• The Groom Lake Desert Rat

    From Seth Able@RICKSBBS to all on Wed Dec 11 09:44:00 2024
    The Groom Lake Desert Rat #7 posted here with the permission of the author Glenn Campbell. Posted here by Michael Curta Colorado MUFON

    THE GROOM LAKE DESERT RAT. An On-Line Newsletter.
    Issue #7. April 10, 1994.
    Rachel, Nevada.

    !!!!!!!!!!! NEWS FLASH !!!!!!!!!!!

    - --- ABC NEWS LOSES CAMERA EQUIPMENT -----

    Acting at the request of
    the anonymous Groom Lake security force,
    the Lincoln County Sheriff's Department on Friday afternoon
    confiscated the equipment and videotape of an ABC News film crew
    after the crew was seen with a video camera at the Freedom Ridge
    viewpoint.

    While the unacknowledged Groom Lake air base has become a popular
    subject for many news photographers, the ABC crew claims they took
    no such pictures. They say that, on the advice of the network's
    legal counsel, they never pointed their camera in the direction of
    the secret base. The news report was to focus on the ironies of
    military secrecy, including the logical inconsistencies of the
    photography restriction. Crew members also say they filmed only
    on public land and never crossed the nearby military boundary.

    After driving down from the ridge in two four-wheel-drive
    vehicles, the four-man crew and their two escorts were stopped and
    detained by two deputies of the Lincoln County Sheriff's
    Department. Also present were two men wearing camouflage fatigues
    with no name tags or insignia. These men, presumably members of
    the perimeter security force, declined to identify themselves, but
    the vehicles they were driving bore U.S. Government plates.

    Members of the film crew told the deputies they took no footage of
    the base, but apparently their word was not believed. Based on
    the statements of an unnamed security guard who claimed to have
    seen the ABC camera pointed at the base, the deputies obtained a search-and-seizure warrant by radio, then confiscated all
    equipment and tapes of the crew and their escorts. Equipment
    seized included a professional video camera, sound mixing
    equipment, tape recorders, microphones, batteries, cables, a
    tripod, scanner radios, walkie-talkies and video and audio tapes.
    The total value of the equipment was estimated to exceed $65,000.

    According to local activists, this is the first time that a search
    warrant has been served on visitors to the Groom Lake perimeter.

    Immediately following the seizure, the equipment was taken inside
    the base perimeter and turned over to the anonymous private
    security force. The film crew was not informed of the equipment's
    final destination or if they would get it back. It is not clear
    why the tapes and equipment were turned over to the security
    personnel and not retained by the Sheriff's Department or the
    local justice court that issued the warrant. On public land, it
    is assumed that only the Sheriff's Department has jurisdiction,
    not the security personnel.

    The ABC crew consisted of correspondent James Walker, producer
    Robert Haberl, cameraman Robert Jennings and sound technician Mel
    Barr. All are employed by ABC News and were on assignment for
    "World News Tonight with Peter Jennings." Accompanying the crew
    was government oversight activist Glenn Campbell, from whom radio
    equipment was seized. A sixth member of the party, aerospace
    historian Peter Merlin, was detained with the others but did not
    lose any equipment.

    Members of the party were individually searched, as were their
    vehicles. After the equipment was seized, the six were allowed to
    leave the area. No one was arrested, and the group was detained
    for approximately two hours total.

    The ABC crew and Mr. Campbell say they will fight the seizure.

    - --- TRIAL DATE CORRECTION -----

    In DR #4, the rescheduled trial date for four of seven accused
    trespassers was incorrectly reported. The rescheduled date is
    Apr. 13 (not Apr. 18). Even this date may be subject to revision
    owing to delays in obtaining subpoenas.

    On Jan. 2, the seven Las Vegas residents were arrested at a guard
    house about one-half mile inside the military boundary, about 13
    miles northeast of the secret Groom Lake base and about a mile
    northwest of the public Freedom Ridge viewpoint. [See DR #1.]
    Members of the group claim they crossed the border by accident
    while trying to find a well-publicized hiking trail to Freedom
    Ridge.

    The group passed the border while driving on a maintained access
    road serving the Groom Lake base. The border point is marked by
    signs on either side of the road but no fence or gate. This
    stretch of unpaved road has been dubbed "Sucker's Alley" by
    experienced visitors because of the growing number of first-time
    tourists who have driven beyond the signs here and been arrested
    at the guard house just beyond. The border and signs are located
    where the road passes through a narrow ravine where there is
    limited warning time and no convenient place to turn around.
    Visitors who drive up to the guard house to ask for information
    are usually arrested immediately with no opportunity for excuse or
    explanation.

    The group also claims that they passed a security patrol
    immediately after crossing the border and that the patrol made no
    attempt to stop them. They say an occupant of the vehicle waved
    to them in an apparently friendly manner, a gesture taken as an
    implied consent to proceed.

    While three of the seven chose to plead "No Contest" at their
    arraignment and accept a fine, the four remaining defendants have
    maintained their innocence and rejected plea bargain offers by the
    District Attorney. The four say that although they did cross the
    line, the circumstances were confusing and they did not do so
    intentionally.

    In the course of the arrest, cameras, telescopes and binoculars
    belonging to members of the group were seized by the anonymous
    security guards. Receipts were given for some of this equipment,
    but they were not signed. The equipment has not yet been
    returned.

    - --- CAMPBELL SEEKS CONFISCATED FILM -----

    Rachel resident Glenn Campbell is continuing to seek the return of
    four rolls of photographic film taken from him on June 16, 1993.
    Like the ABC crew in the more recent incident, Campbell was seen
    with a camera on public land near the military border but claims
    he took no pictures of restricted installations. Campbell says
    that he was near the border north of Groom Lake where the base
    itself was not visible.

    Campbell says his film includes shots of a military helicopter
    deliberately buzzing him and a companion at a height of 25-30 feet
    about the ground. He says that under Air Force regulations,
    aircraft are supposed to maintain an altitude of 500 feet above
    any person, building or vehicle. Campbell characterizes the
    encounter as a deliberate assault in which the helicopter downwash
    was used to bombard the pair with flying debris. Campbell says
    that the film contains proof of both the action and the intent.

    Although Campbell voluntarily gave his film to a Sheriff's deputy
    when asked to so, he says that it was with the explicit
    understanding that the film would be developed and returned to
    him. Campbell says that, despite numerous demands and inquiries,
    the film has not been returned. He says he has not been given any
    notice that the film is being forfeited either, and he has not be
    charged with any crime. Campbell contends that his property has
    been confiscated without due process.

    "I did not photograph any installation," Campbell says. "You
    couldn't even see anything from that area, so I figured it was
    safe to let the Sheriff examine my film. I know now that I was
    foolish, but I thought I would get it back, especially when the
    pictures contained clear evidence of Air Force wrongdoing. I
    thought the Sheriff would retain control of the film and the
    federal authorities wouldn't be so dumb as to try to cover up
    their own crimes. I was wrong."

    In a letter to Mr. Campbell, the District Attorney confirmed that
    the film was turned over to the Air Force but gave no further
    specifics. Mr. Campbell's lawyer, Steve Hofer, has formerly
    requested information from the District Attorney on where this
    film is being held and to which party a suit should be directed.
    Campbell says he will pursue the matter in court if no progress is
    made.

    In an unrelated case, no word has been received on the status of
    the two rolls of film taken from a photographer working for the
    New York Times Magazine after he was seen on Freedom Ridge with a
    camera on March 23. [See DR#6.] It remains unclear at the
    writing whether the rolls relinquished actually contained any
    pictures or whether the photographer or his employer will choose
    to pursue the case.

    ===== SUBSCRIPTION INFO =====

    This special issue of the Groom Lake Desert Rat may be freely
    reproduced without restriction.

    For more information, contact psychospy@aol.com or call 702-729-
    2648. (Email is preferred for non-urgent messages.)

    To subscribe to this free on-line newsletter, send an email
    message to psychoserv@aol.com (not psychospy). Hard copy
    subscriptions by regular mail are also available for $1.50 per
    issue (or $15 for
    the next 10 issues) from: Glenn Campbell, HCR
    Box 38, Rachel, NV 89001.

    #####

    Seth,
    telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23
    http://ricksbbs.synchro.net:8080
    ---
    ■ Synchronet ■ Rick's BBS telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23
  • From Seth Able@RICKSBBS to all on Wed Dec 11 09:45:00 2024
    The Groom Lake Desert Rat Issue #10 Uploaded here with the permission of the author Glenn Campbell.

    Up loaded by Michael Curta Colorado MUFON

    THE GROOM LAKE DESERT RAT. An On-Line Newsletter.
    Issue #10. July 5, 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...
    MEDIA COMMUNICATIONS 101

    [Note: This file ends with "#####". Check for truncation.]

    ----- MEDIA COMMUNICATIONS 101 -----

    OR "HOW I LEARNED TO STOP WORRYING AND LOVE 'ENCOUNTERS'"

    People often ask us: "Psychospy, you've been interviewed by every
    major TV network, several national magazines and a dozen local
    news outlets. What's it like being a big-time media schmuck?"

    Some readers may be frustrated that they have yet to receive their
    own fifteen minutes of fame while Psychospy has monopolized what
    seems like an hour and a half. Fame is easy, we contend. Just
    find yourself a Cold War military base the government won't admit,
    set up permanent residence beside it and write a tourist guide
    inviting the world to visit. The government will expend great
    energy in stonewalling you or overreacting to your presence, and
    you will feed off that energy to generate still more attention.
    Soon, many reporters will arrive, and your face and name will be
    everywhere.

    Follow those simple instructions and your fifteen minutes will
    come. Guaranteed. In the meantime, we would like to brief you on
    what to expect when you arrive at the top. As an aging veteran of
    over six months of interviews, Psychospy knows what it takes to
    generate a sound bite or pose dramatically on a mountaintop. As
    our own media career winds down toward inevitable has-been status,
    we want to share with the next generation our accumulated wisdom
    and our philosophical musings on news and how it is reported.

    ----- PRINT MEDIA -----

    As editor of the Rat and other publications, Psychospy has long
    been familiar with the medium of print. When you read a newspaper
    or magazine article, you can never be certain the writer is
    telling the truth or has just made the whole thing up, but if you
    do trust his honesty, print can convey a lot of information.
    Print is a medium of ideas. It is not very efficient in conveying
    emotions or the visual appearance of a scene, but it can describe
    complex issues and hidden connections more clearly than television
    can.

    When a newspaper reporter visits you at your research center near
    your chosen secret base, he comes with no tools except his notepad
    and perhaps a tape recorder. Sometimes he brings a photographer,
    who just sits quietly in the background most of the time. After
    talking with a newspaper reporter for a while, it's easy to forget
    that he is one of "them" and you may quickly revert to your
    natural, unrehearsed self. Of course, this can be dangerous,
    because once you relax you may say something casually that you
    would rather not see in print. You must be particularly
    circumspect about the topic of UFOs; no matter what you say on
    this subject, one group or another of your supporters is bound to
    be upset. Sometimes, the reporter may ask you if he can contact
    your parents back in Boston to see what kind of boy you were and
    ask what they think of you now. At this point, you have to draw
    the line.

    When the article reaches print, some inaccuracies and omissions
    are inevitable. Due to length restrictions, the article will be,
    at best, a highly distilled record of a very narrow slice of
    reality. The words will not convey the full depth and breadth of
    your personality; they will portray only your social role. To
    crystallize the issues that you want reported, it is important to
    say you represent an impressive sounding organization, even if you
    are its only active member. Give yourself a title, like
    "President" or "Research Director," and that is how you will be
    reported. Even if you choose to be only a "Local Representative,"
    do not be surprised if the article portrays you as the sort of
    heroic, larger-than-life figure that is normally seen only in
    comic books. This sometimes fawning attention results in part
    from the refusal of the military to respond to the charges and
    provide any counterpoint to your own one-sided story.

    ----- TALK RADIO -----

    In the course of the current Media Feeding Frenzy, Psychospy has
    had an opportunity to participate in a number of talk radio
    programs around the country. There are dozens of these shows in
    every major city and they are constantly on the prowl for new
    material. If your name appears in the newspapers in any almost
    any capacity, chances are a host will call you up and ask you to
    be a guest on his show.

    Radio talk shows are usually conducted live by telephone from the
    comfort of your own home. It is hard to embarrass yourself or do
    anything wrong on them, because no matter what you blurt out, some
    callers will make you look good by saying something even more
    foolish. Radio talk shows are perhaps the most revealing medium
    because you never know what questions are going to be thrown at
    you. Many callers will be hostile to your position, and being
    able to respond to them calmly and rationally greatly enhances
    your credibility with everyone else.

    ----- TELEVISION -----

    On the surface, television seems like the most "real" news medium.
    Television doesn't just report an event; it takes you there. Not
    only do you hear the subject's words; you see his surroundings,
    feel his emotions and seem to be participating in his life in an
    intimate way. In one sense, television doesn't lie. Unless the
    picture has been doctored by special effects--which is forbidden--
    what you would see in person is exactly what appears on the
    nightly news.

    In another sense, television can tell as many lies as print can.
    There are two important factors that aren't obvious on the screen
    that can transform the story into total fiction. One is editing.
    A crew can shoot an hour's worth of tape of a speech or interview,
    but due to the time constraints of broadcasting, only a few
    seconds of it is likely to air. For the person being interviewed,
    the benefit of editing is that you can muff your lines repeatedly
    and only your best ones will be used. Even if you are a babbling
    idiot, the show can make you look infinitely wise by editing out
    most of your drivel. The downside is that it is also easy for the
    editor to take your quotes out of context and make you seem to be
    saying something you never intended. A classic case is that of a
    local Sheriff's deputy who was once interviewed near the Black
    Mailbox by a crew doing a UFO story. His actual quote was
    something like: "I've seen the sky alive with activity--flares,
    dogfights, bombing runs--but everything I've seen is routine
    military maneuvers."

    The quote that actually aired was missing all the qualifiers. It
    was something like: "I've seen the sky alive with activity..."
    In the context of the show, the truncated quote implied that the
    policeman believes in UFOs and sees them here all the time.

    The other invisible factor influencing the story is the presence
    of the camera itself. When a print reporter hangs around for a
    while, it is easy to forget he is reporting on you, and you soon
    return to your natural behavior. A television camera is
    impossible to ignore. It is big and the lens is often just a few
    inches from your face. Nothing can really be natural as long as
    the camera is present. Due to the constraints of lighting and
    space, you can't do much of anything the way you normally do.
    Often, the cameraman offers "suggestions" about where to stand and
    which way to look as you go about your "natural" activities.

    As a transitional element in the story, you may be asked to drive
    up in your car and walk into your research center--and do it
    repeatedly until it comes out right. Most scenes of moving from
    place to place and performing routine actions are timed for the
    camera. The cameraman sets up first and then tells you when to
    go. The only rule that most reputable organizations observe is
    that they can't tell you to do something you wouldn't do normally.
    Sometimes, they'll ask you to repeat an action several times, but
    they want it to be consistent with your real personality and with
    what you would do if the camera wasn't there. Of course, they can
    only take your word about what your real actions would be. The
    charge of "staging" a scene usually makes cameramen bristle.
    They'll admit to doing it for routine movements but insist they
    wouldn't do it for anything important. Unfortunately, what
    constitutes an "important" action that shouldn't be staged varies
    from crew to crew.

    ----- THE STRUCTURE OF TELEVISION -----

    The crew for a local television station usually consists of just
    two people: the reporter and the cameraman. Their function is
    straightforward: The reporter collects the facts and asks the
    questions, and the cameraman handles the camera and sound.

    A network TV crew usually adds at least two more people: a sound
    technician and a producer. There can also be others: production
    assistants, writers, maybe even a second cameraman and sound guy.
    At that point, it's hard to call the story news anymore. It's
    show biz.

    In a national news program, the reporter is called a
    "correspondent." This is the person talking into the camera and
    interviewing the subjects. The viewer would think, when watching
    the report, that the correspondent is the person in charge. He
    must be the one who conducts the research, sets up the interviews,
    rakes the muck and comes up with the startling conclusions
    reported in the piece.

    Wrong. In most cases, the correspondent joins the story only on
    the day of the shoot. The correspondent is the high paid
    "talent," hired as much for his screen presence as his reporting
    skills. The person who really assembles the story is the
    producer. He or she rarely appears on camera but could have been
    working on the story for weeks. The producer does the research,
    handles the logistics and briefs the talent. When the
    correspondent conducts an interview, the producer is usually
    lurking just off camera to feed him questions and make sure he
    hasn't forgotten anything. When it comes time to do a "stand up,"
    where the correspondent talks into the camera, he first huddles
    with the producer to decide what to say.

    One news program, like "60 Minutes," can have many producers, each
    working on a different story. The business is highly competitive,
    and enemies are everywhere. The opposition is "PrimeTime Live"
    and "20/20," but each producer is also competing with others on
    the same show and within the same network to get their story on
    the air. Whenever a new producer calls us about the Groom Lake
    story, the first thing we have to do is brief them on who else in
    their own organization has already been looking into it; otherwise
    they might never know.

    We get the impression that the news business regards producers as
    expendable and eats them alive in mass quantities. The only time
    you see a producer on screen seems to be when he or she is
    carrying a hidden camera into a crack house or some other
    dangerous place where they would never send Mike Wallace. Many of
    the producers we have met have been young, idealistic former film
    or political science students willing to work 14 hour days for
    what we suspect is a lot less money than they deserve.

    The correspondent lives more in the show business sphere. His pay
    may be negotiated by an agent, and it is more likely to be based
    on the star system than objective abilities. Networks want a
    familiar face that the viewer can bond with, in essence creating
    brand loyalty. Many people feel attached to Hugh Downes and
    Barbara Walters and the nice correspondents on their show and will
    tune in on these familiar faces even if they have nothing to do
    with producing the stories. Many correspondents are highly
    professional, do their homework, ask good questions and deserve at
    least some of their rewards. A few others are whiny prima donnas
    who haven't a clue as to what the story is and who are despised
    even by their own film crews. Nonetheless, the unbroken rule is,
    the correspondent has to look good--smart, tough, insightful--and
    through the magic of editing, it always comes to pass.

    When the correspondent arrives for the interview, you are supposed
    to bond with him like he's your old buddy even though you've
    already bonded with the producer and don't know this guy from
    Adam. You are supposed to pretend there is no one else in the
    room. The big camera, the bright lights, the microphone on a boom
    floating six inches above your head, the half dozen people lurking
    behind the cordon of cables.... Like the secret base itself, they
    all are not supposed to exist.

    In practice, though, focusing on the correspondent makes the
    interview relatively easy. You do forget the camera with time,
    and you don't have to remember any lines, just respond to the
    questions. You know that the interview will be edited down to a
    couple of sound bites, so verbal stumblings aren't a problem. You
    are not going to be able to cover any complex issues here because,
    of course, this is television. Your only job is to provide an
    inventory of pithy, self-contained statements--a sound bite
    library--to be chopped up and used as fodder for the editing
    process.

    As long as you stick to the facts and pick the right secret base
    to complain about, you can't go wrong. Editing will make you look
    good, and as long as the military declines to respond, the report
    will be supportive. The limelight will be all yours until the
    public grows tired of your story and spits you out like used
    chewing gum.

    ----- AN "ENCOUNTERS" ENCOUNTER -----

    After the article on Groom Lake appeared in the New York Times
    last week [Synopsis in next DR.], we felt that an apex had been
    reached and now was time for the story to evolve into something
    different. We wanted the focus to shift to Washington and to
    serious issues like the hazardous waste injury lawsuit. We feared
    that after hitting the Times, there was no place to go but down.
    We felt the Watchers-on-Freedom-Ridge story had achieved
    saturation in all the respectable markets. We almost wished that
    the government would just take the damn land and be done with it.

    The MFF was becoming tiresome, and we wanted to put on the brakes,
    but that was easier said than done. The Times story itself
    generated additional media interest. On Monday, we got a call
    from ARD German television. Germans, we were told, have a special
    interest in Cold War relics, and our secret base reminded them of
    how they used to be. Their film crew came a few days later, and
    we were happy to cooperate with them. (Aired 7/4.)

    On Tuesday, we got a call from a new Fox UFO/paranormal series
    called "Encounters." They had talked to us in previous weeks
    about doing a segment on Area 51, but the project did not interest
    the Fox executives and was shelved. When the Times story hit, it
    rose again from the dead, this time on a fast track schedule.

    Upon hanging up the phone, we were filled the same feelings of
    dread and foreboding we last experienced several months previous
    when a reporter and his psychic from the "Weekly World News" came
    to town in a white limousine. (Yes, we were as surprised as you
    are: They DO have reporters who actually leave the office.) In
    that case, we were able to hide under our bed until the limo left
    town. When the story hit the streets ("SPACE ALIENS HANG OUT AT
    NEVADA BAR"), we were elated to find ourselves not in it.

    It was harder to hide from "Encounters." At the time of the phone
    call, only two episodes had been aired, but we already knew their
    style. A stern anchorman introduced slickly produced segments on
    an ominous government conspiracy to keep UFO information from the
    public. While we are as interested in UFOs and government secrets
    as anyone, we felt that "Encounters" was more fiction than news.
    Our main objection was the unscrupulous editing. Interviews and
    footage from unrelated UFO cases were meshed together as though
    they were from the same case. Sound bites from credible UFO
    researchers were interspersed with those of hucksters we have met
    personally and regard as completely unreliable. The production
    was breathlessly paced, visually compelling and overlaid with a
    sinister soundtrack, but after watching each segment, we felt that
    no reliable information had been conveyed and no real
    investigation had taken place.

    We had also been interviewed in January for the "Encounters"
    pilot. They really wanted underground alien bases. "Proof"
    wasn't necessary; all they needed was anecdotes. We sensed that
    simply the fact that somebody had said something was enough to put
    the claim on the air. Evidently, we did not provide the quotes
    they wanted, because none of our interview made the cut. Only our
    hands were seen opening a road sensor.

    Now, they were baaaack, like the unkillable monster of a "B"
    movie, and they wanted to interview us again. We spent a
    sleepless night or two trying to figure out what to do. We
    finally decided that our participation would probably do no
    lasting harm. We would stick with the script we were comfortable
    with--on the land grab and perils of government secrecy--and let
    others speak about UFOs.

    The "Encounters" expedition was lead by "Agent X", a frequent
    visitor to the area whose real identity is no more secret than
    Psychospy's. X readily admits to being "shameless" with regards
    to publicity, but his claims about Area 51 are relatively
    rational. He does not predict earthquakes, heal the sick or claim
    any psychic communication with the aliens. X is the sort of
    powerful screen presence we feel honored to hide behind.

    Agent X escorted the "Encounters" crew to the top of Freedom Ridge
    on Friday night (7/1), while Psychospy was at home and sound
    asleep. Through the magic of editing, however, Psychospy will
    become part of this expedition on the small screen, along with the
    "Encounters" correspondent who wasn't there either. In industry
    parlance, this story was shot "out of sequence." First, they
    filmed the scene on Freedom Ridge, then, on a different night at a
    location many miles away, they shot an imaginary hike to the top.
    Later, back in Las Vegas, they would shoot the correspondent
    meeting Agent X to prepare for the expedition that had already
    taken place.

    As X put it: "They're even more shameless than I am."

    On Saturday afternoon, the correspondent arrived in Rachel in a
    white limousine, the first one we've seen in town since the
    "Weekly World News." He was supposed to be here in the morning,
    but his driver took a wrong turn, and they ended up taking the
    LONG way from Vegas, through Beatty and Tonopah, a six hour drive
    instead of two and a half.

    After the correspondent arrived, Psychospy participated in two of
    the location shoots: "Rachel Departure" and "Base Camp". In
    Rachel, the crew energetically loaded their equipment cases onto
    the top of the four wheel drive vehicles and lashed them down
    while the camera rolled. The idea was to convey the appearance of
    a very serious and professional "Encounters" expedition just
    getting under way. It was the mythical start of our journey to
    Freedom Ridge, which had actually been conquered the night before.
    We did three takes of the convoy turning onto the highway and
    heading out of town, Then we returned to Rachel, gassed up, had
    some snacks, and REALLY left town with no camera running.

    We didn't go to Freedom Ridge but to a location near Hancock
    Summit that was closer to the highway and judged more visually
    interesting. Here, we set up a "base camp" for our imaginary
    hike. We propped up some camouflage netting in a tent-like
    structure, built a campfire and stacked our equipment cases in an impressive-looking configuration. The sole purpose of this
    exercise was to provide an out-of-focus backdrop for the
    correspondent's interview with Agent X. Psychospy and three
    members of the seven-man crew served as extras for this scene.
    Our job was to move around the campsite doing serious and
    purposeful looking things. We moved cases around and pointed at
    maps as though planning our next move. At one point, Psychospy
    walked around with a clipboard and pretended to take inventory, an
    action that has always impressed us on TV.

    After the interview had ended and dusk was falling, we commenced
    our "hike". In several takes, X, the correspondent and we four
    extras, marched up a nearby hillside in tight single file,
    deliberately taking the most rugged route. We marched down again,
    then up again, then down again, and during each leg of the journey
    the director actually said "Action" and "Cut." At one point,
    Psychospy was asked to stand on a ridge, silhouetted by the
    setting sun, and look through his binoculars at an empty sky.
    It's the sort of dramatic posturing we do so well.

    Lest you ask, there is no reason at all to hike to Freedom Ridge
    if you have a four wheel drive. The road goes all the way to the
    top, and this is indeed how the crew got there when they visited
    on Friday night. There is also no particular reason to set up a
    "base camp" when Rachel is less than an hour's drive away. Hiking
    seems much more dramatic, however, and our camouflage tent, no
    matter how shoddily constructed, made an impressive looking
    backdrop.

    After darkness fell, the night vision lens was attached to the
    camera, and we climbed the hill yet again to film our arrival at
    "Freedom Ridge." We stood on a rocky outcropping and X pointed
    out to the correspondent the features of the base below. Of
    course, we were looking only a blank hillside--a TRULY nonexistent
    base--but the magic of editing will fix all that. At one point,
    Psychospy was invited to point out the locations of the
    nonexistent security patrols. We politely declined this
    opportunity and passed it to the shameless X. We were happy
    enough to be a extra in this drama; something told us we didn't
    want a speaking role.

    At the time of filming, the "Encounters" segment was expected to
    air on July 15. Check it out.

    ----- INTEL BITTIES -----

    TRESPASSER TRIAL DATE. The oft-delayed trial of the four of seven
    accused trespassers is now scheduled for July 6 at 1 pm at Alamo
    Justice Court. (The June date was canceled when one of the
    defendants was hospitalized.) Best to confirm with Psychospy or
    call the court before you show up.

    ===== SUBSCRIPTION AND COPYRIGHT INFO =====

    (c) Glenn Campbell, 1994. (psychospy@aol.com)

    This newsletter is copyrighted and may not be reproduced without
    permission, EXCEPT FOR THE FOLLOWING: For one year following the
    date of publication, you may photocopy the 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 any internet user. To subscribe (or unsubscribe), send
    a message to psychospy@aol.com.

    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

    #####


    Seth,
    telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23
    http://ricksbbs.synchro.net:8080
    ---
    ■ Synchronet ■ Rick's BBS telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23
  • From Seth Able@RICKSBBS to all on Wed Dec 11 09:48:00 2024
    The Groom Lake Desert Rat Issue 17 is posted here with the permission of the Author, Glenn Campbell

    Posted by: Michael Curta, Colorado MUFON

    NOTE: This Issue of the Rat was in two parts, it has been merged into one for convenience.


    THE GROOM LAKE DESERT RAT. An On-Line Newsletter.
    Issue #17. October 13, 1994.
    -----> "The Naked Truth from Open Sources." <-----
    AREA 51/NELLIS RANGE/TTR/NTS/S-4?/WEIRD STUFF/DESERT LORE
    Direct from the "UFO Capital," Rachel, Nevada.
    Written, published, copyrighted and totally disavowed by
    psychospy@aol.com. See bottom for subscription/copyright info.

    In this issue...
    SENSOR WARS
    A JOURNALIST REPLIES
    GROOM LAKE "FAN MAN" SAILS TOWARD BASE
    INTEL BITTIES

    [Note: This issue has been sent in two parts. The first ends with
    a "CONTINUED" notice and the second ends with "###".]

    ----- SENSOR WARS -----

    In DR#3, we reported the existence of a number of road sensors on
    public land near the outer perimeter of the Groom Lake base. Each
    apparatus consists of two canisters about the size of soft drink
    cans buried about fifteen feet apart beside the road (magnetic
    detectors). These are wired to a transmitter about the size of a
    gallon paint can half-buried behind a bush. The unit is powered
    by batteries housed an ammo can sitting beside the transmitter.
    At one point, we counted twenty of these on public land, extending
    up to seven miles from the border.

    The sensors upset us because they suggest that the military, not
    BLM, is in practical control of this land. If you trip a sensor,
    within a few minutes an anonymous security patrol will appear.
    Your license plates will be recorded and relayed to the
    nonexistent base. If you deviate from the expected path to
    Freedom Ridge, a patrol will actively shadow you and won't let you
    out of it's sight until you return to the paved highway. If you
    happen to show up at an inconvenient time, the non-accountable
    patrols may even block your access to this public land, as
    reported in DR#9.

    At the least, the sensors represent bad public relations. They
    convey the message that no matter how much land the military has,
    they will always seek to control even more. Every military
    perimeter needs a buffer zone to protect it, then another buffer
    zone to protect THAT perimeter, and so on. In fact, the Groom
    Mountain Range was taken in the 1980s for no other purpose that to
    provide an unused buffer zone. If you cross the border in the
    vicinity of Freedom Ridge, you still have to traverse at least
    seven miles of empty sagebrush before you come to the border of
    "Area 51." The sensor network essentially turns public land into
    a buffer zone for that buffer zone.

    No one objects to the military installing sensors within the areas
    they legally control. The military has a right to detect when
    people actually intrude onto their land, but collecting
    information on the whereabouts and identity people who have NOT
    intruded is different. That is purely an intelligence function.
    Is domestic surveillance part of the military's charter? When the
    entity collecting the intelligence is in itself unacknowledged,
    the potentials for abuse are great. Where is this intelligence
    being sent? Will it be passed to the FBI, NSA or some other
    intelligence agency? Will people whose vehicles are seen near the
    border be flagged as "suspect citizens" and watched more closely
    for un-American activities? It may sound far-fetched, but when
    the data collecting apparatus is entirely anonymous and no one can
    be held accountable for abuses, then there is no telling how the
    information may be used.

    Such a discussion about whether the sensors are legal and proper
    has been largely academic until now. Although we are opposed to
    them on philosophical grounds, as a practical matter we know where
    they are and how to disable them. You can pull the power plug
    before you pass and reconnect it after you leave. When television
    crews visit, the sensors provide an irresistible visual
    illustration of Big Brother at work. We express our theatrical
    outrage into the camera as we point out the transmitter hiding
    behind the bush. Until now, we've been happy with the status quo.
    We wouldn't want to remove a sensor because, for one thing, we
    have already carefully mapped them, and removing one would mean
    that a new one would show up somewhere else and we would have to
    change are maps accordingly.

    ..... MYSTERIOUS DISAPPEARANCES .....

    A few days ago, on Oct. 5, we were out in the field with a crew
    from yet another TV affiliate. Part of our shtick as we are
    driving the press to Freedom Ridge is to use our radio equipment
    to detect a sensor, then get out of the car with camera in tow to
    look for it. On cue, we convey our sentiments: Look, it's a
    sensor ON PUBLIC LAND! It means THEY KNOW WE ARE COMING and we're
    going to be shadowed by ANONYMOUS SECURITY GUARDS IN WHITE JEEP
    CHEROKEES. This sensor is an offense to our FREEDOM, PRIVACY AND
    PEACE OF MIND. It makes us feel so... so... VIOLATED!

    Of course the exercise is totally staged, because we already know
    where the sensors are and when to tell the cameraman to start
    rolling. Often we give our radio equipment to the reporter
    sitting beside us so that he'll have the satisfaction of saying,
    "There it is!"

    ....So we're cruising down the dirt road toward Roadblock Canyon
    with the TV cameraman in the back seat and the reporter in the
    front. Suddenly, we stop the car, close our eyes, open them again
    and announce our remarkable clairvoyant intuition: "Sensor ahead."
    We give the scanner to the reporter and tell him to yell out when
    "496.25" shows up on the screen. With the camera rolling, we
    start driving again, past a sensor we have already mapped and
    identified as number 810.

    Nothing happens.

    We back up, drive forward again. Still nothing. Okay, so
    clairvoyance is never perfect. If we were alone, we would get out
    and checked the bushes, but the crew has a deadline to meet. We
    tell the cameraman to stand by because we know there are other
    sensors on this road: five altogether. About a mile further down
    the road we pass the prior location of sensor 811. The camera is
    running, but still no response on the scanner. Now we are
    beginning to sweat and wonder if we will ever have a chance to
    express our outrage. We have the reporter look at the frequency
    counter instead of the scanner as we back up and pass over the
    site again. Nada.

    We drive ahead, and get no response at the presumed locations of
    812 and 813. By this time, the exercise is getting tired.
    Psychospy has cried wolf once too often, and the camera doesn't
    roll when we announce a possible sensor. We start feeling a bit
    depressed and wonder if maybe the military had taken them all
    away, just like the very photogenic "No Photography" signs they
    removed after the KNBC fiasco (DR #15). The sensors are part of
    our dog and pony show. Since the base itself is relatively
    static, most crews decline even to shoot it. (Most now rely on
    still photos or stock footage borrowed from other stations.) The
    only reason to go into the field now is to catch shots of the
    ominous Cammo Dudes sitting on a hill, the sinister "Use of Deadly
    Force Authorized" signs, the mysterious "black" helicopter and the
    ubiquitous sensors hiding behind bushes miles from the border.
    Take away these things, and for a visual medium like television
    THERE IS NO STORY.

    Could the military have suddenly gotten smart?

    ..... WHAT HAPPENED? .....

    After passing through the infamous "Sensor Alley" to Freedom Ridge
    with nary a blip on the screen, we theorized that someone at a
    high level in the Air Force saw the Larry King TV special on Oct.
    1. In it, the sensors were mentioned, and we figured that a
    member of the brass with some P.R. sense had seen it and conveyed
    a message down the chain of command that sensors on public land
    aren't terribly prudent. Even without the sensors, there are so
    many patrols in the field now that it seems highly unlikely that a
    vehicle could slip into the area undetected. Instead of
    protecting the border, the sensors were drawing people to it.
    They were among the props that made Freedom Ridge the sort of
    irresistible adventure destination that cannot help but attract already-seen-it-all tourists.

    We surmised that the orders had to come from a high level because
    the local command structure has always seemed crippled and
    incapable of changing with the times. The local Dudes seem
    trapped by their own antiquated rules, still fighting a heavy-
    handed battle with Soviet spies and not the subtle P.R. challenges
    of the 90's. Change, if it happens, has to come from above;
    otherwise, the organization marches ahead in robot mode and
    repeatedly shoots itself in the foot whenever given the opportunity.

    Although we felt depressed about losing our props, removing the
    sensors was the right thing for the military to do. We thought it
    indicated a glimmer of intelligence and hope at the top of the
    command structure.

    But we were wrong.

    ..... A VISIT FROM THE LAW .....

    The day after the TV crew visited, two sheriff's deputies dropped
    in to see us at our Research Center. They were Undersheriff Gary
    Davis and Lieutenant Richard Triplett. They said they were
    investigating the disappearance of eight road sensors reported
    AWOL by the Air Force.

    They wanted to know if we knew who had taken them. We said we
    didn't, and that's the truth.

    The deputies mentioned that Sergeant Lamoreaux had visited our
    office on an earlier occasion, seeking information on who might
    have run down a cow near the Black Mailbox. In the course of his
    visit, we might have shown Sergeant Lamoreaux the detector unit we
    had found in the middle of a road over a year ago. This was one
    of the soft-drink-sized canisters, made from standard PVC pipe,
    containing a coil and some primitive electronics. The wires
    leading out of the unit were frayed and chewed up, as though a
    coyote had gnawed on it and maybe pulled it from the ground. At
    the time we discovered the unit, we weren't sure what it was.
    There was a manufacturer's name on it, but no indication that it
    was government property. Subsequent examination of the inner
    electronics gave us the clues we needed to find a complete
    apparatus. A friend of ours stumbled upon the first one. By
    driving past it repeatedly and analyzing the output, we found the
    radio techniques we needed to discover the rest.

    The two officers asked us if they could see the detector unit we
    showed to Sergeant Lamoreaux. We pointed to it sitting on the
    table beside them. It was a popular item at our Research Center,
    and we did not hesitate to show it to visitors. As reported in
    our Viewer's Guide, we considered it abandoned property and would
    be happy to return it to anyone who can prove ownership.

    We opened the unit and explained to the officers how it worked.
    The officers said that the detector unit we held in our hands was
    worth $1000. We laughed at that one. We said that it was
    possible that the entire apparatus, including transmitter and
    battery, might have cost the military $1000 at very inflated
    contractor prices. We were not talking high tech. The detector
    unit was composed of off-the-shelf electronic components
    performing a very simple function: to receive the electric current
    produced by a big piece of metal--a car--passing by a coil,
    amplify the signal and pass an impulse along to the equally
    rudimentary transmitter. Any knowledgeable hobbyist should be
    able to reproduce the functions of the detector with about $20
    worth of overpriced parts from Radio Shack.

    The officers insisted that the sensor unit alone cost the
    government $1000, while the transmitter was valued at $4000.
    That's a total cost to the taxpayer of $6000, batteries not
    included. The officers told us, very politely, that any theft of
    government property worth more than $250 was a felony. For
    example, theft or possession of one of these detector units that
    we now held in our hands was punishable by one to four years in prison.

    Just then we felt something go "clunk" in our digestive tract. In
    an instantaneous clairvoyant revelation, we saw where things were
    leading.

    They were out to nail Psychospy.

    ..... HOW TO NEUTRALIZE AN IRRITANT .....

    People have often asked us if, as the military's chief irritant
    here, we have ever suffered any threats or retribution for our
    activism. Alas, we have had nothing sinister to report. Once,
    our home was visited by mysterious Men in Black (DR#1), but they
    turned out to be Jehovah's Witnesses. On many occasions near the
    border, we have been deliberately buzzed at very close range by
    the big Blackhawk helicopter, no identifying numbers, in direct
    violation of the Air Force's own regulations on clearance
    distances. We were outraged, of course, but wouldn't miss it for
    the world. Recently, we were arrested for apparently interfering
    with the warrantless seizure of a news crew's video tape. We'll
    fight it all the way to the Supreme Court if necessary, but even
    if we lose the fine probably won't be more than a couple hundred
    dollars--well worth the price in entertainment and political
    value, we'd say.

    People warn us, "Be careful. If they want to get you, they will."
    We have always taken these warnings lightly. All we need to do to
    protect ourselves, we reply to our advisors, is remain pure of
    heart and clean of spirit, be honest, open and honorable at all
    times and the goons can't touch us. Oh, naivete! As we talked to
    the officers with a thousand dollar piece of junk in our hands, we
    were feeling a wee bit vulnerable. We saw, in our clairvoyant
    vision, that if "they" ever wanted to get us, this is how they'd
    do it. They'd look around for opportunities and strike us
    wherever we were exposed.

    Officer Triplett said that he was not going to read us our Miranda
    rights because we were not under arrest. We were just having a
    friendly conversation. Nonetheless, he wanted us to know that
    what we said could be used against us in court. He was going to
    ask us a series of questions, and we had the right not to answer
    if we so chose. However, if we did choose to respond, and that
    answer turned out to be a lie, it could be a bad for us in the
    future. Officer Triplett asked us if we understood what he had
    just said, and we replied that we did.

    What followed was a game of "I've Got a Secret." The officers
    asked us questions, and we replied with "Yes," "No" or "I'm sorry,
    but I'd really rather not answer that." The tone was cordial
    throughout our chat, and we had a chance to give each question
    careful thought before replying. We do not recall the exact
    sequence of the questions, but what follows is the gist....

    The officers asked us if we had any sensors in our possession,
    other than the piece we held in our hands.

    We said, "No."

    They asked us if we knew who had taken the sensors.

    We voiced our theory that the sensors were stolen by mice. We
    explained to the officers that when the mice come to see Groom
    Lake, they often want to take a souvenir back home with them. The
    sensors are convenient and easy to find now that we have published
    the frequency and told the world how to locate them with any off-
    the-shelf scanner (DR#15). The sensors are a compelling symbol of
    authority, as irresistible to purloin as the Restricted Area
    signs. Because they are farther from the border than the signs,
    sitting all by their lonesomes in the desert, the mice find them
    easier to snag.

    The officers asked us if we knew any of these mice personally.

    We said that we knew a few adventurous rodents who might do that
    sort of thing. We said that we had no specific evidence, however.
    We suggested that the sensors were probably taken independently by
    a number of different mice rather than in a concerted effort by
    one or two.

    The officers asked us if we had ever HAD a detector unit in our
    possession, other than the one we held in our hands.

    We thought about it carefully and replied that we preferred not to
    answer that question.

    The officers asked us if we had ever had one of those $4000
    transmitters in our possession.

    Again, we replied, thoughtfully, that we preferred not to answer
    the question.

    The officers asked us if we had ever had a battery in our possession.

    We replied proudly and unequivocally, "No." We have never had a
    battery in our possession.

    In very hypothetical terms, we recounted for the officers a bit of
    history. There was a time, many moons ago, when the Air Force
    refused to acknowledge that it had any sensors on public land.
    The nonexistent secret base guarded by nonexistent Cammo Dudes was
    also protected by nonexistent road sensors. BLM, the custodian of
    the lands on which the sensors are buried, had no knowledge of
    them either until a reporter we talked to inquired. A BLM ranger
    had to dig one up himself and present it to the Air Force before
    the AF admitted anything.

    We explained to the officers, strictly hypothetically, that prior
    to the AF admission, the status of the sensors was very vague. If
    one happened to stumble upon one of these orphaned items in the
    desert, it would peak ones curiosity, would it not? If no one
    admitted to owning them, they would seem like abandoned property,
    like any of the dozen crashed jets or practice bombs found
    littering the area. Unable to obtain any official information
    about what this strange apparatus was or who might have left it
    behind, a curious individual might be tempted to take one home to
    examine. Hypothetically, one might want to dissect it to find out
    how it works. That sort of information might help lead one to the
    owner, to whom, of course, one would want to return it immediately
    if they could prove it is theirs.

    We explained to the officers that after the Air Force conceded
    that it did have sensors on public land, the situation would have
    changed. One would not want to have any such apparatus in ones
    possession. To any person or organization who had become a
    painful thorn in the side of both the military and the Sheriff's
    Dept., possessing any such hardware could be a very dangerous
    liability, could it not?

    In an embarassing breach of etiquette in our otherwise polite and
    hypothetical conversation, Undersheriff Davis blurted out, "So who
    did you give the sensor to?"

    We looked mystified. "Sensor? What sensor?"

    We reiterated that we had no sensors in our possession and did not
    know which rodent was responsible for the current wave of sensor-
    nappings. We liked the sensors just the way they were. They were
    part of our act for the TV cameras. Why would we want to mess up
    a good thing?

    Undersheriff Davis, in another faux pas, asked if they could
    search our Research Center for sensors. We thought about it a
    moment then politely declined. We said that it was a matter of
    principal. Although we did not have any sensors or other
    contraband in our possession, we did not know if there was
    anything else in our Research Center that might be construed
    against us. We could not think of anything specifically, but we
    liked our privacy and would feel more comfortable if the premises
    were not searched.

    The officers said that they would have to confiscate the one
    detector unit we had found in the road. We expressed our dismay,
    since it had no government markings, was found abandoned in the
    road where any passing patrol could have picked it up and was
    discovered before we had any idea what it was. Nonetheless, the
    officers insisted that we knew that it belonged to the government.
    They said that the responsibility would be the government's to
    prove it was theirs, and if they could not do so, then it was
    possible it would be returned to us. (Fat chance, we thought....
    Just like those dozens of rolls of film taken from visitors with
    the promise of "free developing.")

    The officers gave us a receipt for the detector. They agreed that
    we had been courteous and helpful. They said that they would go
    to their Rachel substation (a rarely-used building a block away)
    to talk it over and would come back to us if they had any further
    questions.

    ..... CUTTING A DEAL .....

    The officers returned about fifteen minutes later. They said they
    had been talking on the phone to the Sheriff but that they had not
    yet contacted the Air Force, who they had been cooperating with in
    this investigation. The information and offer that Officer
    Triplett subsequently made to us we assume had the direct approval
    of the Sheriff himself.

    First, Officer Triplett showed us a snapshot of a sensor and
    transmitter, apparently given to them by the Air Force. He said
    that he wanted to let us know, in a friendly sort of way, that
    they would be going door to door to all of our neighbors in Rachel
    to show them the picture and ask if anyone had ever seen us with
    such an apparatus or heard us talking about having one. They were
    not going to make any accusations, mind you, just have a friendly
    chat about us with every person in town.

    Then Deputy Triplett made us an offer. It was a friendly offer,
    based on the kind of deal, he said, that is often cut in drug
    cases. Triplett said that they already had "two or three good
    suspects" in the disappearance of the sensors. If these suspects
    were confronted with their crimes, there was a risk that they
    might "roll over" in exchange for more lenient treatment. In a
    drug case, this means that the addicts turn in the pushers; the
    pushers turn in the distributors, and the distributors turn in the
    Mafia dons that can't be convicted by any other means. Triplett
    said that, unfortunately, due to our prominent position, we were
    the party who the authorities would most want to convict. If the
    other suspects could implicate us in any way, then there would be
    no protection for us; we would have to suffer the full force of
    the law.

    On the other hand, if we chose to turn in those two or three
    suspects before they could turn in us, Officer Triplett could
    assure us that would not be prosecuted for any involvement in the crime.

    We politely declined this generous officer. We told the officers
    that we doubted anyone would implicate us because we were innocent
    of any involvement in the crime. It would also seem difficult for
    us to turn in the other suspects if we did not know who they were.
    Any possible mice we knew of were already far outside the
    jurisdiction of the Lincoln County Sheriff's Department.

    Our friendly conversation concluded, the officers proceeded to the
    door. We thanked Undersheriff Davis for his purchase: He bought
    a topographic map on which we had marked, at his request, the
    location where we had found the detector unit in the road. We
    suggested to the officers that the best way to prevent theft of
    sensors in the future was for us to publish an account of the
    officers' visit in our Desert Rat. We would warn the mice of the
    potential penalties--one to four years in mouse prison--and
    perhaps this would dissuade them. The officers agreed that this
    was a good idea.

    We walked the officers to the door and bid them a warm good-bye.


    ..... HULK REBORN .....

    At the time the officers parted, we felt nothing but respect and
    sympathy for these noble defenders of the law. The Air Force had
    made a complaint, and the Sheriff's Dept. felt obligated to
    investigate it. It can be difficult being stuck in the middle
    like that, but justice is blind, and these officers were doing
    their job as best they could.

    Psychospy is naturally a mild-mannered character. He is not given
    to anger or rash outbursts. He prides himself in being able to
    see both sides of every issue and in understanding the complex
    human motivations in every social interaction. There are no
    "good" or "bad" people, just people with different points of view.

    But even as we recited to ourselves these good and proper
    thoughts, we couldn't help but sense that something wasn't quite
    right. Inside, we felt a churning. A transformation. Our
    clothing felt too tight. There was a heaving in the chest. A
    change in skin tone. From deep within our gut, a horrible,
    wrenching impulse started making its way to the surface.

    We were getting pissed.

    The more we thought about what the officers said the more furious
    we became. We hadn't felt this way since we spent a January night
    outside the Lincoln County Detention Center waiting for the
    release of the seven accused trespassers (DR#1). No one in the
    Sheriff's Dept. would even confirm that the prisoners were being
    held, never mind their status, so we had no choice but to spend
    the night in our car in the parking lot, in sub-freezing
    temperatures, awaiting their release. When they were finally
    bailed out, at about 4 am, we were asleep and missed them.

    That's when the beast first emerged. A mild-mannered Bill Bixby
    was transformed, in a metaphysical sense, into a raging green
    Incredible Hulk. We were possessed by the irrational and
    uncontrollable urge to do grievous damage to the Lincoln County
    Sheriff's Dept.

    Nothing in the first part of our conversation with the two
    deputies bothered us. The officers had a job to do and conducted
    themselves professionally. What gnawed at us was what they said
    after coming back from talking to the Big Guy. Psychospy does not
    "roll over." We stand proud for our crimes and do not rat on
    others to reduce our own sentence. We remain pure of heart and
    honest and honorable in all of our actions, so if we are accused
    of anything, we will stand trial and exercise every one of the
    legal rights available to us. Psychospy is not your run-of-the-
    mill, sell-out-your-neighbor drug dealer. We do not cut deals.

    We're mad as hell and getting more livid as we speak. We
    recognize that there are a couple of issues that need to be
    addressed right away. One is the future of the Sheriff himself.
    He is up for reelection on Nov. 8, so now is the time to declare
    our allegiances. Another issue is the lingering problem of the
    road sensors, which we want to see removed from public land once
    and for all. If the military will not remove them willingly, then
    we predict no sensor will be safe from the mice.

    ..... A DESERT RAT POLITICAL ENDORSEMENT .....

    In the upcoming elections, the current Sheriff, Dahl Bradfield, is
    facing a credible outside challenger, Don Brown. Brown appears to
    be an experienced law enforcement officer, including two terms as
    a Sheriff in Washington State. We have met Mr. Brown and are
    impressed. We can't say that we know him very well, but two
    advantages overrule our unfamiliarity: (1) Brown has vowed to
    sever all ties with the Air Force, and (2) he is not Dahl Bradfield.

    After the KNBC video tape seizure, the Las Vegas Review-Journal
    printed an editorial cartoon (7/26) showing the stereotypical pot-
    bellied Sheriff with reflective glasses standing beside his squad
    car at the side of the highway. A road sign in front of him reads:

    Now Entering LINCOLN COUNTY, Nevada...
    NO Videotaping
    NO Trespassing
    NO Bill of Rights

    The more we know about Dahl, the more he seems to fit the
    stereotype.

    One misjudgment that continues to sour many voters is his
    orchestration of a removal campaign for a Lincoln County
    Commissioner, Floyd Lamb. Floyd is a cagey old politician and
    certainly no angel, but he was a strong leader who was willing to
    stand up to Dahl. Floyd was once a powerful state senator whose
    career ended when he was convicted in a bribery case; the voter's
    knew about his past when they elected him to the County
    Commission. Floyd's worst crime as commissioner, as far as we can
    fathom, is that he called Dahl a "liar" at a Commissioner's
    meeting and threatened to cut the Sheriff's Dept. budget. In a
    county with one of the largest per-capita police force in the
    country, the Sheriff's Dept. is entity to be feared. The age-old
    dilemma applies: When you live in a police state, who will
    protect you from the police? Signatures for Floyd's recall were
    collected chiefly by Sheriff's deputies and their spouses--the
    sort of obvious conflict of interest that never would have been
    tolerated in the big city. In the recall election, Floyd was
    defeated by a slim margin (making us feel guilty that we didn't
    get out and stump for him).

    We have met the Sheriff himself only in passing. We have never
    encountered him near the border of Area 51, only his deputies, but
    we see in their actions an absence of critical judgment from
    above. The compensation the Sheriff's Dept. receives from the Air
    Force is minor: They pay for one deputy and one car. Yet, when
    the Air Force calls, the Sheriff's Dept. always seems to jump-to.
    Contacts and agreements between the feds and the Dept. are secret,
    and until recently, the Dept. was deputizing members of the
    anonymous security force. When the military, through its own
    unwise decisions, places itself in an absurd and untenable
    position, the Sheriff seems willing to share those problems upon
    request, no matter how damaging to the department's credibility.

    Only now, as the election approaches, is the Dept. backing off.
    It may be too late! The worst political gaff you can commit in
    this county is to be seen as a stooge of the federal government.

    While we normally remain agnostic in political matters, we have
    seen enough questionable decisions by Sheriff Bradfield to draw us
    out of the closet. THE GROOM LAKE DESERT RAT ENDORSES DON F.
    BROWN FOR THE NEXT SHERIFF OF LINCOLN COUNTY.

    (Whoa! Bradfield must be quaking in his boots now!)

    ..... THE SENSORS MUST GO! .....

    The sensors themselves have become a symbol of paranoia, security
    overkill and government inefficiency. At $6000 per assembly, they
    could easily be equated with the $500 screwdrivers and $1000
    toilet seats the military is known for. Anyone who seriously
    wants to evade the sensors can do it; the only people who trip
    them are casual tourists and those who deliberately WANT to find
    them to take pictures or souvenirs.

    We do not recommend that anyone steal the sensors. As the
    deputies pointed out, it could be a felony if you are caught.
    However, we see nothing wrong with disabling the sensors simply to
    assure your own privacy. If the military asserts the right to
    monitor citizens on public lands, citizens should also be able to
    refuse participation in this surveillance program if they so
    chose. The proper method to disable a sensor is to gently
    disconnect the power cord. Don't get caught doing it, because
    Sheriff Bradfield may initiate a "tampering with government
    property" charge against you. Given that the sensors have not
    been sanctioned by BLM and you have done no permanent damage to
    them, we believe that the charge would be untenable in court, but
    you don't want to endure the hassles of hiring a lawyer and going
    to court either.

    Following is some additional embarrassing information on the road
    sensors.

    ..... SENSOR ADDRESSING .....

    All road sensors we have found in this area broadcast on the same
    frequency: 496.25 MHz. When tripped, a transmitter emits a burst
    of digits indicating the unit's ID code and the direction the
    vehicle is traveling. The ID code is set by easily-changed dip
    switches inside the transmitter. For example, the first sensor on
    the road to Freedom Ridge is number 810, the second is 811, and so
    on. We collected many of the ID numbers back in the good old days
    when security broadcasted "in the clear" and the patrols would
    call them out when passing. Now, the ID's can (hypothetically) be
    confirmed by a five minute examination of each sensor.

    We do not recommend that anyone remove or disassemble a sensor,
    but if anyone DID engage in such evil acts, this is what they
    could do for fun: "Borrow" a sensor, sit on a hill and
    systematically change the dip switches in one sensor unit to the
    numbers of different units. One unscrupulous person could
    repeatedly trip a single sensor using different ID numbers and
    thereby orchestrate an invasion! First, you could send the codes
    for 810, 811, 812, etc. (assuming these sensors are eventually
    replaced). Then, you could trip a series of sensors from the
    north, maybe on several different roads simultaneously. The Cammo
    Dudes would be frantic, and helicopters would be everywhere
    looking for the imaginary visitors.

    Not that we would EVER do such a devilish thing, but it would be
    easy to carry out and is certainly fun to contemplate. And now
    that the Dudes know what we know they know we know, they'll have
    to ask themselves every time: "Is it live, or is it Memorex?"

    ..... ILLEGAL REPEATER STATION? .....

    After the AF was forced to admit that they had the sensors, they
    sent BLM a letter announcing their intention to keep them on
    public land within the scope of "casual use." Casual use means
    that you can use public lands for almost anything you want as long
    as there is no significant impact on the land or wildlife. You
    can, for example, pitch a tent or build a campfire almost
    anywhere, as long as your return the site to its natural state
    when you leave.

    The Air Force argues the road sensors are discreet and present no
    significant environmental impact. Looking at a single sensor as
    an inert object, we agree that it probably would fall within the
    scope of casual use. We object only the surveillance function, as
    well as the fact that there is not just one, but an big organized
    network of devices. It is like building a dozen campfires
    simultaneously within a limited area of public land.

    Anyway, if one sensor apparatus--no more than two feet high
    including antenna--does not violate casual use, how big does it
    have to be before it does? Four feet? Eight feet? Can the AF
    park a ten-foot microwave relay station on public land without
    applying to BLM for a right-of-way? What about a 16 foot radio
    repeater station?

    It so happens that there is a 16-foot solar-powered repeater on
    public land about two miles outside the border. It is used in
    connection with the sensor network, relaying the signal of certain
    isolated transmitters back to the main receiver. Since BLM wasn't
    informed of the sensors until the issue was forced, we assume the
    AF never bothered to apply for a right of way for the repeater
    station either.

    The repeater is located in Township 5 S, Range 55 E, Section 28.
    To get to it, take Valley Rd. from SR-375 (LN 11.4) for 5.3 miles,
    turn left on the side road and go 3.4 miles. Stop the car and
    look at the top of the hills to the left.

    Could it be illegal?

    ..... FELONY CHARGES .....

    If you are caught stealing or dismembering a road sensor, you must
    be prepared to suffer your own fate. However, you should let us
    know about your predicament, and we'll do what we can to assist
    your defense. A felony charge is not pleasant to face, but unlike
    the misdemeanor obstruction count Mr. Campbell is currently
    playing with, a felony offers full rights of "discovery." That
    means we can put the AF through the ringer as to who, exactly,
    placed the sensors on public land, when and under what authority,
    how they were purchased and how their valuation was determined.
    If $20 detectors are indeed being sold to the government for
    $1000, discovery would yield the documents to prove it. At the
    trial--a jury trial, of course--BLM officers could be subpoenaed
    to determine their policy toward military sensors on public land.
    (At present, they have issued no opinion.) Carefully handled, a
    felony proceeding can be turned around to put the accuser on
    trial. Could be deep woo-woo for the AF.

    ..... BOUNTY OFFERED FOR NEW SENSORS .....

    There have long been rumors that the Dudes have road sensors that
    cannot be easily detected. Presumably, these would be smaller
    units that need less maintenance. They may be totally buried and
    use a transmission system that cannot be detected with a frequency
    counter. No doubt, these would cost the taxpayer $10,000 a piece
    instead of $6000. We don't know for certain that these sensors
    exist, but if they do Psychospy is offering $100 for information
    leading to the first one found on public land. (Do not remove it;
    just tell us how to find it so we can photograph it and tell the world.)

    In summary, we fear that any road sensors left on public land will
    be both useless and vulnerable to theft. With so many tourists
    now flocking to the area, there is also a risk of accidental
    damage to the sensors if they are not explicitly marked with
    fluorescent "Sensor Here" warning signs. (We've tried doing this
    ourselves, but somebody keeps taking them down.) For example,
    people might innocently run over the transmitters when driving
    off-road or accidentally shoot a hole in one when hunting for
    rabbits. The obvious AF solution: They'll install sensors to
    protect the sensors. Maybe they'll train TV cameras on each, but
    then how will they protect the cameras? You gotta love those
    security dudes because they'll never go down easy.

    ----- A JOURNALIST'S OPINION -----

    After we told an acquaintance of ours, a reporter on a big city
    crime beat, about our visit from the deputies, he replied....

    "Interesting development on the road sensors. You said eight
    (8) were missing? That's a lot of sensors. And a lot of money
    ($32,000, or thereabouts?). I wonder who is taking them, and why,
    other than general disruption of Groom security activities.

    "Oh, by the way: Police ALWAYS use that tired old line that
    they have other suspects and they might talk as a way of getting
    information. As you probably know, it is NOT illegal for police
    to lie to get a confession. I once went to a seminar at which
    interrogation tactics of police were detailed. It was
    interesting. I came away with one guiding principle: If I am
    ever accosted by police in an interrogation setting (they're only
    supposed to interrogate if they believe you're guilty of the
    crime.) SAY NOTHING and CALL MY ATTORNEY. Their little tricks are
    very clever, but any reasonably smart person can see where things
    are going and avoid the trap.

    "In your case, it doesn't sound like it got heavy at all.
    They're probably just trying to see if you would easily confess.
    Their promise to interview everyone in Rachel sounds like just
    another tactic to shake loose a confession. These cops are SO
    predictable."

    ----- RUMOR: GROOM LAKE "FAN MAN" SAILS TOWARD BASE -----

    The following information came from a witness who prefers to
    remain anonymous. Owing to lack of confirmation, we print it here
    as "rumor."

    In the early morning hours of Sept. 22 (or thereabouts), a man in
    his 40s attempted to "paraglide" into Area 51. He was with a
    group of ex-Vietnam buddies from Southern California who had
    decided, at the spur of the moment, that they were going to
    intrude into the secret base. You know: capture an alien, bring
    it back and put it on display during the Larry King extravaganza.
    The group did not have the "Area 51 Viewer's Guide" and had only a
    vague notion of where they were going. The source's description
    suggests that they were way off target. They climbed a ridge,
    which could have been the north end of the Groom Range, and saw
    some lights in the distance, which probably weren't the main base.

    The intruder apparently took off from the top of the ridge using
    an unpowered, airfoil-shaped parachute (a paraglider). The other
    members of the group didn't know the intruder was planning his
    stunt until he passed over them. The intruder is described by our
    source as a gung-ho, off-the-wall type who would try anything. He
    apparently did sail across the line into the Nellis Range buffer
    zone surrounding Groom, but he didn't get very far. He was chased
    down by security; a scuffle ensued, and he was hauled off to
    Nellis Air Force Base. A second member of the group followed him
    in on foot and was also detained by the Dudes.

    Both of the intruders happened to be in the Marine Reserve, so
    their case has been handled by military justice. According to the
    source, the parachutist was supposedly held at Nellis AFB for
    almost a week, then released. He will go on trial in a military
    court, which can apparently be kept secret. The member of the
    party who followed on foot paid a fine of about $1100 and agreed
    to sign some security forms.

    Inquiries to Nellis have yielded, "No comment." (Does this mean
    the incident DID take place?) Inquiries to the Sheriff's Dept.
    yielded only ANOTHER pair of intruders--two men from Utah who
    drove past the Keep Out signs on Groom Lake Road later the same day.

    Members of the original group do not want publicity. The source
    has allowed us to publish only the above general outline.
    Although we can't confirm any of it, we feel that the account is credible--because the intruders sounded so naive and ill-prepared.
    We wish we could have been there.

    ----- INTEL BITTIES -----

    KING SHOW WENT WELL. We were pleased overall with the Oct. 1
    Larry King UFO extravaganza, broadcasting live from Rachel. King
    was great. The producers were great. The crew was great. The
    panel was great. The people of Rachel were great. We want to
    thank them all for making it a great show. Perhaps in the next
    issue of the Rat we will be able to comment in more detail on the
    circus, including the still-unanswered questions about King's
    possible cloning. (He did seem a little older and thinner than he
    appears on TV.)

    SEMI TRUCK AT WHITE SIDES. Sighted at the White Sides trailhead
    on Sept. 19: A North American Van Lines tractor-trailer truck.
    The drivers had some time to kill and came to take the hike.
    (Note: The White Sides trailhead offers a convenient turnaround
    for truckers, while the Freedom Ridge trailhead does not.) C'mon
    down, good buddies!

    ADVICE REPEATED. Naive tourists have been driving across the
    border lately at the rate of about one car per week. Immediate
    arrest, the towing of your car and a fine of up to $600 are
    guaranteed. It may seem obvious but is worth repeating: If the
    big signs say "Restricted Area," "No Trespassing," "Keep Out," and
    "Use of Deadly Force Authorized," it means you shouldn't drive
    past them.

    RUNWAY EXPANSION? Unsubstantiated third-hand rumor: One of the
    runways at Groom will be extended by about a mile. The contractor
    is Bectel and the work will begin after the first of the year.
    [Thanks to a reader.]

    AURORA SIGHTING. You can find Bill Sweetman's version of the
    alleged Aurora spyplane (different from the Testor's version) in
    the toy section at Wal-Mart stores. It is a two-inch model
    packaged in a Micro-Machines set of three aircraft, including the
    SR-71 and alleged TR-3A. Also found in the package are a couple
    of tiny Cammo Dudes--all for less than $5. [Thanks to a reader.]

    NEW CATALOG ITEMS. The following items are now in stock and
    available for immediate shipment from our mail order arm, Secrecy
    Oversight Council: Ben Rich's "Skunkworks" book, Lazar saucer
    model, book on Edward Teller ("Teller's War"), book on NSA ("The
    Puzzle Palace"), "Comprehensive Guide to Military Monitoring,"
    Tonopah Test Range satellite image (Cactus Flat), Nevada Test Site
    satellite image (Pahute Mesa), "UFOs And The Alien Presence: Six
    Viewpoints" and "Watch the Skies." A bound copy of all Desert Rat
    back issues is available for $1 per issue ($17 plus postage). Ask
    for our latest catalog for ordering information.

    REMEMBER THE SEVEN TRESPASSERS? (DR #1) Well, their charges have
    been settled (DR #11), but they still haven't got their equipment
    back from the AF. This includes binoculars, a telescope and a camera--worthless to the military but a significant loss to the
    owners. WHAT IS GOING ON HERE? Is the equipment contributing the
    national defense, or is the Air Force being PETTY AND VINDICTIVE?
    Let's resolve this case.

    ===== 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 may 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. (The same one year grace
    period also applies to all previous issues of the Rat, extended
    from six months.)

    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

    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

    ###



    Seth,
    telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23
    http://ricksbbs.synchro.net:8080
    ---
    ■ Synchronet ■ Rick's BBS telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23
  • From Seth Able@RICKSBBS to all on Wed Dec 11 09:49:00 2024
    The Groom Lake Desert Rat Issue #18 posted her with the permission of the author, Glenn Campbell.

    Posted by Michael Curta, Colorado MUFON

    Note: The Newsletter has been edited from 2 parts into one part for convince.


    THE GROOM LAKE DESERT RAT. An On-Line Newsletter.
    Issue #18. November 16, 1994.
    -----> "The Naked Truth from Open Sources." <-----
    AREA 51/NELLIS RANGE/TTR/NTS/S-4?/WEIRD STUFF/DESERT LORE
    Direct from the "UFO Capital," Rachel, Nevada.
    Written, published, copyrighted and totally disavowed by
    psychospy@aol.com. See bottom for subscription/copyright info.

    In this issue...
    INCUMBENT SHERIFF PREVAILS IN LOCAL ELECTION
    LARRY KING FEEDBACK
    DR. GREER ON "48 HOURS"
    OUR READERS RESPOND
    BLM ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT RELEASED
    CAMPBELL TRIAL INVITATION
    HAZARDOUS WASTE PRE-TRIAL HEARINGS
    ENEMY UPDATE
    INTEL BITTIES

    [Note: This issue has been sent in two parts. The first ends with
    a "CONTINUED" notice and the second ends with "###".]

    ----- INCUMBENT SHERIFF PREVAILS IN LOCAL ELECTION -----

    On Nov. 8, incumbent Lincoln County Sheriff Dahl Bradfield handily
    defeated his challenger Don Brown. That could mean four more
    years of secret Air Force "rent-a-cop" agreements, deputies
    harassing journalists and confiscating film without due process,
    and continued dismal confidence in law enforcement throughout the
    county. But, hey, we're sanguine. The people have spoken, 58 to
    42 percent. An election is the purest expression of the public
    will, and there's no arguing with those numbers.

    We can't claim that the electorate was ill-informed. During his
    six years in office, Bradfield seemed to have committed every
    lapse of professional judgment in the book, and his heavy-handed
    "God Squad" of unsupervised deputies had pissed off a large
    portion of the county. We and some of allies took out an ad in
    the Lincoln County Record to remind voters of his biggest gaffs
    and their enormous cost to the county [may be available at the FTP
    or WWW sites], and we thought our logic was flawless. All the
    Sheriff could offer in his ads were a few trumped-up endorsements
    from law enforcement organizations, one of which, the Las Vegas
    Sun reported, hardly knew he existed. The challenger, who was
    formerly a Nevada State Police chief and well-regarded Sheriff in
    Washington State, seemed like a breath of fresh air who could
    restore faith in local law enforcement. In the weeks approaching
    the election, we worked hard behind the scenes to support his
    campaign, and we were almost ready to count our chickens before
    they hatched until receiving a call late on election night
    shattering our faith in humanity.

    We considered this election an important one. The big Groom Lake
    base is wholly within Lincoln County, yet returns only trivial
    economic benefits to the community. A nonexistent base doesn't
    have to pay its taxes and doesn't have to engage in any form of
    community relations. Being directly downwind of both the Groom
    Lake base and the adjoining Nevada Test Site, county residents
    have been dumped on for years by the federal government. In the
    days of above ground atomic testing, this meant dangerous levels
    of fallout and a predictable rise in devastating cancers. Given
    the raw treatment the county has received over the years, this
    place ought to be a hotbed of anti-government rhetoric, and it is,
    but that sentiment is rarely translated into action.

    For a piddling contract fee of $50,000 a year, the Sheriff's Dept.
    has essentially taken orders from the Cammo Dudes, seizing film,
    arresting naive trespassers and investigating law-biding tourists
    whenever the anonymous authorities call. This public police
    department, nominally an open entity responsible to the people,
    has seen no conflict in representing a government agency that
    refuses to acknowledge its own existence. The Sheriff pulled back
    from film seizures, perhaps temporarily, only when the election
    loomed and negative publicity began to build up in the Las Vegas press.

    Similarly, the county tax assessor, an ossified 26-year veteran,
    has shown no interest in pursuing the base for the value of
    contractor facilities. Although the AF itself is not liable for
    local property taxes, the same does not hold for the private
    contractors that largely operate the base. [See DR#5.] If they
    occupy a government building, property taxes must be paid on it as
    if it were private land (NRS 361.157). As it stands, the AF gives
    the county an imaginary assessment every year, most recently $3.2
    million, and the county blindly accepts it, billing the AF for the insignificant taxes implied, recently $80,000. Of course, $3.2
    million wouldn't buy a latrine at a place like Groom, but the
    current assessor's attitude is that if county pushes the AF too
    hard, they might sue or pack up the base and move it elsewhere.
    Legal guidance, which should be provided by the county District
    Attorney, is lackluster at best. He seems more concerned with
    pursuing Campbell on the obstruction charge [See trial invitation
    below.] than in making the secret base pay its due.

    Since the officials who were up for election had also offended the
    electorate in other ways, the prevailing sentiment ought to have
    been "Throw the Bums Out!" Indeed, that is what we thought we
    heard on the street in the weeks prior to Nov. 8. What happened,
    in fact, was the opposite: Every incumbent in major county
    offices was reelected. The District Attorney ran unopposed,
    apparently because there are not many lawyers willing to come to
    this area. The Sheriff routed his opponent easily, as did the
    Assessor, Clerk, Treasurer, an incumbent Commissioner and the
    Justices of the Peace (including Nola Holton, who will be trying
    the Campbell case).

    Philosophically, we cannot argue with the results. As an activist
    nipping at the heals of the monolithic Air Force, Psychospy is
    arguing in favor of democratic processes--that the secret base
    should be subject to the same public accountability as any other
    government agency. We cannot suddenly change our tune when the
    democratic processes let us down. We believe that every
    community, like every individual, has the right to self-
    determination. The liberties American society holds dear include
    the right to totally screw yourself up if you so choose. People
    and communities that make good decisions prosper, while those that
    make poor ones fail, and it is not the place of government or us
    aliens to intervene. As it stands, Lincoln County is a dirt-poor
    backwater, chasing away industry with its high taxes and bloated
    local government and showing little interest in changing. Like a
    person who drinks himself into a stupor, we can only conclude that
    this is the way the community wants to be.

    Still, after expending significant energy on this election, we are disappointed in the results and annoyed that we misjudged them so
    badly. Removing the Sheriff and Assessor from office would have
    been a major blow to the legal and tax immunity of the secret
    base. The AF would suddenly find itself in a much less friendly
    environment and might have to start paying its due. We hoped that
    Lincoln County would become a "mouse that roared," demanding
    proper compensation from the feds for hosting this huge and
    potentially dangerous facility. Now, we expect no more than a
    squeak, and we have been trying our best to figure out what went wrong.

    The incumbents were of all political affiliations--Democrat,
    Republican and Independent--so the national pro-Republican sweep
    did not explain the results. If local sentiments seemed
    overwhelmingly anti-incumbent before the election, why did the
    incumbents win? In Rachel, the Bradfield was voted down almost
    two-to-one. Why didn't the same happen in the rest of the county?
    To understand the results, we must understand the society here.

    ..... LINCOLN COUNTY DEMOGRAPHICS .....

    The remote town of Rachel, with 71 voters, is on the border of Nye
    County, to which it is closely related in culture and attitudes.
    Nye is a place of rugged individualism, where brothels are legal
    and the prevailing philosophy is libertarian--meaning that people
    should be free to conduct themselves however they choose without
    interference from the government. With Psychospy's liberal
    Eastern roots, we used to be annoyed by the blustering I'll-Take- Out-Fifty-Federal-Agents-Before-They-Take-Away-My-Guns rhetoric
    found in Nye and Rachel, but now we find it refreshing and even a
    tad appealing. Nye has been especially aggressive in pursuing its
    own secret base, the Tonopah Test Range, as well as other federal
    facilities within its borders, for taxes and law enforcement
    respect. During the Cold War, when anti-nuclear protesters
    starting marching en masse across the cattle guard at the entrance
    to the Nevada Test Site, the Nye County Sheriff and D.A. refused
    to handle them, so the feds had to construct tennis court-sized
    cages at Mercury to temporarily house the trespassers. Because
    the Nye county government actively asserts its rights and defends
    its independence, it doesn't get dumped on the way compliant
    Lincoln County does.

    Rachel, we have discovered, is not representative of the rest of
    Lincoln County. Rachel is a relatively new town, existing for
    only about 30 years and thus composed mostly of "outsiders." The
    rest of the county has been frozen in time for generations. The
    main streets of the four major towns, Caliente, Panaca, Alamo and
    Pioche, have changed little in the past fifty years. The absence
    of economic development has helped preserved the county's
    historical sites, but it has also meant no significant influx of
    new ideas or new blood.

    Culturally, Lincoln County is not part of Nevada but of Utah.
    Except for Rachel, the county is overwhelmingly Mormon.
    Mormonism, or Latter Day Saints, is a religion of great mystery to
    the outside world, known for its secret rites and a colorful
    history intertwined with the American West. Although Psychospy is
    agnostic, we regard religion as one of the unalienable liberties
    that an outsider has no right to interfere in. What concerns us
    about Mormonism is not its belief structure but how it interacts
    with rest of the world. Even then, we are not seeking to
    criticize, only to explain and understand.

    LDS culture is very close-knit and upholds a firm respect for
    authority. "Family values" are paramount, and to help preserve
    these ideals, the church does not shy away from active involvement
    in all aspects of society, including business, education and
    politics. Perhaps because the group was persecuted in its early
    days, Mormons tend toward an "us-against-them" attitude similar to
    that of Judaism. LDS is a society that pulls together against
    real and perceived threats. In practical terms, this means that
    when the church's interests are seen as at risk in an election,
    Mormons tend to vote as a block under the guidance of church
    authorities.

    In the Nov. 8 election, the incumbents had nothing in common
    except that they were mostly Mormon, while the challengers were
    mostly non-Mormon. Had the nascent anti-incumbent sentiment been
    allowed to express itself, the church might have lost political
    power in the county, resulting, it might be perceived, in the
    degeneration of public morality. Was the election in fact pre-
    ordained? From secondhand sources we have heard of local Mormons
    quietly expressing their displeasure at being told by their
    bishops how to vote but who obeyed the orders anyway. Evidently,
    God is omniscient and has many human spies. We have not spoken to
    any of these Mormon's directly, so the claim is unproven.
    Generally, Mormons don't talk to non-Mormons about the affairs of
    their church any more than workers talk about Area 51.

    We were unimpressed, however, by a candidate's night we attended
    at a high school shortly before the election. It was presided
    over by the bishop of the local LDS ward. We knew he was a bishop
    even before being told because he had that air of moral rectitude.
    In his introduction, the bishop said, in effect, that there were
    no conflicts in Lincoln County, and as if to prove the point no
    debate between candidates or questions from the audience were
    permitted. This meant, of course, that no embarrassing questions
    could be posed to the incumbents regarding their past performance
    and newcomers couldn't show their strengths in a direct exchange.
    Candidates were reduced to bland three minute statements at the
    podium. Given that the candidates had already visited most voters door-to-door, we didn't see the purpose of a candidate's night if
    the candidates couldn't challenge each other.

    The Sheriff, an overweight, young-looking man, seemed to have
    nothing to offer in his three minutes except that he had taken
    some law enforcement courses and had instituted a 911 telephone
    system. Like many of the other candidates, he had grown up in
    Lincoln County and attended Southern Utah College in nearby Cedar
    City. In comparison, his opponent, tall, thin and in his 60s,
    seemed a paragon of worldliness and maturity. He recounted his
    experience as a law enforcement administrator in a series of
    prestigious posts outside the county. "Good show!" we thought to
    ourselves as he passed the two minute mark. The challenger then
    went on to explain that recently he had dedicated himself to
    "Vampire 2000," an organization of law enforcement officers
    fighting the "new order" and the encroachment of federal control.
    We began sinking slowly into our seat as the challenger proclaimed
    that he would tolerate no restrictions on assault rifles in this
    county, but murmurs of approval from the audience picked us up again.

    The strangest appearance of the evening was that of the District
    Attorney, who although he was running unopposed was game enough to
    offer his three minute resume. Given that a part of the DA's job
    is to argue cases in court, he seemed surprisingly weak as a
    public speaker. He is apparently no intellectual slouch, however,
    having attended Stanford University followed by a law degree at
    the University of Florida and a stint in corporate law in Miami.
    A non-Mormon in his mid-30s who ought to have a better grasp of
    democratic principals than most natives, he seemed to us to be
    misplaced soul, and we wondered what made him tick. The one-man
    DA's office both prosecutes criminal cases and serves as legal
    counsel to county government. As an elected official, his office
    is independent and responsible only to the voters, but you
    wouldn't know it from his past performance, in which he has pretty
    much toed the line of the Sheriff's Dept. Since his position is
    secure, he ought to be beholden to no one and free to do what is
    right for the county, but so far he has not lived up to that promise.

    As stated, we cannot prove that the incumbent landslide was the
    result of the Mormon majority voting as a block. There were
    certainly other factors at work. In a long-established county
    with little population turnover and only 2300 voters, it is
    possible for everyone to be related to everyone else. Indeed, a
    glance at the tiny Lincoln County phone book (18 pages) reveals a disproportionate number of repeated last names. If you take the
    Sheriff and his extended family and personal allies, add those of
    the Undersheriff, whose position is also threatened, and the
    families and cliques of all the various deputies who fear a loss
    of their current freedom or job security.... Given that this is
    one of the largest per-capita police forces in the country in one
    of the poorest counties, you could have a majority right there.
    One fact is certain: In the Sheriff's hometown of Panaca, where
    his family ties are deepest and, coincidentally, the Mormon Church
    is strongest, he was also reelected by the biggest margin, almost three-to-one.

    Panaca was also the source, according to the postmark, of the only
    hate mail we received as result of the election. (We've received
    more from UFO buffs who believe we work for the government.) The
    anonymous scrawlings from Panaca said, "If you don't like the way
    Lincoln County is run--LEAVE!" Indeed, that is exactly how
    democracy and free enterprise work. Every community has the right
    to choose its own destiny, to uphold its own values and present
    its own chosen face to the world. Individuals and businesses, in
    turn, have the right to move to wherever the opportunities are the
    best for them. If, for example, the Mormon majority makes the
    environment uncomfortable for all non-Mormons, deprives them of
    political power and enforces upon them their own religious values,
    then indeed the others will move out and none will move in. The
    only downside is that most industry beyond the walls of this tiny
    kingdom is not controlled by Mormons, and businesses would be
    foolish to invest where they have no power. The moral purity of
    the community may be preserved, but not its jobs.

    Is it legal to vote on behalf of your religion or your family.
    Certainly. Is it right? No. The root of democracy is
    individuals making their own decisions, in private, without fear
    of retribution and through their own independent conscience.
    Otherwise, the system is as totalitarian as any Communist regime.
    We recall, with bittersweet amusement, the caption on the Review-
    Journal cartoon....

    "Entering Lincoln County.... Now Leaving America."

    ----- LARRY KING FEEDBACK -----

    The following postings on internet newsgroups were passed on to us
    by our network of cyberspace spies following the Oct. 1 Larry King
    Special on TNT, "UFO Cover-Up: Live from Area 51." In addition to
    taped segments, there were four live panelists: Stanton Friedman
    and Kevin Randle, representing the Roswell Incident; Dr. Steven
    Greer, founder of the CSETI UFO group; and Rachel resident Glenn
    Campbell, subtitled as an "activist." Only Campbell did not wear
    a suit and tie.

    "The show is off the air 10 minutes and I am left with the
    feeling that Glenn Campbell works for the government. I have no
    evidence to that fact, I am new to this whole line of information,
    but Mr. Campbell in my opinion seemed to soft-peddle the entire
    affair in a much too uncomfortable way for me to give him any
    credibility. Friedman on the other hand, pending further
    information, seems very credible and quite likable, if not eccentric."
    -- buddhatek@aol.com

    "Okay, the show is off the air 28 minutes now, and you've got
    an interesting theory. What better place to plant a
    disinformation artist than as a crusader? Campbell, you're
    correct, was very soft-shoe about the whole affair, even though he
    moved his entire lift from Boston to live in a trailer in the
    desert. Oops, I forgot... that trailer is actually The Area 51
    Research Center.

    "Whether or not he's actually a disinformant remains to be
    seen. What was evident, however, is that Glenn Campbell couldn't
    hold his own against the scientists and researchers on the panel.
    Let's face it, Campbell is not a scientist, a physicist, even a
    serious author. He's simply like one of us, an 'enthusiast' (I
    hate that term) who's taken it to an extreme. He seems very
    uninformed on the UFO phenomenon, which strikes me as remarkable.
    How can you claim to be the Area 51 researcher extraordinaire and
    not give a hoot about UFO's? The two subjects are so intimately linked.

    "I'm not sure he's a government agent. He may just be a boob."
    -- sharvey@interaccess.com

    "The guests on Larry King had mixed beliefs and ideas... much
    of what is a cross section of the people who are interested in UFO
    study. Stanton was correct in pointing out that there has been no
    serious study of the phenomenon. Glenn Campbell is a better
    writer than interview guest, he really doesn't have a UFO
    position, he just wants the military to stop acting like Area 51
    isn't sitting out there. Greer is pushing the envelope with the
    CE5 stuff. Hey, if he gets out in the fresh air and gets some
    exercise waving a spotlight around the sky, more power to him.
    Maybe they'll take him to their leader, who knows."
    --d.beaty2@genie.geis.com

    "Steven Greer spent some time in Gulf Breeze, FL. I was there
    at the same time. He was received warmly and with healthy open-
    mindedness. Then, it became PAINFULLY obvious that his claims
    were completely exaggerated. For instance, on March 14th, 1993 (I
    think it was '93.), three of the Gulf Breeze 'red light' UFOs
    appeared AND WERE VIDEOTAPED. He immediately claimed that he was 'telepathically' in contact with them and invited them to 'land on
    the beach behind us.' He asked all present to 'send out your
    awareness to them.' He was heard to say (to the UFOs), 'We
    welcome you, we love you, we invite you to land,' etc. When the
    UFOs disappeared, he claimed it was 'A MAJOR CE-5.'

    "Later that year (in June), he tried his tricks again (calling
    them in). He was in a parking lot on Santa Rosa Island, about
    seven miles from the other watchers at Shoreline Park. The UFO
    did appear that night--about a mile from Shoreline, and about
    eight from Greer.

    "Later, he claimed that the craft 'appeared overhead' at a very
    close range. Other witnesses deny this, as do their videotapes.
    Perhaps he saw something all the others didn't?"
    -- dxr41@po.cwru.edu

    ----- DR. GREER ON "48 HOURS" -----

    Larry King panelist Dr. Steven Greer is an M.D. from North
    Carolina and the founder of CSETI (Center for the Study of
    Extraterrestrial Intelligence), a group that seeks direct
    communications with aliens. We know little about him except for
    his prior appearance on "48 Hours" (4/20) in which he and his
    group journey to Mexico where they hope to be taken aboard a UFO.

    Greer: "I'm serious enough about this that I have transferred
    every asset I have into my wife's name."

    The group sets up an observation post and their array of cameras, communicators and signaling equipment near the small town of
    Metepec, which happens to be about 50 miles from the busy Mexico
    City airport. Sure enough, the group has seven sightings in six nights--bright lights hovering above the distant horizon that are
    captured on video tape. (Later, two film analysis experts say
    there is nothing to distinguish these lights from ordinary
    aircraft.) The group even claims communications with one of the
    UFOs through light signals.

    Greer: "It interacted beautifully, though, in terms of the off
    and on. I mean, that was incredibly good CE-5. In no way could a conventional craft move in a way where it could signal back and
    forth like that with the lights on and off."


    ----- OUR READERS RESPOND TO PREVIOUS RATS -----

    NUKING VEGAS [DR#11]

    "I thought your views on Las Vegas were disgusting. Yes I
    agree there is little cultural worth there, but there are still
    humans that live there. I hope someone wants to destroy you and
    where you live. No I do not live in LV, but feel destruction of
    life through terrorist action is absolutely stupid. I hope there
    are no further commentaries like this one in your newsletter."
    -- 74541.1743@compuserve.com

    "It's obvious that the only reason that you've ever been to LV
    is to shop and immediately head out of town. I've lived here for
    24 years, my family has been here since 1943, and I find that it
    is a very reasonable place. There are actual neighborhoods with
    children, schools, parks, and other "normal" activities.... Most
    of our problems are caused by people that have come to town in the
    last 10 years or so which has caused a lot of growth which has
    pretty much ruined any chance of a pleasant life. East Coast
    people (and I use the term "people" loosely) are usually morons
    who are going to rough it out West and end up destroying or over-
    regulating things and generally making a mess.... One can only
    hope that the exhaust from a UFO completely fries the top of
    Freedom Ridge the next time you clowns are up there."
    --john@cephas.isri.unlv.edu

    Ed.: We admitted were wrong about Vegas, and we still feel guilty
    and ashamed. We repented in DR#16, suggesting a different target....

    NUKING NEW YORK [DR#16]

    "...But really, how closed minded can you be to condemn an
    entire city based on your limited experience. Maybe everyone
    doesn't want to live in the woods or the desert. Being a NYC
    resident myself, I find your comments very ignorant and scary. I
    enjoy the culture here and the sensory overload experience of
    working and living in this metropolis. When I want to get away
    from the crowded spaces I get in my car and drive to the
    Adirondack State Park which has over 5 million acres of some of
    the most beautiful high peak woodlands in the country. During the
    summer months we NYC people who appreciate natural beauty get in
    our cars or buses and spend weekends out in the Hamptons where we
    have clean and uncrowded beaches surrounded by sandy dunes and
    farmlands. Perhaps you should limit your coverage to topics that
    you know something about. Your reckless comments certainly don't
    help your credibility on matters that you are trying to shed light on."
    -- macinwi@ffhsj.com

    Ed.: Nuke it!

    CALIFORNIA FALLING INTO OCEAN [DR#16]

    "Kindly inform the person wanting the map of the western US
    after the coast falls into the ocean, that he's got it all wrong.
    After the big one hits, we on the Left Coast expect to watch the
    entire eastern portion of the US slide into the Atlantic."
    -- dhomuth@ednet1.osl.or.gov

    Ed.: Please note that on NO OCCASION has Psychospy advocated the
    nuking of California. (But now that we think about it....)

    CLONING UPDATE

    The letter by the cloning activist G.S. in [DR#16] prompted one of
    our readers, Andy S., to do some research and confirm that indeed
    his claims were true. According to contemporary news accounts, a
    live KNBC-TV news broadcast was interrupted on Aug. 9, 1987, when
    a station visitor placed a toy gun to the head of consumer
    reporter David Horowitz and demanded that he read a statement on
    the air. The visitor, Gary Stollman, the son of the KNBC
    pharmaceutical reporter Max Stollman, had gained entry to the
    studio by mentioning his father. Only a few seconds of the
    statement were actually broadcast before being cut off, but the
    Desert Rat has obtained the full text. It begins...

    "The man who has appeared on KNBC for the last 3 years is not
    my biological father. He is a clone, a double created by the
    Central Intelligence Agency and alien forces. It is only a small
    part of a greater plot, to over throw the United States
    Government, and possibly the human race itself. The CIA has
    replaced and tried to destroy my family, and those of my friends.

    "Although I have known about this since 1981, I have not taken
    any action about it for fear of the lives of my family. I have
    been forced into CIA-run mental hospitals, such as Cedars-Sinai
    Thalians, where I am shown being interviewed by many different
    doctors, although I spoke to nobody there for two weeks. At UCLA-
    NPI, I attempted to have myself released by a court several times,
    but was asked by a Dr. Martin Zsuba to keep removing my requests
    for a writ-hearing. I have been unable to obtain records from
    several other hospitals, including Ben Taub Hospital in
    Cincinnati, where all the phones were turned off for 48 hours
    after I arrived.

    "I do not know where my real family or others are being held,
    but I believe it is somewhere in California."

    A NEW TYPE OF SENSOR? [DR#17]

    "I was in the Air Force during Vietnam. We used "dog do-do"
    sensors to monitor an area. It looked just like a piece of you-
    know-what with a little wire antenna on one side. It was activated
    by a small pin you removed. It had a life of two or three days and
    if anyone walked near it a signal was sent out. They came
    packaged in shrink wrap packages 6 to a pack.

    "Keep an eye out for devices like that."
    -- Jcarter@orl.mmc.com

    ----- BLM ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT RELEASED -----

    People who made comments to BLM on the proposed White
    Sides/Freedom Ridge withdrawal should have received by now their
    copy of the proposed Withdrawal Amendment and Environmental
    Assessment for the Freedom Ridge/White Sides land withdrawal--an
    intermediate step toward eventual AF control of the nearest Groom
    viewpoints. A 30-day protest period on the document is now in
    effect (ending Dec. 9), but it is open only to those who made
    comments during the previous planning process. (Apparently you
    qualify if BLM sent you a copy of the document.)

    To file an effective protest, you must show that the environmental
    and land use issues raised during the previous comment period were
    not adequately addressed in the current document. There is no
    sense in ragging about the UFO cover-up, black budget
    accountability or defense priorities. Your protest must directly
    relate to the document at hand.

    We note with interest that the stated purpose of the withdrawal
    has changed since the public comment period. The only initial
    official Air Force explanation in the Federal Register and at the
    hearings was: "The purpose of the withdrawal is to ensure the
    public safety and the safe and secure operation of activities in
    the Nellis Air Force Range Complex."

    The new document says: "The purpose of the withdrawal is to
    provide a security and safety buffer to prevent a compromise of
    national security interests and to protect assets of the adjacent
    withdrawn Nellis Air Force Range."

    The document also provides the following significant admission:
    "In 1988 the U.S. Congress withdraw the Groom Range Addition to
    the Nellis Air Force Range as a security and safety buffer zone
    between public lands administered by the BLM and the NAFR complex.
    The USAF subsequently discovered that two areas adjacent to this
    buffer zone provide viewing of military activities on this portion
    of the NAFR. Public viewing of military activities (which has
    often included illegal photography of range activities) has
    increased during the past few years, necessitating the diversion, postponement, or cancellation of missions to prevent a compromise
    of national security."

    There is nothing surprising in the content of these statements,
    and the purpose may even be justified (if they can also neutralize
    the OTHER viewpoints like Tikaboo Peak that haven't been touched).
    What is disturbing about these statements is that this is the
    first time we have ever heard them from the Air Force (if, indeed,
    this document conveys the Air Force position). For example, we
    have never heard the Air Force admit that it erred in 1988.

    Here's the scenario we see: The AF applies for a land withdrawal,
    but gives only vague reasons--"public safety," "secure operation
    of activities," etc. The public is allowed to comment on the
    action based only on this vague explanation--which makes
    meaningful comment very difficult. After the comment period is
    over, the AF starts fleshing out its reasons for the withdrawal,
    providing more specifics and admitting its mistake in 1988. By
    the time the application reaches the Secretary of the Interior,
    maybe the AF even admits that there IS a base at Groom Lake and
    that they want the land specifically to keep people from looking
    down on it. Although this admission appears to be what we were
    seeking from the beginning, the problem is that it was presented
    only AFTER the public comment period was over, so obviously the
    public had no access to it. In essence, the withdrawal becomes a
    closed process with only the theatrical appearance of public input.

    ----- CAMPBELL TRIAL INVITATION -----

    All members of the press and public are hereby invited to attend
    the trial of political activist GLENN CAMPBELL of Rachel, Nevada,
    on the charge of Obstructing a Public Officer (NRS 197.190) for
    pushing down the car door locks during the seizure, without a
    warrant, of the news video tapes of KNBC-TV of Los Angeles near
    Freedom Ridge, July 19, 1994. (Four of the five tapes have still
    not been returned, although the crew insists that they did not
    photograph the secret base.)

    The trial will begin with jury selection on WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER
    21, 1994, at 10:00 a.m. and may take one or two days.

    Charges will be presented by Lincoln County District Attorney
    Thomas A. Dill before Justice Nola Holton of the Pahranagat Valley
    Justice Court in the County Annex Building, Alamo, Nevada (on US-
    93, 90 miles north of Las Vegas and 50 miles east of Rachel).
    Campbell will defend himself, with the possible co-counsel of a
    Nevada lawyer.

    It is advised that those who wish to attend confirm the date and
    time just before the trial. Local lodging is available at the
    Meadow Lane Motel and Alamo Motel, both at (702)725-3371.

    COMMENTS. This will be a jury trial, so the judgment on Campbell
    will be rendered by the same pool of local voters that re-elected
    Bradfield. (Keep this in mind when placing your bets.) In any
    case, we regard the process as more important than the outcome.
    If found guilty, Campbell will be subject to a fine but no jail
    time. At one point, the DA offered to seek only a $50 fine if
    Campbell pleaded "no contest," but the defendant declined.

    REFERENCES. The incident for which Campbell was arrested was
    recorded in the Las Vegas Review-Journal, July 21 (with an
    editorial July 22 and an editorial cartoon July 26); Las Vegas
    Sun, July 21, and Publisher's Auxiliary (organ of the Reporter's
    Committee on Freedom of the Press), Aug. 1. [Also DR#12.] For
    general information on Campbell and his goals, consult feature
    articles in the New York Times Magazine, June 26, 1994; Omni
    Magazine, Sept. 1994; Popular Science, March 1994; Reno Gazette-
    Journal, July 24, 1994; and Dayton Daily News, March 20, 1994.

    ----- HAZARDOUS WASTE PRE-TRIAL HEARING -----

    On Nov. 10, we attended a brief pre-trial heading on the lawsuit
    filed by a widow and several "John Doe" plaintiffs charging
    injuries at Groom Lake stemming from illegal hazardous waste
    disposal. When we walked into the courtroom, there were children
    everywhere. Twelve kids in the jury box, a girl in the judge's
    chair, a boy on the witness stand and a sniffling wimp at the
    defense table represented, evidently, by two young gentlemen
    making rude sounds into their microphone. Across the aisle was a
    gangly, blond-haired DA who clearly hadn't had an opportunity to
    go to Stanford yet.

    It was a field day to Las Vegas Federal Court by a local grade
    school. We guessed that the youths were about 12 years of age.
    Earlier in the day, they had witnessed the sentencing of a real
    drug dealer, a pregnant woman condemned to a couple of years in a non-fictional slammer. From their places in the courtroom, the
    students fired questions at the real judge, who towered above the
    melee in his judicial robes. Would the woman have the baby before
    going to jail? Would she be able to keep the baby? Why was she crying?

    Someone in the jury box asked U.S. District Judge Philip Pro what
    his salary was. He said he made $135,000 a year.

    Then the children filed out and grownups filed in. Three
    gentlemen in dark business suits represented the government: Two
    from the Justice Dept. and one from the EPA. The lead lawyer was
    Richard Sarver, who we understand is a former Air Force officer.
    Lawyer Jonathan Turley, representing the workers, sat alone at the
    other table. In the pews were the widow and her family and a
    handful of reporters scribbling notes on steno pads.

    The hearing was conducted in legalese, much of which was beyond
    the grasp of our own tiny brain. We did pick out a few tidbits,
    though. The judge asked if there were any ongoing negotiations to
    reach a settlement, and Sarver said they were "almost DOA"--dead
    on arrival. The judge also asked Sarver repeatedly whether the
    government would "stipulate that the base exists." The government
    lawyer declined the opportunity--meaning that the government still
    does not acknowledge any base at Groom. However, Sarver did
    repeat the official line that there are indeed "facilities at
    Groom Dry Lake." It's a subtle distinction lost to meager minds.

    We noted that six months would be allowed for the discovery
    process, during which each side of the case will be seeking
    information from the other. The content of the rest of the
    hearing was over our head. At one point, some angry-sounding
    words were exchanged between Turley and Sarver, but the subtext
    was not apparent to us. The hearing ended after 45 minutes, and
    the lawyers dispersed.

    Whatever happened, Turley walked out of the courtroom looking like
    the cat that ate the bird. Apparently, the government had
    overplayed its hand. It had attempted to suppress the entire case
    on national security grounds, and that gambit had failed. All we
    know for sure is that Turley was bubbling. He was heard to use
    "sex" and "law" in the same sentence, with law being rated as superior.

    ----- ENEMY UPDATE -----

    -- In DR#16, we reported that our intimate enemy list included
    Lazar's gatekeeper GENE HUFF. We are now as surprised as anyone
    to report a change in status: Huff and Psycho have kissed and
    made up, and all those harsh words of the past have been forgotten.

    Huff has even sold us a shipment of the handsome Lazar saucer
    posters, which are now available from us for $15 (plus $3.50
    postage in the US). This 22" x 34" poster features three
    schematic views of the "Sport Model" flying saucer that Lazar says
    he worked on at "Area S4." In the background is a Russian
    satellite image of the Papoose Lake area. It happens that in the
    mountains north of the lake bed a tiny saucer shape appears, but
    we suspect that it is a photo artifact. (Huff says that the
    "saucer" did not appear on other frames taken at the same time by
    other cameras on the satellite.) The poster was produced by Lazar
    and Huff to coincide with the release of the Testor's S4 saucer model.

    -- Replacing Mr. Huff on our mortal enemies list is German UFO
    filmmaker MICHAEL HESEMANN. (Big round of applause, ladies and
    gentlemen.) We met him on only one occasion, when he came to
    Rachel to videotape part of a UFO documentary. He struck us as
    narcissistic and highly unprofessional. He was abusive of his
    crew (or so we gathered from his tone of voice, as we do not speak
    German), and he insisted in appearing in every shot of his
    interview with us. When a German journalist later asked us what
    we thought of Hesemann, we summed up succinctly: "He's an
    asshole." That translates into German as "Arschloch," a sentiment
    apparently shared by many in the German UFO field. Eventually,
    our analysis made it back to Hesemann himself, who called us from
    Dusseldorf to leave a long and unhappy message on our answering
    machine. Listening to it, we were reminded of Col. Klink
    threatening Col. Hogan. Hesemann said he was going to cut us out
    of his documentary, but he was kind enough to give us one last
    chance to regain favor: If we wrote him a letter of unconditional
    apology, which he would publish all over Europe, then he would not
    sue us. We were trembling, of course, especially in light of
    Hesemann's written comments to the journalist, the ominous tone of
    which is best experienced without translation....

    "Wie Herr Campbell, den ich in der Tat WIE JEDEN interviewte,
    der in der Area 51 forschte, mein Video beurteilen kann, das
    derzeit uberhaupt erst im Schnitt ist ist vielleicht das grosste
    Ratsel der Wuste von Nevada. Ist er ein Medium? Oder hat er
    selbst so einen Scheiss gesagt, dass der Film schon wegen seines
    Interviews (von den anderen Interviews weiss er ja nichts)
    schlecht sein MUSS? Was, bitteschon, soll er uber mich gasagt
    haben? Nun, Campbell hat ein Manko. Als er in Rachel eintraf,
    sind die 9 Scheiben--zumindest laut John Lear--langst nach White
    Sands verfrachtet worder. Darum hat er nie selbst was gesehen.
    Ich war das achte Mal in Rachel, als ich ihn interviewte. Ich
    hatter bereits, zusammen mit einem ABC-TV-Team, eine sehr
    beeindruckende Sichtung. Er nicht. Pech. So what? Neid???"

    -- Conspiracy nutcase GARY SCHULTZ is still our treasured enemy.
    He showed up in Rachel during the Larry King show and afterwards
    had the gall to visit our Research Center and try to strike up a
    conversation. Since this is the twerp who once phoned our
    neighbor to spread vague rumors of child molestation against us
    (false, we must emphasize), we regard our differences as
    irreconcilable. No kissing and making up here. We ordered the
    little dip from the premises and told him never to come back.

    -- The enemy status of SEAN DAVID MORTON remains unchanged. At a
    Nov. 5-6 UFO conference in the Bay Area, Sean described his
    relationship to us as being like Michael Jackson to Weird Al
    Yankovich. (This is fine by us, as we have already proclaimed
    that we are not a child molester.) In our continuing campaign to
    "data him to death," we are thinking of setting up a World Wide
    Web page devoted entirely to the bigger-than-life exploits of this
    modern Munchhausen. Another neat idea would be to establish an
    internet newsgroup, alt.fan.sean.morton, where Sean's growing
    legion of "fans" can exchange information and insights about their
    hero. We don't currently have newsgroup host capabilities,
    however. Is there a sysop out there interested in sponsoring this?

    ----- INTEL BITTIES -----

    BILBRAY DEFEATED. One bright spot in the Nov. 8 election was the
    surprising defeat of Democratic Representative James Bilbray,
    Congress's most vocal defender of the secret base and Air Force
    interests in Nevada. In interviews, Bilbray came closer than any
    other government official to admitting that the base was there,
    but he seemed 100 percent in support of its continued official
    nonexistence. In an interview on the Fox "Encounters" segment on
    Area 51 [7/22, DR#10,15], Bilbray said that he had been all over
    the Nellis complex but had seen no evidence of alien craft.
    (Critics counter that Bilbray would have only gone where the
    military wanted him to and didn't have the clearance necessary to
    see anything really secret.)

    THE CAMPING SEASON IS NOW OVER in the Rachel area, as nighttime
    temperatures drop through the 20s enroute to a winter low
    approaching minus 10 F around the first of the year. Daytime
    weather can still be pleasant (or horrible), but you'll need a
    warm jacket. Light snow is common here in December and January,
    and snow on the ground brings impenetrable fog to the valleys.
    The normally clear desert skies are often heavily overcast in the
    winter. Spring is the windstorm season, where fierce gales from
    the southwest often prohibit outdoor activities.

    Identical weather is found at the Groom base, which was once
    cynically referred to by Lockheed workers as "Paradise Ranch."
    According to Skunk Works chairman Kelly Johnson, the name was
    "kind of a dirty trick since Paradise Ranch was a dry lake where
    quarter-inch rocks blew around every afternoon." [Source:
    "Lockheed U-2," by Bill Yenne via C.H.]

    GROOM LAKE VOR. The frequency for the Groom Lake VOR (navigation
    beacon) is 117.5 MHz.

    WWW UFO PAGE. A new World Wide Web page on UFOs, pointing to back
    issues of the Desert Rat as well as a variety of UFO files, is
    available at "http://www.bgsu.edu/~jzawodn/ufo/".

    ===== SUBSCRIPTION AND COPYRIGHT INFO =====

    (c) Glenn Campbell, 1994.

    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 may 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. (The same one year grace
    period also applies to all previous issues of the Rat, extended
    from six months.)

    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.

    Current circulation: 1860 copies sent directly to subscribers
    (plus an unknown number of postings and redistributions probably
    several times this number).

    A catalog that includes the "Area 51 Viewer's Guide", the Groom
    Lake patch and hat and publications relating to Groom Lake 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

    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

    ###



    Seth,
    telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23
    http://ricksbbs.synchro.net:8080
    ---
    ■ Synchronet ■ Rick's BBS telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23