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- From: psychospy@aol.com
- X-Mailer: America Online Mailer
- Sender: "psychospy" <psychospy@aol.com>
- Message-Id: <9403221103.tn17647@aol.com>
- Date: Tue, 22 Mar 94 11:03:27 EST
- Subject: Groom Lake Toxic Burning Alleged
- Status: R
- Content-Length: 10390
-
- [Supplement to the Groom Lake Desert Rat]
-
- Title: GROOM LAKE TOXIC BURNING ALLEGED
- Subtitle: A former worker at the secret Air Force base says
- poisonous substances were routinely ignited.
-
- Las Vegas Review-Journal, Mar. 20, 1994, Page 1B.
-
- Illustration: Photo of "The B-2 Stealth bomber, one of the planes
- tested at the Groom Lake base." Map of buildings at the Groom
- Lake base, titled "Groomed for secrecy," with the following
- labeled: "Lockheed hangers," "burn pits," "Scoot-N-Hide shed,"
- "Red Hat hangers," "Satellite dishes" and "Sam's Place bar and
- recreational complex."
-
- By Keith Rogers, Review-Journal
-
- Trucks hauling poisonous waste from California routinely arrived
- at the Air Force's secret Groom Lake base on Mondays and
- Wednesdays, said a former base worker who was employed there
- during the 1980s.
-
- There were always two Kenworth rigs, he said. They towed trailers
- with sealed cargo bays sometimes filled with 55-gallon drums of
- resins, solvents and hardening compounds--stuff he said Lockheed
- Corp. used to coat its radar-evading Stealth aircraft.
-
- At the base, 35 miles west of Alamo in Lincoln County, the trucks
- would roll past the dormitory complex where as many as 2,000 full-
- time residents lived, then down a road that parallels a taxiway
- that leads to Lockheed's hangers at the south end of the base.
-
- There, just west of the road and at the foot of Papoose Mountain,
- the trucks would back up to one of the 300-foot-long trenches.
- Workers would then roll the barrels into these pits where the
- drums and their classified contents would be doused with jet fuel
- and ignited.
-
- Like every activity at the base, the Air Force and the phantom
- trucking company, known only a NDB, operated with great latitude
- under the veil of secrecy, often in defiance of state and
- environmental laws at the time.
-
- The waste shipments were never accompanied with manifests, which
- are required by law in Nevada and California. And the trail of
- paperwork to the base, once known as Area 51, was covered by code
- words.
-
- Any reference to the base during the Stealth project was
- nonexistent in government correspondences, other than the name
- "Score Event," said the source who spoke on the condition of
- anonymity, but who provided a base manual, map and aerial
- photograph of the base that was taken in the mid-1980s by a
- government contractor.
-
- "They could have hauled in untold amounts of things," he said.
- "They would bring the stuff up from California at first twice a
- week, then once a week," he said.
-
- His story about waste disposal practices at the Groom Lake base
- confirms what other workers and former workers have said about the
- burn pits and the acrid fumes that wafted over the hangers and
- dormitories where people lived and worked.
-
- Nevada environmental officials are probing whether the burning was
- proper and George Washington University law professor Jonathan
- Turley is preparing legal action against the Air Force, accusing
- it of environmental crimes. Turley has said his growing list of
- clients includes people who were injured by the Air Force's
- actions.
-
- Nevada's only environmental official with a clearance to enter the
- base, Air Quality Bureau Chief Thomas Fronapfel, has visited the
- base twice since allegations about open-pit burning were made last
- year. He said he has "looked at most of the information" about
- waste burning practices at the base and has found that classified
- materials were burned, but they were mostly papers.
-
- Fronapfel and his boss, Environmental Protection Division
- Administrator Lew Dodgion are still trying to determine how they
- will report their findings and what action, if any, they will
- take. Dodgion has said, though, that the amount of information
- that state has compiled about waste disposal practices at the base
- is small compared to what his staff has not reviewed.
-
- Neither the Air Force, Lockheed nor NDB are licensed waste haulers
- in Nevada, according to the state's Motor Carrier Division in
- Carson City. NDB is not listed as a trucking firm in Nevada,
- California or in the National Directory of Addresses and Telephone
- Numbers.
-
- Allen Hirash, a spokesman for the California Department of Toxic
- Substance Control, said, however, that Lockheed Aeronautical
- Systems Co., in Burbank, Calif., was a registered hazardous waste
- hauler from 1982 to 1991. Likewise, several Air Force bases in
- California once were registered to haul hazardous waste but the
- registrations have expired, the latest being the one for Beale Air
- Force Base. Its registration expired Jan. 31.
-
- When asked about its waste hauling practices from Lockheed's
- Advanced Development Co. in Palmdale, Calif., the so-called Skunk
- Works division that developed Stealth aircraft, company spokesman
- Jim Ragsdale issued a statement that he said "is all my management
- is willing to say on this topic."
-
- "Lockheed on occasions in the past has had requirements for
- removal of materials from our factory that our customer, the US
- Air Force, deemed to be classified materials. In those instances,
- Lockheed followed instructions from its customer as to how the
- materials were to be transported away from the factory location,"
- the statement says.
-
- "When the materials were trucked away, the destination of the
- trucks and the eventual disposition of the classified materials
- were determined by the Air Force," Ragsdale's statement says.
-
- Air Force officials in Las Vegas and at the Pentagon did not
- respond last week to questions about Lockheed's statement.
-
- But in a telephone interview Thursday, Rep. Jim Bilbray, D-Nev., a
- member of the House Armed Services and Intelligence committees,
- said he has asked the Air Force to give him a "full, detailed
- briefing on any burning activities in its Nellis Range Complex,
- which maps show include the Groom Lake base.
-
- "They may not be willing to come forward and admit to violations
- that they don't think took place," Bilbray said, noting that while
- he can't acknowledge the base's existence he said he has "deep
- reaching ability to peer in."
-
- "What was done out there a few years ago, the institutional memory
- might not be there. Records might not exist," he said.
-
- Regardless of the secret nature of the Groom Lake base, Bilbray
- said if any environmental crimes took place, the people who
- suffered from them should be compensated.
-
- Bilbray confirmed that he has heard of the words, Score Event, in
- connection with the Nellis Air Force Range complex, but "I
- shouldn't get into it," he said.
-
- "When you cannot acknowledge that a facility exists, it makes it
- very difficult to talk about what goes on there," he said.
-
- What did go on at the Groom Lake base from 1980 through 1990
- didn't come cheap, said the source who worked there during those
- years.
-
- The source said he saw charts that listed the base's budget at
- between $93 million and $115 million per month. That figure fits
- with the $1 billion to $1.5 billion annual budget that private
- military analysts have estimated based on projects at the base and
- daily flights to shuttle workers there.
-
- "I was staggered by the numbers," the source said.
-
- High-powered, telemetry satellite dishes at the base's north end
- serve a dual role for communicating and fogging film of any would-
- be photographers who were detected on nearby ridges, he said.
-
- A Scoot-N-Hide shed on one runway was used to keep secret advanced
- aircraft out of sight while foreign satellites orbited in view of
- the base.
-
- While the F-117A Stealth fighter jets and a prototype B-2 bomber
- were housed at one end of the base, the government's Red Hat
- teams--the foreign Technology Assessment Group from Edwards Air
- Force Base in California--kept its collection of advances Soviet
- MiG jets in hangers at the other end, the source said.
-
- In the time he worked there, the source said base personnel were
- involved in seven plane crashes that involved three F-117s, one A-
- 7 Navy chase plane and three Soviet MiGs, including one that
- landed in a woman's back yard in Rachel.
-
- At least five unmanned F-86s were shot down for any Army
- battlefield air defense system project. The crashes and missile
- exercises sometimes caused range fires that could have been
- avoided, he said.
-
- Sidebar: EXTRAVAGANT LIVING ON A SECRET BASE
-
- Just because the 2,000 or so civilian and military personnel
- working at Groom Lake were fighting the Cold War didn't mean they
- couldn't enjoy a cold one.
-
- A favorite watering hole was Building 170, the hanger-size
- centerpiece of the base's recreational complex. It is listed in
- one base directory as Sam's Place, a bar named after a Central
- Intelligence Agency official who once ran the base, said a source
- involved in base operations during the 1980s.
-
- Sam's Place was a dark, fully carpeted nightclub with large padded
- chairs and a bar ringed with stools that rivaled the largest ones
- in Las Vegas, the source said. The bar and many of the facilities
- probably still exist, he said.
-
- The club had four pool tables, dart boards and a big screen where
- pornographic movies were shown "until a few ladies on the base
- complained," he said.
-
- The recreational complex was complete with an eight-lane bowling
- alley, a heated indoor pool, four racquetball courts, a basketball
- gymnasium with a wooden floor, tennis courts, saunas and a snack
- bar. At one time, a golf course and lighted softball field
- existed.
-
- Supplies for the base were flown in from Hill Air Force Base in
- Utah aboard C-130s.
-
- "Sometimes people would chip in and buy big ice boxes of shrimp
- that were flown in specially to the base from Florida in 20 to 30
- big Styrofoam coolers," he said. The planes stopped at the base
- only long enough to offload the shrimp, he said.
-
- Some colonels, he said, "had very extravagant tastes," including
- one who had grapefruit flown in from Israel at $25 a piece and
- requested deliveries of canned tuna from South America that he
- estimates cost the government $26 per can.
-
- In the dining hall, prime rib was offered every Wednesday
- afternoon and New York steaks were often on the lunch menu. "They
- used to serve frog legs, king crab and filet mignon at no charge,"
- he said.
-
- "They drank bottled water to the tune of $50,000 a month," he
- said, comparing the lifestyles of some base inhabitants to high
- rollers in Las Vegas at the government's expense."
-
- #####
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