| ==Phrack Magazine== | |
| Volume Five, Issue Forty-Six, File 21 of 28 | |
| **************************************************************************** | |
| [Several of us had plans to tempt fate and join the other pop-culture | |
| lemmings running off to Area 51 during Defcon. The not-so-secret | |
| base has seen more press this year than Madonna. Armed with | |
| our ICOM 2SRAs and a copy of "The Area 51 Viewer's Guide" | |
| we planned to put our lives on the line purely for the sake of | |
| being able to say "We were there!" | |
| The night before we were planning on going, FOX-TV broadcast | |
| an episode of "Encounters" that focused heavily on Area 51. | |
| The thought of tromping off on our little recon adventure | |
| accompanied by winnebago-loads of families taking the kids | |
| to see "that dang UFO place from the TV," just sorta ruined | |
| the mood. | |
| Hopefully, this won't happen to you. And if you do go, | |
| you really should consider getting the "viewer's guide" | |
| from Glenn Campbell (psychospy@aol.com). Email him for | |
| a catalog of Area 51 stuff. | |
| Glenn also publishes an electronic mag documenting recent activities | |
| surrounding Area 51, and related activities. With his permission, | |
| Phrack is extremely please to bring you the latest issue of | |
| "The Groom Lake Desert Rat." | |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| THE GROOM LAKE DESERT RAT. An On-Line Newsletter. | |
| Issue #15. Sept. 2, 1994. | |
| -----> "The Naked Truth from Open Sources." <----- | |
| AREA 51/NELLIS RANGE/TTR/NTS/S-4?/WEIRD STUFF/DESERT LORE | |
| Written, published, copyrighted and totally disavowed by | |
| psychospy@aol.com. See bottom for subscription/copyright info. | |
| In this issue... | |
| SUBTLETIES OF THE TELEVISION TALK SHOW, PART I | |
| NEW AIR FORCE STATEMENT ON GROOM | |
| EG&G TO ABANDON TEST SITE | |
| JANET "N" NUMBERS | |
| JANET HANDOFF FREQUENCIES | |
| GROOMSTOCK '94 | |
| SOUND FAMILIAR? | |
| CAMPBELL ARRAIGNED | |
| LARRY KING NOT CLONED? | |
| MYSTERIOUS SIGN DISAPPEARANCE | |
| INTEL BITTIES | |
| [Note: This file ends with "###".] | |
| ----- MEDIA COMMUNICATIONS 103A ----- | |
| SUBTLETIES OF THE TELEVISION TALK SHOW, PART I | |
| In DR #10, we reviewed the major news media--print, radio and | |
| television--and showed how each could twist reality in their own | |
| special way. Strictly for the sake of science, Psychospy allowed | |
| himself to be turned into a minor media celebrity so we could | |
| report to our readers the sometimes dubious processes behind the | |
| scenes. There was a limit, however, to how low we would sink in | |
| the pursuit of knowledge. We would not take off our clothes for | |
| the camera, and we would not place ourselves in any situation | |
| where our credibility, reputation or dignity could be seriously | |
| trashed. | |
| Now we can report that this barrier has been broken. In the next | |
| two issues of the Rat we will recount our first-hand experiences | |
| with the lowest form of mass media, the television talk show. | |
| ..... THE MEDIUM OF TALK ..... | |
| Talk shows come in three basic formats. The rarest but most | |
| respectable is the SERIOUS ISSUES talk show exemplified by "Meet | |
| the Press," "Nightline" and the roundtable discussions on PBS-- | |
| maybe even "Larry King Live." They are dignified and serious, | |
| explore meaningful political and societal issues, and hardly | |
| anyone watches them. | |
| The next rung down the ladder--vapid but benign--is the CELEBRITY | |
| CHAT talk show, like the "The Tonight Show," "Late Show with David | |
| Letterman" and "Arsenio Hall." Movie stars and Big Money authors | |
| pump their latest work in a non-confrontational environment | |
| designed only to promote laughs. | |
| The last and lowest form of the genre is the HUMAN CONFLICT talk | |
| show. These syndicated programs always bear the name of the host, | |
| like "Oprah," "Geraldo," "Vicky" or "Leeza." He or she is a | |
| charismatic and camera-loving character, no doubt ruthless in real | |
| life, but blessed with the ability to convey warmth and sincerity | |
| on TV. The fodder for these shows is a steady diet of human | |
| suffering, crises, angst and tragedy. Former spouses and | |
| estranged friends face off against each other; grown men and women | |
| reveal to the parents their until-now-hidden perversities, and | |
| human oddities of all shapes and sizes present themselves for | |
| humiliation before a nationwide audience. The ultimate goal of | |
| these shows is the public expression of private feelings. They | |
| seek tears, anger, jealousy and graphic self-immolation recorded | |
| by the camera on a tight close-up. With a dozen such shows now in | |
| syndication, the competition is intense to seek out new forms of | |
| conflict and expose the latest narcissistic trends. | |
| Talk shows are produced "live on tape" with minimal editing, and | |
| this presents special problems for a guest. In other forms of | |
| television, sound bites rule the show. It may seem artificial, | |
| but tight editing at least assures that each party has their say | |
| and only their finest bon mot will be used. The courteous speaker | |
| with a few good ideas can confidently compete with any | |
| extravagant, microphone-hogging blowhard, because most of what the | |
| blowhard says will be cut. In the almost-live talk show, the more | |
| reasonable speaker has to compete with the blowhard head on. | |
| There is no time for an orderly presentation of evidence; he who | |
| makes the most outrageous, confident and colorful claims, | |
| groundless or not, gains the camera's eye and controls the game. | |
| If you have any shred of personal dignity and are asked to be a | |
| guest on a Human Conflict show, the best response is obvious: | |
| "Just Say No." Unless you are a masochist or a natural born | |
| actor, there is no way you can win in this format. We know it | |
| now; we knew it then, but sometimes, like Oedipus, you just can't | |
| stop the inevitable march of Fate.... | |
| ..... ONWARD TO HUMILIATION ..... | |
| The path to our own downfall was indirect. For several months, a | |
| number of journalists have been making the pilgrimage to Freedom | |
| Ridge, and we generally escort them as a sort of local public | |
| relations representative. We do not charge for this service, and | |
| we do not discriminate between journalists. If TASS or Penthouse | |
| or the Podunk Review came to call, we would treat them no | |
| differently than the New York Times. | |
| In May, we got a call from a producer from the Montel Williams | |
| Show, one of the Human Conflict shows that we had never seen. It | |
| seems that "Montel," as he is known to the world, had promised on | |
| an earlier talk show that he would visit the border of Area 51. | |
| We told the producer that we would be willing to escort Montel and | |
| his crew to Freedom Ridge to tape a segment, but we declined an | |
| offer to come to New York to appear on the studio show. Montel's | |
| visit was originally scheduled for May 5 but was canceled at the | |
| last minute, and we breathed a sign of relief. | |
| In August, the project was reactivated, we suspect as the result | |
| of the June 22 article in the New York Times. Montel's visit was | |
| scheduled for Aug. 16, and we were again asked if we would go to | |
| New York to appear on the later show. Again, we declined. | |
| When Montel came to Rachel, he brought a Humvee, his producers and | |
| a film crew. We went through the usual script for the camera: | |
| Montel drives up to our Research Center, and we meet him in the | |
| driveway. Inside, we show him where we are going on the map, then | |
| we get in the car and drive the rugged road to Freedom Ridge. We | |
| had done it before with countless crews, but never so quickly and | |
| in so few "takes." When Montel arrived, there was no question | |
| that he was in charge. He asked no significant questions, and | |
| showed no particular interest in the secret base itself. We | |
| sensed that he came only because he said he would and that his | |
| primary aim was to film a sound bite on the ridge that said, "You | |
| see, I did what I promised." | |
| As we rode down from Freedom Ridge in the Humvee with Montel and | |
| the producer, we were again asked if we would come to New York to | |
| appear on the talk show the following week, Aug. 23. We hesitated | |
| and were about to turn down the offer cold, when the producer | |
| uttered the only horrible words that could force us to comply. | |
| Sean David Morton. | |
| ..... THE EMBODIMENT OF EVIL ..... | |
| We first learned of Sean Morton over two years ago, before we came | |
| to Rachel. We had heard his enthusiastic endorsement of the Black | |
| Mailbox on a UFO video: | |
| "Probably the most amazing thing about Area 51 is the fact that | |
| this is literally the only place in the world where you can go out | |
| and actually see flying saucers on a timetable basis. You can | |
| literally go out there on a Wednesday night between about seven | |
| and one a.m. and you'll see these things flying up and down the | |
| valley. It's absolutely amazing. On even a bad night you'll have | |
| ten, eleven, twelve sightings. On a good night--and I've been out | |
| there with friends of mine camping--on a good night the sky will | |
| just rip open with these things. You'll see anywhere between | |
| twenty to forty objects in a night testing over the base for | |
| anywhere from fifteen and forty minutes at a time." | |
| We've lived near the border for over a year and a half now, are | |
| genuinely interested in UFOs and have spent countless days and | |
| nights in the desert; yet we haven't seen even ONE flying saucer, | |
| let alone scores. The logical explanation is that we arrived too | |
| late, after the saucers had been packed up and moved elsewhere. | |
| The trouble with this theory is that during the early part of our | |
| tenure, Sean Morton continued to bring tours to the area--at $99 a | |
| head--and reported UFOs everywhere. | |
| In one celebrated incident in March 1993, Psychospy spent the | |
| night on White Sides, overlooking Groom Lake, with some aviation | |
| watchers and a writer from Popular Science. We were looking for | |
| the alleged Aurora spyplane--almost as ephemeral as flying | |
| saucers--but we saw nothing more than a few satellites, some | |
| distant aircraft strobes and an occasional meteor. The following | |
| was reported in the March 1994 Popular Science.... | |
| "Last March, three chilly airplane watchers with binoculars | |
| atop White Sides Mountain at this magic hour [4:45am] were | |
| tracking a 737 airliner approaching Groom Lake, as a fourth member | |
| of their group thawed out in his truck below. Parked on a knoll, | |
| he was next to a vanload of UFO seekers. They were lead by tour | |
| operator Sean Morton, whose leaflet described him as 'the world's | |
| foremost UFO researcher.' | |
| "Morton donned a horned Viking helmet and from time to time | |
| pointed to the sky, exclaiming: 'Look at that one!' The airplane | |
| watcher trained his binoculars in the same direction but saw | |
| nothing out of the ordinary. Later, Morton's group became excited | |
| by what they perceived as an entire formation of UFOs; the | |
| airplane watcher's lenses revealed only stars. Finally, as the | |
| morning's first 737 made its gentle approach toward Groom Lake at | |
| 4:45, the UFO enthusiasts rejoiced at Old Faithful's appearance. | |
| Everyone had seen exactly what they hoped for." | |
| In the beginning, when we were new to the area, we were generous | |
| to Sean and called him "fantasy prone." As we got to know him | |
| better and gained confidence in our own knowledge base, we came to | |
| mince no words. Sean is a deliberate con man. He recognizes as | |
| well as us the landing lights of a 737, but he knows that others | |
| can be fooled and taken for a $99 ride to see them. If anyone is | |
| spreading disinformation about Area 51, filling the air with noise | |
| to make the truth harder to grasp, it isn't sinister government | |
| agents; it's Sean David Morton pursuing only his own greed and | |
| self-aggrandizement. | |
| We have worked hard over the past 18 months to undo the damage | |
| Sean has done and displace him from the Area 51 scene. | |
| Discrediting Sean isn't complicated: We simply quote his own | |
| words whenever we can. Sean is a broadly diversified charlatan, a | |
| self-proclaimed expert in faith healing, earthquake prediction, | |
| psychic prophesy and virtually every other New Age fad. We have | |
| no problem at all with him plying his trade within the confines of | |
| the state of California where he justly belongs, but when he | |
| proclaims himself the foremost authority on Area 51, we get | |
| territorial. We hope that our "Area 51 Viewers Guide" has reduced | |
| the gullibility of newcomers and made the environment less | |
| attractive for leeches like him. In fact, we haven't had a | |
| confirmed Morton sighting near the border in over a year. We | |
| heard from sources in California that he no longer gave tours to | |
| Area 51 because the saucers had been moved elsewhere--which was | |
| fine by us. | |
| The saucers must have returned, however. As the recent Groom Lake | |
| publicity reached its peak, "The World's Foremost UFO Researcher" | |
| could not help but resurface to suck energy from it. In recent | |
| months, reports began to reach us that he had appeared as an Area | |
| 51 expert at UFO conferences, on radio talk shows and on the | |
| Montel Williams Show. | |
| In the latter appearance, which was first broadcast in December | |
| 1993, Sean showed video footage of nighttime "UFOs" that he said | |
| he photographed "at great risk to my own life." As we viewed them | |
| later, one clip showed an isolated circle of light jumping around | |
| within the frame. It could have been any stationary out-of-focus | |
| light shot through a hand-held video camera. Notches seen on the | |
| top and bottom of the "disk" correspond to protrusions inside the | |
| lens assembly. In the other clip, only slightly out of focus, we | |
| saw the lights of a 737 landing on the Groom Lake airstrip. To | |
| Sean, it was "an object actually coming in from space." The time | |
| stamp in the corner said "4:49 am." | |
| It was on this show that Montel promised to visit Area 51 escorted | |
| by Sean; yet when Montel finally made the trip eight months later, | |
| Sean was not invited. The producer told us that word had reached | |
| him from many sources that Sean was considered a fraud, that in | |
| addition to UFOs he also did psychic prophesies and that his | |
| claimed credentials were highly dubious. He and Montel felt that | |
| Sean had taken advantage of them and that by having him on the | |
| show they had inadvertently legitimized him. | |
| But none of that prevented them from inviting him back as a guest | |
| the second studio show. | |
| As we rode down in the Humvee from Freedom Ridge with Montel and | |
| the producer, the reality to us became crystal clear: If we did | |
| not appear on the Montel Williams Show, then Sean would have the | |
| stage all to himself and could continue to spread any sort of | |
| nonsense about Area 51. We felt that we had no choice. Either we | |
| did battle with this guy now, before he grew bigger, or we would | |
| be cleaning up his mess for many months to come. | |
| ..... OUR RAPID EDUCATION ..... | |
| We had less than a week to prepare for the big show--nowhere near | |
| enough time to do all the research we needed. The first item of | |
| business was to actually watch the Montel Williams Show and | |
| familiarize ourselves with the format. We cranked up our | |
| satellite dish and surfed through the channels. On "Donahue": | |
| "Six Year Olds Who Sexually Harass Other Six Year Olds." On | |
| "Rolanda, a related topic: "Will Your Child Grow Up To Be A | |
| Serial Killer?" On "The Vicky Show," we heard that Sean Morton | |
| had just appeared as an expert on the prophesies of Nostradamus, | |
| but we were unable to catch that one. | |
| The first Montel Williams Show we saw was, "Mistresses Who Want To | |
| End The Affair." On the stage, three women disguised by dark | |
| sunglasses explained why they had been attracted to married men. | |
| We could only tolerate about ten seconds at a time of this show, | |
| but when we tuned back, we found that the women had shed their | |
| sunglasses and revealed their true identities. Presumably, they | |
| had also revealed, or at least seriously compromised, the | |
| identities of the men they had been having the affairs with. When | |
| we tuned in again later, one of the three was having an angry | |
| argument with a fourth female guest. We guessed that this was the | |
| wife of one of the married men. | |
| A friend sent us a tape of Montel's original UFO show in which | |
| Sean appeared as a "UFO Investigator" and Montel promised to | |
| visit. The show included an abductee, a witness to the "Kecksburg | |
| Incident," a former actress, WFUFOR Sean David Morton, a requisite | |
| skeptic, a pro-UFO filmmaker and--as if you hadn't guessed--that | |
| talk show regular Travis Walton. The show was conducted in the | |
| "expanding chairs" format. It started out with two guests alone | |
| on the stage, then more guests and chairs were added during each | |
| commercial break until there were seven chairs and seven | |
| squabbling speakers vying for attention on the platform. In this | |
| format, attention is diluted with each new chair, so the people | |
| who appear last, typically the skeptics, usually get only a few | |
| seconds of airtime. During the free-for-all of a seven-person | |
| debate, the camera always focuses on the most aggressive and | |
| charismatic guest--i.e. Sean David Morton. | |
| The last chair to be filled was occupied by filmmaker Russ Estes, | |
| who the on-screen caption said, "Does Not Believe In UFOs." This | |
| is false. He is a disciplined UFO investigator who has devoted | |
| his career to making films on the subject, as well as exposing | |
| obvious frauds. What is true is that he "Does Not Believe In Sean | |
| Morton." In his few seconds of air time, he raised doubts about | |
| one of Morton's many fake credentials, his claimed "Doctor of | |
| Divinity" degree. | |
| RUSS ESTES: "Montel, my biggest problem, and this is what I've | |
| run into over and over again, is the quality of the individual who | |
| is bringing me the message. You know, the-boy-that-cried-wolf | |
| syndrome is phenomenal in this field. You get people out there | |
| who are saying, I'm this, I'm that, and I hate to do this to you, | |
| Sean, but here's a guy right here who claims to be the Doctor, | |
| Reverend Sean David Morton. In his own biography, he claims to | |
| have gotten his Doctor of Divinity at--excuse me, it will take me | |
| one second...." | |
| SEAN MORTON: "Berachah University." | |
| RUSS ESTES: "Berachah University, Houston, Texas--the Berachah | |
| Church. I called them. They don't have any type of degrees that | |
| they give. They have Bible study at the best. He claims to have | |
| attended University of Southern California...." | |
| MONTEL WILLIAMS: "So the point that you are making, Russ, is that | |
| there's a problem with the messenger, so therefore the message is | |
| not real." | |
| RUSS ESTES: "How can you believe the message if the people lie to | |
| you from the start." | |
| SEAN MORTON: "The thing I'd like to point out about Mr. Estes | |
| here is that if you don't like the message, you can shoot the | |
| messenger, and it's obvious to me that in the UFO field, we do | |
| this for free, we do this because we want to know the truth, | |
| because we have seen something...." | |
| RUSS ESTES: "But does that mean you bogey up your credentials?" | |
| SEAN MORTON (angry): "That is not true. You are flat-out lying | |
| to these people. I went to USC for four years." | |
| Just then, the debate was cut off by a sloppy edit, and Sean's USC | |
| diploma appeared on the screen. | |
| After watching the tape, we contacted Russ Estes. He said that | |
| the debate between he and Sean went on much longer than was shown | |
| on the screen. "Live on tape" does not mean totally unedited. | |
| This show went on for over two hours to obtain a one hour's worth | |
| of material. Sometimes, whole shows are thrown out when they | |
| don't work. Unfortunately, Estes made a misstep on the USC | |
| degree. As it turns out, this is just about the only authentic | |
| credential he has: a B.A. in Drama and Political Science. We | |
| certainly believe the Drama part: It's the last degree he ever | |
| needed. | |
| The Doctor of Divinity degree is still phony, but in the talk show | |
| world, evidence counts for nothing; only emotions and presentation | |
| matter. Sean walked away from the show as a brave and | |
| knowledgeable crusader, legitimized by a promise from Montel to | |
| take his tour, and with the implied invitation to reappear on the | |
| show. Estes walked away alone, wasn't invited to return, and has | |
| since had to live down the "Does Not Believe in UFOs" moniker. | |
| Sean even had the delightful gall to send Estes a letter, through | |
| the producers... | |
| --- | |
| Mr. Russ Estes | |
| c/o Alex Williams [sic] | |
| The Montel Williams Show | |
| 1500 Broadway Suite 700 | |
| New York, New York, 10036 | |
| Dear Russ: | |
| I am going to assume that you are not a bold faced liar who is out | |
| for some kind of warped revenge, or a person who is just trying to | |
| make a buck off baseless slander. | |
| Let's try to solve this like gentlemen - enclosed is a copy of my | |
| U.S.C. diploma. I have also called the school and my records are | |
| intact. The rest of your "research" on me is equally faulty. | |
| I hope this solves out problem. If not, I have consulted my | |
| attorney and any further slander directed toward me through your | |
| video series or elsewhere, will result in action taken against | |
| you. | |
| Yours Truly, | |
| [BIG signature] | |
| Sean Morton | |
| --- | |
| Things were beginning to look grim for Psychospy. With the time | |
| of the taping drawing near, we hadn't even begun to scratch the | |
| surface of Sean David Morton and his path of destruction. Talking | |
| to our contacts, we saw that Sean had accumulated a vast audience | |
| of intimate enemies, more than we could possibly contact. If Sean | |
| sounds knowledgeable and occasionally has some meaningful | |
| information, it is because he has ripped it off from others. We | |
| were amused to find that there was even an reputable astrologer | |
| who hated Sean, who felt that Sean had stolen his predictions and | |
| passed them off as his own. | |
| It seemed a futile exercise anyway. We knew all the evidence in | |
| the world wasn't going to matter when we actually faced off | |
| against Sean on camera. We were leaving behind our own | |
| comfortable medium of logic and data and stepping into his home | |
| turf--the talk show--where presentation counts more than content. | |
| We were obligated by our own ethics to speak only the simplest | |
| truths and the cautious assertions supported by data. Sean David | |
| Morton, bold faced liar that he is, faced no such constraints. He | |
| could spout any lie he wanted to sound important and get himself | |
| off the hook, and the only thing that mattered here was that he | |
| said it with apparent sincerity and that it held up for | |
| television's thirty second attention span. We knew that if we | |
| started to make an accusation about him, he would instantly sense | |
| the winds and make the same one against us with greater force. | |
| The ensuing argument would make he and us appear to be equals. | |
| Sean knew all the buzzwords and cliches of the UFO movement and | |
| could spout the conventional wisdom much faster than we could. He | |
| knew how to sound sincere and reasonable and adapt instantly to | |
| the sentiments of any social circumstance. He was well-practiced | |
| at responding to inquisitions and had emerged from many without a | |
| scratch. Opposing him, all we had was a body of mundane knowledge | |
| about a very limited area of the desert. Sean was smooth and | |
| well-honed in his talk show delivery, and we were stumbling in for | |
| the first time to a medium where we really didn't want to be. | |
| It was with these reservations and a sense of dark foreboding that | |
| we packed our bags and headed for New York City. There, in Times | |
| Square, we expected a titanic battle between Good and Evil, and | |
| things didn't look good for Good. | |
| [To be continued in Desert Rat #16....] | |
| ----- NEW AIR FORCE STATEMENT ON GROOM ----- | |
| The following statement was recently released to inquiring | |
| journalists by the Nellis AFB public affairs office. (We | |
| requested our own copy from Major George Sillia on Aug. 26.) It | |
| represents a significant shift from the previous "We know nothing | |
| about Groom Lake" response. | |
| "There are a variety of facilities throughout the Nellis Range | |
| Complex. We do have facilities within the complex near the dry | |
| lake bed of Groom Lake. The facilities of the Nellis Range | |
| Complex are used for testing and training technologies, | |
| operations, and systems critical to the effectiveness of U.S. | |
| military forces. Specific activities conducted at Nellis cannot | |
| be discussed any further than that." | |
| That's a step in the right direction. What the base needs now is | |
| a name and a history. For example, tell us about the U-2 and A-12 | |
| programs at Groom in the 1950s and 1960s. That's not very secret | |
| or critical to our current defense, so what's the point in | |
| pretending it is? Will the Air Force take control of the | |
| situation and provide this information itself, or will the void be | |
| filled by a dozen aggressive entrepreneurs? | |
| We'd bet our money on the entrepreneurs. | |
| ----- EG&G TO ABANDON TEST SITE ---- | |
| According to an 8/26 article in the Las Vegas Review-Journal, EG&G | |
| and its REECo subsidiary will not seek renewal of their Nevada | |
| Test Site contract when it expires in 1995. These are two of the | |
| three companies that have managed the nuclear testing ground since | |
| its inception. It is unclear whether this action will have any | |
| affect on operations at the adjoining Groom Lake base, where EG&G | |
| and REECo are also assumed to be major contractors. | |
| Recent rumors say that EG&G no longer operates the "Janet" 737 | |
| jets that shuttle workers to Groom and Tonopah. That operation | |
| has supposedly been taken over by the Air Force, using the same | |
| aircraft and possibly the same staff. | |
| ----- JANET "N" NUMBERS ----- | |
| For aircraft watchers, here are the registration and serial | |
| numbers of Janet 737s and Gulfstream commuter planes spotted at | |
| the Janet terminal at McCarran airport. Based on observations in | |
| 5/94 and the 4/30/94 FAA registry. One or more of the Janet | |
| aircraft are probably missing from this list. (We ask our readers | |
| to find them.) | |
| Boeing 737... | |
| Reg. #/Serial #/Owner | |
| N4508W 19605 Great Western Capital Corp, Beverly Hills | |
| N4510W 19607 Great Western Capital Corp, Beverly Hills | |
| N4515W 19612 Great Western Capital Corp, Beverly Hills | |
| N4529W 20785 First Security Bank of Utah, Salt Lake City | |
| N5175U 20689 Dept. of the Air Force, Clearfield UT | |
| N5176Y 20692 Dept. of the Air Force, Clearfield UT | |
| N5177C 20693 Dept. of the Air Force, Clearfield UT | |
| Gulfstream C-12... | |
| N20RA UB-42 Dept. of the Air Force, Clearfield UT | |
| N654BA BL-54 Dept. of the Air Force, Clearfield UT | |
| N661BA BL-61 Dept. of the Air Force, Clearfield UT | |
| N662BA BL-62 Dept. of the Air Force, Clearfield UT | |
| ----- JANET HANDOFF FREQUENCIES ---- | |
| A DESERT RAT EXCLUSIVE! Published here for the first time are the | |
| air traffic control frequencies for the "Janet" 737 crew flights | |
| from Las Vegas McCarran Airport to Groom. The McCarran freqs are | |
| public, but the Groom ones have not been revealed until now. Air | |
| traffic control broadcasts are "in the clear" and any scanner | |
| radio should be able to pick them up. Each of these freqs has | |
| been personally confirmed by Psychospy or a close associate. | |
| 121.9 McCarran Ground Control | |
| 119.9 McCarran Tower | |
| 133.95 Departure Control | |
| 119.35 Nellis Control | |
| 120.35 Groom Approach | |
| 127.65 Groom Tower | |
| 118.45 Groom Ground | |
| Here are some other Groom freqs (some of which were previously | |
| reported in DR #8). The security frequencies are usually | |
| scrambled, but not always. | |
| 418.05 Cammo Dudes (primary) | |
| 408.4 Cammo Dudes (repeat of 418.05) | |
| 142.2 Cammo Dudes | |
| 170.5 Cammo Dudes (Channel 3) | |
| 138.3 "Adjustment Net" (seems related to security) | |
| 261.1 Dreamland Control (published) | |
| 255.5 Groom Tower (repeat of 127.65) | |
| 154.86 Lincoln County Sheriff | |
| 496.25 Road sensors on public land | |
| 410.8 Pager (apparently from Groom but unconfirmed) | |
| The most accurate way to detect a road sensor (AFTER you have | |
| tripped it), is to program 496.25 into several channels of your | |
| scanner, then scan those channels exclusively as you are driving. | |
| When the scanner stops on one channel, you have just passed a | |
| sensor. | |
| ----- GROOMSTOCK '94 ----- | |
| The "Freedom Ridge Free Speech Encampment" went pretty much as | |
| planned, with at least sixty people in attendance but not all of | |
| them staying for the night. There were no surprises and, sadly, | |
| no confrontations with the authorities when we whipped out our | |
| cameras and pseudo-cameras to point at the secret base. The Cammo | |
| Dudes were visible but kept their distance, and the only authority | |
| figure to show up on the ridge was a BLM Ranger in a Smoky-the- | |
| Bear hat. He was concerned only that we clean up our trash, and | |
| he warned us, by his very presence, that "Only You Can Prevent | |
| Forest Fires." | |
| The event was recorded in an 8/29 article in the Las Vegas Review- | |
| Journal, which dubbed it "Groomstock." [The article may be | |
| available at the FTP site.] We were disturbed to read in the | |
| paper that the attendees included some "marijuana-smoking | |
| slackers." We called around and found out it was true and that it | |
| happened after Psychospy went to bed. Had we known, we would have | |
| quashed it immediately. This sort of thing discredits our ability | |
| to police ourselves and hurts the reputation of the land grab | |
| opponents. | |
| The hot gossip around the campfire was about the Review-Journal | |
| reporter and the loony in the tie-dyed shirt. The loony had spent | |
| about an hour moving rocks and dirt around to make himself a | |
| comfortable bed, then he blew a conk-shell horn and banged cymbals | |
| together to bless it. When the reporter arrived, he volunteered | |
| to make a bed for her, too, not far from his own, and he proceeded | |
| with the project without any encouragement. It is unknown why he | |
| singled her out for this special honor, but evidently she was | |
| "chosen." It should be noted, however, that while blessing the | |
| reporter's bed, the loony accidentally dropped one of the cymbals. | |
| We forget to check with the reporter in the morning to see if that | |
| omen affected the quality of her nighttime experience. | |
| ----- SOUND FAMILIAR? ----- | |
| From an AP news story printed in the 8/5 Review-Journal... | |
| "PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti -- Authorities deported an American TV | |
| crew Thursday, putting the three journalists in an open pickup | |
| truck, parading them through the capital and then dumping them at | |
| the Dominican border.... | |
| "Soldiers detained the freelance journalists for PBS's 'The | |
| MacNeil/Lehrer Newshour' on Sunday while they were filming at | |
| Port-au-Prince's airport. Three of their videotapes were | |
| seized.... | |
| "The military-backed government has urged journalists not to | |
| report 'alarmist' news and has attempted to restrict news | |
| coverage.... | |
| "'I think it's deplorable, and it's obviously an attempt to | |
| embarrass them,' [U.S.] Embassy spokesman Stanley Schrager told | |
| The Associated Press. 'This treatment was not necessary; neither | |
| was the deportation.... It's a transparent attempt by this | |
| illegal regime to interfere with the free flow of information.'" | |
| In related news, the four of the five video tapes seized on July | |
| 19 from KNBC-TV have still not been returned. The tapes were | |
| taken without a warrant after the crew filmed an interview on | |
| Freedom Ridge but not the Groom base itself. Activist Glenn | |
| Campbell, who accompanied the crew, was arrested when he attempted | |
| to interfere with this seizure. | |
| ----- CAMPBELL ARRAIGNED ----- | |
| Activist Glenn Campbell reports that his Aug. 24 arraignment on | |
| obstruction charges was "amicable." Charges were presented, but | |
| the District Attorney did not appear. The complete text of the | |
| charges, stemming from the July 19 KNBC incident, reads as | |
| follows... | |
| --- | |
| Case No. P55-94 | |
| IN THE JUSTICE COURT OF THE PAHRANAGAT VALLEY TOWNSHIP | |
| IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF LINCOLN, STATE OF NEVADA | |
| CRIMINAL COMPLAINT | |
| STATE OF NEVADA, Plaintiff, | |
| vs. | |
| GLENN P. CAMPBELL, Defendant. | |
| STATE OF NEVADA ) ss. | |
| County of Lincoln ) | |
| DOUG LAMOREAUX, being first duly sworn and under penalty of | |
| perjury, personally appeared before me and complained that on or | |
| about the 19th of July, 1994, in Lincoln County, State of Nevada, | |
| the above-named Defendant, GLENN P. CAMPBELL, committed the | |
| following crime: | |
| COUNT 1 | |
| OBSTRUCTING PUBLIC OFFICER, a violation of NRS 197.1990 and LCC | |
| 1.12.010, a MISDEMEANOR, in the following manner: | |
| The Defendant did, then and there, after due notice, willfully, | |
| hinder, delay or obstruct a public officer in the discharge of his | |
| officer powers or duties. Specifically, the Defendant did, then | |
| and there, after due notice, willfully hinder Sergeant Doug | |
| Lamoreaux in the discharge of his official duties by locking the | |
| doors of the vehicle which Sergeant Lamoreaux was retrieving | |
| certain items from and further refused to unlock the doors after | |
| being requested to do so by Sergeant Lamoreaux. | |
| All of which is contrary to the form of Statute in such cases made | |
| and provided and against the peace and dignity of the State of | |
| Nevada. The complainant, therefore, prays that a Warrant be | |
| issued for the arrest of the Defendant, if not already arrested, | |
| so that he may be dealt with according to law. | |
| [Signed] | |
| DOUG LAMOREAUX | |
| Sergeant | |
| Lincoln County Sheriff's Department | |
| SUBSCRIBED and SWORN to before me | |
| this 24th day of August, 1994 | |
| [Signed] NOLA HOLTON | |
| NOTARY PUBLIC/JUSTICE OF THE PEACE | |
| --- | |
| The only surprise in these charges is the line "and further | |
| refused to unlock the doors after being requested to do so by | |
| Sergeant Lamoreaux." That is not how Campbell recalls the | |
| incident. DR#12, published less than 12 hours after the incident, | |
| reported it as follows... | |
| "At this point Campbell, who had been standing on the opposite | |
| side of the vehicle, reached in and pushed down the door locks on | |
| the side that Lamoreaux was approaching. | |
| "Lamoreaux said, 'You're under arrest.' Campbell was | |
| immediately handcuffed and placed in Deputy Bryant's vehicle." | |
| Campbell claims that Lamoreaux said, "You're under arrest," | |
| IMMEDIATELY after he pushed down the door locks, with no request | |
| being made to unlock them. Campbell says he has two other | |
| witnesses, the KNBC crew, who can verify his story. In this case, | |
| where the basic recollection of facts is in conflict, it will be | |
| interesting to see what the second officer, Deputy Kelly Bryant, | |
| will say under oath. | |
| However, the core of Campbell's defense rests on Constitutional | |
| issues. He is guilty of obstruction only if the officer was | |
| indeed engaged in the "lawful" execution of his duties. Lamoreaux | |
| justified his warrantless search by citing, in vague terms, a | |
| certain Supreme Court ruling, the name of which he could not | |
| recall at the time. That ruling is apparently in the case "Ross | |
| vs. U.S." which allows the warrantless seizure of "contraband" | |
| from a vehicle when there is a danger of flight. It is unclear at | |
| this point whether the video tapes of a news crew constitute | |
| contraband in the same manner as a shipment of marijuana or stolen | |
| merchandise. Complex First Amendment issues may be invoked. The | |
| case may be further complicated by the repeated offer by the TV | |
| reporter to allow Lamoreaux to view the video tapes himself. | |
| Campbell has requested, and has been granted, a jury trial. | |
| According to the Justice, this will be the first jury trial held | |
| in this court since about 1987. Campbell announced his intention | |
| to represent himself at the trial, with possible legal co-council. | |
| A tentative trial date of Oct. 25 has been set, but it is likely | |
| to be postponed. Campbell indicated that he will waive his right | |
| to a trial within 60 days to allow more time to conduct legal | |
| research. | |
| ----- LARRY KING NOT CLONED? ----- | |
| Our report in DR#13 about the diversion of Larry King's plane to | |
| Nellis AFB continues to disturb many of our readers. It raises | |
| the specter of secret contacts between King and the military or | |
| even a surreptitious replacement of the talk show host by a look- | |
| alike clone. Now, we wonder if our panic was only a false alarm. | |
| A producer from a Las Vegas TV station tells us: "I checked into | |
| it and think it is legit. According to the FAA, McCarran Airport | |
| was never really closed, but they did have pilots choose not to | |
| land on that Saturday afternoon because of inclement weather. | |
| They also confirm that there is an agreement with Nellis to allow | |
| planes in trouble to land there. I spoke to the control tower at | |
| McCarran. They checked their records, and they indicate that on | |
| that Saturday a nasty thunderstorm was noted by the tower at 1:45- | |
| 2:05. In fact, four takeoffs were delayed during that time due to | |
| weather. Planes in the air just flew holding patterns until the | |
| weather cleared." | |
| Presumably, King's plane didn't have enough fuel to maintain the | |
| holding pattern. Thunderstorms can be very localized, and perhaps | |
| Nellis was clear. A producer at Larry King Live says that, in her | |
| opinion, he is definitely the same Larry King. She says he got | |
| the military escort because he was late for a speaking engagement | |
| and made his wants known on the plane. | |
| So what can we say? Obviously, the FAA, the TV station and the | |
| King producer ARE PARTIES TO THE CONSPIRACY. This story is deeper | |
| than it seems, and the Rat will pursue the investigation for as | |
| long as it takes. THE TRUTH IS OUT THERE. | |
| ----- MYSTERIOUS SIGN DISAPPEARANCE ----- | |
| The big "No Photography" signs on the Groom Lake Road have | |
| disappeared. For over a year, they were installed on public land | |
| about two miles from the military border, but sometime in the | |
| first week of August they were cleanly removed, posts and all, | |
| apparently by the Air Force. (A civilian thief--like SDM, who has | |
| a number of these signs in his possession--would have simply | |
| unscrewed the signs, not uprooted the heavy posts and carefully | |
| filled up the holes.) The two signs on either side of the road | |
| were each about 3 feet by 4 feet and bore the following text: | |
| WARNING: THERE IS A RESTRICTED MILITARY INSTALLATION TO THE WEST. | |
| IT IS UNLAWFUL TO MAKE ANY PHOTOGRAPH, FILM, MAP, SKETCH, PICTURE, | |
| DRAWING, GRAPHIC REPRESENTATION OF THIS AREA, OR EQUIPMENT AT OR | |
| FLYING OVER THIS INSTALLATION. IT IS UNLAWFUL TO REPRODUCE, | |
| PUBLISH, SELL, OR GIVE AWAY ANY PHOTOGRAPH, FILM, MAP, SKETCH, | |
| PICTURE, DRAWING, GRAPHIC REPRESENTATION OF THIS AREA, OR | |
| EQUIPMENT AT OR FLYING OVER THIS INSTALLATION. VIOLATION OF | |
| EITHER OFFENSE IS PUNISHABLE WITH UP TO A $1000 FINE AND/OR | |
| IMPRISONMENT FOR UP TO ONE YEAR. 18 U.S. CODE SEC. 795/797 AND | |
| EXECUTIVE ORDER 10104. FOR INFORMATION CONTACT: | |
| USAF/DOE LIAISON OFFICE | |
| PO BOX 98518 | |
| LAS VEGAS, NV 89193-8518 | |
| The signs first appeared in May 1993 shortly after WFAA-TV from | |
| Dallas took video of the base from White Sides. (When challenged | |
| by the Sheriff, they admitted photographing the base but managed | |
| to retain their tape.) The signs were removed in Aug. 1994 | |
| shortly after KNBC-TV from Los Angeles lost their video tape after | |
| NOT photographing the base. It is unclear why the AF removed the | |
| signs. Perhaps they have become a little smarter and are adopting | |
| a "don't ask, don't tell" policy toward photography (but we | |
| wouldn't want to be the ones to test that theory). The signs | |
| themselves had become a tourist attraction, and no visitor could | |
| resist having their picture taken beside them. | |
| At the same time the "No Photography" signs vanished, the | |
| misplaced "Restricted Area" sign also went away. This is the | |
| crossed out sign seen in the NYT article, where the "stupid | |
| faggot" comment had later been written and then erased (DR#12,13). | |
| God, we'll miss that sign! It was as illegal as hell--being on | |
| public land--but an old friend to us nonetheless. | |
| At least now we can assure the public: If you see a Restricted | |
| Area sign, it's real and they mean it. | |
| ----- INTEL BITTIES ----- | |
| ENCOUNTERS TRANSCRIPT. Complete, unedited transcripts (not just | |
| the sound bites) of the interviews in the 7/22 Encounters show | |
| (DR#10) are available to Compuserve users. Type GO ENCOUNTERS, | |
| and look under "Browse Libraries" and "Interview Transcripts." | |
| Interviews include Rep. James Bilbray (file FREED2.105), Agent X | |
| (FREED1.105) and Glenn Campbell (FREED3A.105, FREED3B.105). This | |
| is a transcript for video editing, so every "Um" and "Ah" is | |
| recorded. | |
| NEW GUARD FACILITY. We send our congrats to the Dudes on their | |
| newly constructed prefab building next to the guard house on Groom | |
| Lake Road (about a half mile inside the border). Apparently, they | |
| are expecting more business along this part of the border and need | |
| a new substation. Interested taxpayers can view the new building | |
| from the first hill on the hiking trail to F.R. ("Hawkeye Hill"), | |
| a location that will continue to be public even if F.R. is taken. | |
| UPCOMING TV SEGMENTS. UNSOLVED MYSTERIES will broadcast a show on | |
| UFOs with a segment on Area 51 on Sunday, Sept. 18 at 8pm. The | |
| broadcast will include a new interview with Bob Lazar. THE | |
| CRUSADERS will broadcast a segment on UFOs, including a visit to | |
| F.R., on Sept. 10 or 11 (date and time vary by city). Air date | |
| for THE MONTEL WILLIAMS SHOW taped on Aug. 23 has not been | |
| confirmed, but it could be the week of Sept. 12. | |
| ===== SUBSCRIPTION AND COPYRIGHT INFO ===== | |
| (c) Glenn Campbell, 1994. (psychospy@aol.com) | |
| This newsletter is copyrighted and may not be reproduced without | |
| permission. PERMISSION IS HEREBY GRANTED FOR THE FOLLOWING: For | |
| one year following the date of publication, you may photocopy this | |
| text or send or post this document electronically to anyone who | |
| you think might be interested, provided you do it without charge. | |
| You may only copy or send this document in unaltered form and in | |
| its entirety, not as partial excerpts (except brief quotes for | |
| review purposes). After one year, no further reproduction of this | |
| document is allowed without permission. | |
| Email subscriptions to this newsletter are available free of | |
| charge. To subscribe (or unsubscribe), send a message to | |
| psychospy@aol.com. Subscriptions are also available by regular | |
| mail for $15 per 10 issues, postpaid to anywhere in the world. | |
| A catalog that includes the "Area 51 Viewer's Guide", the Groom | |
| Lake patch and hat and many related publications is available upon | |
| request by email or regular mail. | |
| Back issues are available on various bulletin boards and by | |
| internet FTP to ftp.shell.portal.com, directory | |
| /pub/trader/secrecy/psychospy. Also available by WWW to | |
| http://alfred1.u.washington.edu:8080/~roland/rat/desert_rat_index. | |
| html | |
| Current circulation: 1440 copies sent directly to subscribers | |
| (plus an unknown number of postings and redistributions). | |
| The mail address for Psychospy, Glenn Campbell, Secrecy Oversight | |
| Council, Area 51 Research Center, Groom Lake Desert Rat and | |
| countless other ephemeral entities is: | |
| HCR Box 38 | |
| Rachel, NV 89001 USA | |
| ### | |