodman:
- And you're messing with it.
-
- Lazar:
- I don't have any at my house.
-
- Goodman:
- You said that's part of what you're working on.
-
- Lazar:
- Electronic equipment to detect plutonium: They're
- called alpha radiation detectors or air proportional
- detectors.
-
- Goodman:
- Why do you want to detect the plutonium?
-
- Lazar:
- They use them to screen personnel that are leaving an
- area that's been plutonium contaminated; they check
- equipment for plutonium contamination; so on and so
- forth.
-
- Goodman:
- This is as bad as radiation?
-
- Lazar:
- Plutonium does produce radiation.
-
- Goodman:
- So it's as bad as when they've been clearing the people
- in nuclear power plants and stuff like this?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah.
-
- Goodman:
- And you're devising a device that's going to be
- easier?
-
- Lazar:
- No, our device is just less expensive.
-
- Caller:
- Can you list your credentials?
-
- Lazar:
- As far as what?
-
- Caller:
- Schooling, degrees.
-
- Lazar:
- I have two masters degrees; one's in physics; one's in
- electronics. I wrote my thesis on MHD, which is
- magnetohydrodynamics.
-
- I worked at Los Alamos for a few years as a technician
- and then as a physicist in the Polarized Proton Section,
- dealing with the accelerator there.
-
- I was hired at S-4 as a senior staff physicist to work on
- gravitational propulsion systems and whatnot associated with
- those crafts.
-
- Caller:
- What school did you go to?
-
- Lazar:
- I'd rather not say, the reason being I am currently
- working with them under contract, and I'm having enough trouble
- with this as it is.
-
- Caller:
- Why did you leave the Groom Lake project?
-
- Lazar:
- I don't want to go into that either. That's a big,
- long complicated story. It gets into my personal life,
- too, and I don't want to get into that.
-
- Caller:
- Have there been any attempts made on your life?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah.
-
- Caller:
- When was the last one?
-
- Lazar:
- There was only one direct one. I really don't remember
- when that was, maybe six, eight months ago, something like
- that. Just being shot at getting out on the freeway.
-
- Caller:
- Did another car drive by and shoot you?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah.
-
- Caller:
- Are there any weapons on board the alien craft?
-
- Lazar:
- Not that I know of. Of course, the gravity generators
- themselves can be focused, and I imagine that can be
- used as a weapon.
-
- Caller:
- How many alien people do they hold?
-
- Lazar:
- I don't know. How many people can you fit in a car?
- I imagine if there's a bunch standing up, you can pack
- them in there.
-
- Caller:
- Is Element 115 an extraterrestrial material?
-
- Lazar:
- Yes, definitely.
-
- Caller:
- How do you suppose the S-4 project came to acquire
- 500 pounds if it's not from this world?
-
- Lazar:
- I would imagine it came on one of the craft.
-
- Caller:
- Extra fuel, huh?
-
- Lazar:
- Maybe.
-
- Caller:
- How close can a civilian get to Area 51 or Emigrant
- Valley? What is security like? How many guards and
- so forth?
-
- Lazar:
- I think the closest you can get is probably about 10 miles,
- and then you get a mountain between you and them.
-
- Caller:
- A lot of patrols?
-
- Lazar:
- Oh yeah.
-
- Goodman:
- Off the air, you said you traveled one time on hydrogen
- in your car.
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah, I had a 1978 TransAm I converted to run on hydrogen.
-
- Goodman:
- We were talking about this one night as a new fuel for
- transportation. Is that more dangerous than gasoline?
-
- Lazar:
- It depends how it's stored. There's ways you can do it.
-
- You can store it as a gas, compressed in a cylinder where,
- yeah, it's dangerous and explosive.
-
- You can store it as a liquid -- cryogenic liquid --
- where it's also dangerous and explosive.
-
- Or you can also store it in a hydride [sp], a chemical
- that absorbs hydrogen like a sponge absorbs water. When
- it's in that storage state, it's really not flammable.
- You heat the chemical using the radiator water, or electrically,
- or the exhaust gas to produce the hydrogen, and there's only
- a small amount at a time ever produced. And in that instance
- it's a lot safer than gasoline, and that's the method I use.
-
- Goodman:
- In other words, we could put these in automobiles?
-
- Lazar:
- Absolutely, definitely. The only exhaust is water vapor --
- essentially steam and very little oxides.
-
- Goodman:
- Where do we get hydrogen?
-
- Lazar:
- The most common place is from water. When you pass electricity
- through water, you break down the bonds and wind up with oxygen
- and hydrogen.
-
- Goodman:
- What could we be charged if we pulled up to a tank and asked
- for some water?
-
- Lazar:
- It takes energy to separate the water back into its molecular
- state, or atomic state rather.
-
-
- Goodman:
- But forgetting what the components are inside the car, if
- a driver were to drive up, they would just have to put water
- into this particular unit? Could they make it that simple?
-
- Lazar:
- You could make it that simple, yes.
-
- Goodman:
- Has this been known for years in the scientific field?
-
- Lazar:
- There's been plenty of cars that have been made to run on
- hydrogen. In fact one state somewhere has their entire postal
- fleet with little jeeps that run on hydrogen. There's a
- company called Billings Energy that does the conversions.
-
- Goodman:
- Why do you think it's not being made readily available to us?
-
- Lazar:
- There's probably lots of reasons. You're looking at the oil
- companies. . .
-
- Goodman:
- Okay. That's what I wanted to get to.
-
- Lazar:
- But you can always point your finger at them for anything.
-
- Goodman:
- But I mean, it's just being held back from us even though it
- could be here.
-
- Lazar:
- But you've got the problem of availability, too, if you're
- going to just use gaseous hydrogen.
-
- Goodman:
- What would it take to change our current motor in a car to
- accept this?
-
- Lazar:
- Not very much at all. It's very similar to a propane
- conversion.
-
- Goodman:
- Have you heard from Mr. Teller at all?
-
- Lazar:
- No.
-
- Goodman:
- Not one word? In other words, he's done nothing at all?
-
- Lazar:
- No.
-
- Goodman:
- You said we're nowhere near being able to have an
- anti-matter reactor?
-
- Lazar:
- No, not at all. The first thing we'll come up with
- when we toy with that some more is -- and there's already
- been talk of it -- is an anti-matter weapon. Unfortunately,
- that's the easiest thing to produce. First we'll see that
- before we'll see potential useful uses.
-
- Goodman:
- I was talking to Bob Lazar off the air, and Bob is a jet
- car driver. That's how he relaxes, doing 350 miles per hour.
-
- Roger:
- Are the nine disks quite different in appearance?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah, they're all completely different in appearance.
-
- Roger:
- Are they then perhaps from different star systems?
-
- Lazar:
- Could be.
-
- Roger:
- You said the one you looked at, the Sport Model, was from
- Reticulum, right?
-
- Lazar:
- That's what I READ.
-
- Roger:
- So that has the gravity propulsion system. But then some
- of the others may have some other type of propulsion system?
-
- Lazar:
- I was told that the reactors are all similar in them [the crafts],
- and from that I just assume that the propulsion system is the
- same. But it is possible that the other ones have different
- propulsion systems, yeah.
-
- Roger:
- How many light years from Earth to Reticulum?
-
- Lazar:
- 32, 33, 34, somewhere around there.
-
- Roger:
- They must get away from Earth before they amplify these
- gravitational systems, do they not?
-
- Lazar:
- They don't HAVE to, but it has to be a line of sight where
- they can move to.
-
- Roger:
- In other words, it wouldn't have any effect on the Earth even
- though it were close to it when they turned it on?
-
- Lazar:
- No.
-
- Roger:
- Where do the aliens fit into religion? They must say
- something about it. I heard that they had a [bearing]
- on us through religion, perhaps through colonization.
-
- Lazar:
- I've read some about that. You know, I don't want to
- go into that because that's going to upset everybody.
-
- Caller:
- What is the top speed of the craft?
-
- Lazar:
- It's tough to say a top speed because to say speed you have
- to compare distance and time. And when you're screwing
- around with time and distorting it, you can no longer judge
- a velocity. They're not traveling in a linear mode where they
- just fly and cover a certain distance in a certain time.
- That's the real definition of speed. They're bending and
- distorting space and then essentially snapping it back with
- the craft, so the distances they can travel are phenomenal --
- in little or no time. So speed has little bearing.
-
- Caller:
- Is the laser part of their technology or their flying speed?
-
- Lazar:
- No, I haven't seen anything along that line.
-
- Caller:
- Is Rockwell involved with that?
-
- Lazar:
- Not that I've seen.
-
- Pistol:
- You've mentioned anti-gravity generator and anti-matter
- generator. Are they different?
-
- Lazar:
- It's not a gravity generator; it's a gravity amplifier. I
- get tongue-twisted all too often.
-
- The anti-matter reactor provides the power for the craft and
- the basic low-amplitude gravitational wave, which is too low
- of an amplitude to do anything. It's piped into the gravity
- amplifiers, which are found at the bottom of the craft.
- There it's amplified into an extremely powerful wave, and
- that's what the craft is flown on. But there is an anti-matter
- reactor: that's what provides the power.
-
- Roger Nelson, KBAY-Radio San Francisco announcer:
- Last time I asked Bob Lazar about the hyper-light propulsion
- systems he had seen, he said the crafts have hyper-light
- capabilities -- beyond the speed of light. Do you know
- anyone in our government or who worked on the craft who
- might be from Earth who has taken those craft and flown
- past the speed of light to other galaxies?
-
- Lazar:
- I don't, and I don't know if they have been used for that.
-
- Nelson:
- Is there any way to find how many of our guys on particular
- programs have gone to space, what they're learning, exactly
- where they are now, and whether or not there's any tie-in
- with the Alternative Three Escape-Earth Plan that supposedly the
- Government leaders are stirring up now. Is there any place
- that you know of that this information can be found?
-
- Lazar:
- I imagine, if any of that is in fact true, it would be found in
- the midst of S-4 or 51 down there. But how to contact those guys
- and actually get them to talk is a feat not yet attained.
-
- Nelson:
- What is it you are now doing now that they have cut you off
- at the knees?
-
- Lazar:
- I do other scientific research and produce, design, and
- repair alpha radiation detection equipment.
-
- Nelson:
- A number of copies of these broadcasts and the show on
- Channel 8 and all the other stuff has been getting around,
- perhaps even internationally. Has anybody bothered you since
- you went public?
-
- Lazar:
- Other than the sily little things that have been done, no,
- nothing, nothing big to be concerned about.
-
- Nelson:
- Are we going to see you at any of these things like the
- January 7th conference ["An Evening With Bill Cooper," Showboat
- Hotel Sports Pavilion, Las Vegas, Nevada, 5:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.,
- $15 per person], or other symposiums in the future?
-
- Lazar:
- I don't think so, no.
-
- Nelson:
- Well look, I think you're a very brave man. With that kind of
- an onus on your head, it takes a lot of courage to keep coming
- back to the airwaves. I stand up and cheer as one.
-
- Caller:
- How do your magnetohydrodynamics studies relate to the hot
- spots in the earth's magnetic flux, and does that relate to the
- deep-hole theory, the Soviet Union's plan?
-
- Lazar:
- I don't know what the Soviet Union's plan was. I looked at
- it from a power point of view, as producing on a large scale
- plasma-generated energy in a power-plant situation, or producing
- something that would retrofit -- like a coal-fired plant that
- has a lot of waste heat and high-energy plasma.
-
- Caller:
- The question is, are you experimenting using the earth's flux?
-
- Lazar:
- No. There's stand-alone high-energy magnets that I use.
-
- Caller:
- What is the atomic weight of 115?
-
- Lazar:
- I hate even to guess. I know it because we've written it down
- because we've calculated it, but I really don't remember.
-
- Caller:
- Can you give us a ballpark?
-
- Lazar:
- No, 'cause I'd be wrong! Just like if I gave a ballpark on the
- gravitational wave frequency -- and that's really bugging the hell
- out of me.
-
- There were three things, as a matter of fact, that for some reason
- I've developed a mental block on. I'll have to call Billy, and
- then he can announce it on the air. I'll just call him and then
- he can relay it to everyone.
-
- New Caller:
- I'd like to stand up and cheer for Bob Lazar! It does take a
- lot of courage, and it's about time somebody stepped forward with
- some information that's being kept from us for so long.
-
- How long do you think it took them to make their journey here,
- using their methods of propulsion?
-
- Lazar:
- An extremely short time. I'd hesitate to say, but I don't think
- you're even looking at days.
-
- Caller:
- Is that because of this gravity lines-of-force thing or because
- time stands still for them and it really does take a long time
- but they don't know it because time stands still?
-
- Lazar:
- No, they're actually traveling almost IN-BETWEEN time because
- of the way that they distort time and space. So that they're
- traveling vast distances without the incrementation of time.
- The time would be very, very little. Days is probably --
- I'm way off saying that, too. But I hate to say something
- and be really far off.
-
- Caller:
- Could these aliens be robots and not actually be native beings
- from that galaxy?
-
- Lazar:
- I imagine it's possible. Who knows what actually flew the
- craft, whether or not aliens have ever been in Area S-4
- down there, but it's possible that some automated creature
- flew them. Who knows?
-
- Goodman:
- You made a statement when he asked how long it took them
- to get here, and when you were inside the spacecraft itself
- you didn't see any sleeping quarters. So perhaps they just
- start in the morning and they're here in the afternoon;
- it's that simple as far as OUR time goes.
-
- Lazar:
- If it even takes that long.
-
- Barbara:
- When your hypnotherapist, Layne Keck, talked on the air
- about you, did you request that?
-
- Lazar:
- That he talk about me?
-
- Barbara:
- Uh huh.
-
- Lazar:
- No, George Knapp requested that, and then Layne called me to
- find out if it would be okay, and I said yeah, go ahead.
-
- Barbara:
- Well, I called the office and that was what I was told,
- and it didn't seem quite --
-
- Lazar:
- That I requested Layne to go on? No.
-
- Barbara:
- That's what the person in the office said.
-
- How was your experience there with him? How did you feel
- about your experience?
-
- Lazar:
- As far as what? How I got along with Layne?
-
- Barbara:
- No. As far as how you felt comfortable with going back
- to some unpleasant experiences.
-
- Lazar:
- The emotions came up when you're under hypnosis, and that
- part wasn't exactly pleasant.
-
- Barbara:
- How do you feel about it today?
-
- Lazar:
- I feel better. At the time, it wasn't very pleasant.
- But in general, just being under hypnosis is a really
- good feeling.
-
- Barbara:
- You have the videotape of that?
-
- Lazar:
- Yeah.
-
- Barbara:
- It's in your possession?
-
- Lazar:
- I don't want to say where it is, but I know where it is.
-
- Barbara:
- I'm going to be doing that because I was with him. So for
- my own personal information, I just wanted to do that,
- because I have good aliens, bad aliens, you know, it runs
- in my family. And there's an extreme reason why I'm going to
- be doing this, so I wanted to clarify that and try to
- make myself . . .Although I can do it on my own, I won't
- go deeper than a certain point.
-
- New Caller:
- Is there any limit on the distance a spaceship can travel.
- Can it actually travel out of our galaxy to the Andromeda
- galaxy? How far can 223 grams of Element 115 take you?
-
- Lazar:
- I really don't know. From what I understand, the actual
- consumption of the element is very low; I imagine it is
- possible with enough [junk] made to travel to another galaxy.
-
- Caller:
- I assume the gravity wave is more powerful than the
- gamma wave, correct?
-
- Lazar:
- Than the GAMMA wave?
-
- Caller:
- Or the spectral wave? What's the limit on light waves
- with the 10 billion light years or something -- how far light
- can travel?
-
- Lazar:
- A limit as far as what? It depends on the interaction:
- the gravitational fields the beam passes through, the
- photons pass through, and so on and so forth, so there's
- no real limit at true dead space.
-
- As I said last time, and only one person took advantage
- of it, if anyone does have any questions they want to ask
- me, they can write in care of this station. A person called
- earlier and wanted a copy of that newspaper article. I
- have no problem in copying that and sending it to him.
- So just write to the station, whatever the address is.
-
- =================================================================
- 1220LAZ.UFO
-