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Subject: Conspiracy Journal - May28, 2004



Conspiracy Journal
5/28/04  #264
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What unknown forces are really in control of our lives?  Do nightmares of  old gods and spirits of cobweb presence run rampant in our unconscious?  Have otherworldly desires completely taken over, or are we merely the victims of opportunity and profit?  Do secret societies with allegiance to stygian madness seek the ultimate control?  Or are we merely pawns in some vast universal battle for reality?   Lies are the truth, and truth lies -- but one shining source remains that all seek to learn...Conspiracy Journal...here once again to bring the light of truth to curse the darkness.

This week Conspiracy Journal brings you such throat-tightening stories as:

How the U.S. Secretly Fed Radioactivity to Thousands of Americans -
-
Did Plane Collide with 'Unknown Object?' -
- Area 51 Hackers Dig up Trouble -  
Chile: An Alleged Non-Human Caught On Film -
AND -  Voices From Beyond the Grave Come to Rest in Manitoba -


All these exciting stories and MORE in this weeks issue of  CONSPIRACY JOURNAL.

Keep up to date on all of the worlds strangest news stories updated daily
at the Conspiracy Journal Breaking News page.
http://www.members.tripod.com/uforeview/news.html

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 * NEW FALL - WINTER 2003 ISSUE!
CHECK OUT Tim Swartz's new column - UFO DATABASE - on the Amethyst
Moon website. www.BeyondInfinityMagazine.com
 
Left in the Dark: UFOs and Power Blackouts
 http://www.beyondinfinitymagazine.com/FW23/fw23ufodata.htm

~ And Now, On With The Show! ~

- HUMAN GUINEA PIGS DEPARTMENT -

Plutonium Files: How the U.S. Secretly Fed Radioactivity to Thousands of Americans

Denver-based journalist Eileen Welsome reveals how as a reporter for the tiny Albuquerque Tribune (circulation 35,000) she uncovered one of the country's great Cold War secrets: the U.S. government had knowingly exposed thousands of human Guinea pigs with radiation poisoning including 18 Americans who had plutonium injected directly into their bloodstream.

In a Massachusetts school, seventy-three disabled children were spoon-fed oatmeal laced with radioactive isotopes. In an upstate New York hospital, an eighteen-year-old woman believing she was being treated for a pituitary disorder, was injected with plutonium.

At a Tennessee clinic, 829 pregnant women were served "vitamin cocktails" containing radioactive iron, as part of their regular treatment.

No these are not acts of terrorism by common criminals.

These are just some of the secret human radiation experiments that the U.S. government conducted on unsuspecting Americans for decades as part of its atom bomb program.

In a gruesome plot that spanned 30 years, doctors and scientists working with the US atomic weapons program, exposed thousands of unwilling and unknowing Americans to radiation poisoning to study its effects.

For years, the experiments by the U.S. government and the identities of their human guinea pigs were covered up.

Then after a six-year investigation, investigative reporter Eileen Welsome uncovered the names of 18 people who were injected with plutonium in the 1940s without their knowledge by federal government scientists. In 1993, she published her finding in The Albuquerque Tribune and later received the Pulitzer Prize for her work.

Another six years later, Welsome published The Plutonium Files: America's Secret Medical Experiments in the Cold War. The book gives a detailed account of the unspeakable scientific trials conducted by the U.S. government that reduced thousands of American men, women, and even children to nameless specimens.

AMY GOODMAN: After a six-year investigation, reporter Eileen Welsome uncovered the identities of eighteen people injected with plutonium in the 1940's without their knowledge by federal government scientists. Eileen Welsome published her findings in a series in the Albuquerque Tribune and received the Pulitzer Prize for her work. It took another six years for her to complete her book called The Plutonium Files, America's Secret Medical Experiments in the Cold War. She joins us now in Boulder, Colorado. Eileen Welsome, thanks for joining us.

EILEEN WELSOME: Happy to be here. Thank you for having me.

AMY GOODMAN: Over the years we have spoken with you, but now that we're on this tour and you live in Denver, this is a rare opportunity to sit down and go through this story. First, how did you even get a clue that this was going on?

EILEEN WELSOME: Amy, it started, as you mentioned earlier, I was a reporter at the Albuquerque Tribune and I was doing some research on an air force base there, and they were doing some cleanup work. I noticed that in the document there were several radioactive animal dumps on this air force base. So I was curious about what kind of animals were in the dump and why were they radioactive? So I went over to the air force base, Kirkland Air Force Base, to what was then called the Air Force Special Weapons Laboratory. And they got out a big stack of these dusty reports for me to read on these animal studies. And so as I was thumbing through these reports, and it was horrible because they were incubating beagles and watching them develop cancers and how long they lived and charting the radiation sickness. But as a reporter, there wasn't a story there for me. These were old experiments and as gruesome as they were, it wasn't something that a daily newspaper would be interested in. So it was about 5:00 on Friday, I was eager to go home, but I felt like I had gone to this trouble to get these documents and I had to make my time look good. So I kept flipping through the reports. And my eye fell on a footnote and the footnote mentioned something about 18 humans who had been injected with plutonium. So I kind of reared back in my seat. I was just shocked. Shocked to think that our government had injected 18 people with plutonium. So I jotted down what I could from the citation and the next day, which was a Saturday, I went to the university library there and started hunting up reports about these scientists. So that was the beginning of it and the reason I looked at the footnote, I need to say this, is I had done a lot of financial reporting prior to that time and I know that whenever a company wants to put in the bad news, it's always in a footnote. So that taught me to look at footnotes.

AMY GOODMAN: And so how did you begin to unravel this story?

EILEEN WELSOME: Well, here was my problem: I learned there were some scientific reports in the literature, so I got those reports. I started to cull everything I could. And I learned that there were 18 people that had been injected with plutonium, but they were known by code numbers only. So the problem for me became how to find 18 Americans that had been injected with plutonium 30 or 40 years ago in a country of millions. So I thought that -- I mean, it was an impossible task, and so I started very crudely. I put these 18 code numbers on yellow sheets of paper and then as I gathered documents, I would write down what I knew about each of these 18 people. So I eventually learned their ages, the date they were injected, what kind of disease they had, if there was an autopsy or a biopsy conducted, and when they died. And then it was just a matter of continuing to do that and pick up clues.

AMY GOODMAN: Tell us about one of the 18 people.

EILEEN WELSOME: Well, I had gone off on a journalism fellowship and I had been filing Freedom of Information Act requests with the federal government. So I had a tiny folder on this experiment and when I came back and looked -- I pulled out my folder and I had fresh eyes. And I looked at this document again and these documents were redacted. In other words, the names of the patients were whited out and so were the names of the doctors. And my eye fell on this line, which said Doctor so and so contacted the physician of Cal-3 in Italy, Texas. And what leapt out at me were the words, Italy, Texas. By then, I knew a lot about Cal-3. I knew he was an African American man who would have been 80 years old, who would have been -- who had his left leg amputated three days after he was injected with plutonium. So given those few clues and that this person might have lived in Italy, Texas, I was determined to go there and knock on every door until I found this man.

AMY GOODMAN: We're talking to Pulitzer Prize winning reporter Eileen Welsome. So tell us about your discovery, how you made contact.

EILEEN WELSOME: So I got out a map. I looked up Italy, Texas. It was south of Dallas, about 60 miles. I called directory assistance, got the number of Italy's City Hall, called them up, introduced myself, described the person I was looking for and they said, ???You're looking for Elmer Allen, but he died a year ago. Would you like his wife's number???? So I said, ???Of course.??? And I wrote the number down and within minutes I was talking to Mrs. Allen.

AMY GOODMAN: And what did you say?

EILEEN WELSOME: I was very circumspect because I didn't want to frighten her and I didn't want to seem like a kook and I didn't want to put words in her mouth. I wanted to know what she remembered. So I simply said, you know, I had some documents that suggested that her husband may have been involved in a government-funded study and I would like to talk with her about it. And she asked me to talk to her daughter, Elmerine Allen Whitfield. And I called her and she was very quiet on the phone. As I reeled out my story, she said, ???Ok, you can come on.??? And so I flew to Italy, Texas, and we sat down at her kitchen table and by the end of the interview, I knew and they knew that I had found the first of these 18 people.

AMY GOODMAN: Elmer's story?

EILEEN WELSOME: Elmer's story.

AMY GOODMAN: What was Elmer's story, how did he end up in a hospital being injected with plutonium?

EILEEN WELSOME: Elmer was a railroad porter. He and his wife were living in the Bay Area in the mid 1940's. They had left Texas and gone out there to start a better life. They had two young babies. Elmer fell from the train in Chicago and damaged his leg, and that sort of put him into the medical system. That was the beginning of his participation in this experiment. And his leg did not heal and he kept going back to the doctor. Somehow he found himself in this clinic at U.C. San Francisco University of California Hospital in San Francisco, and they selected him for this radiation experiment.

AMY GOODMAN: But he didn't know that?

EILEEN WELSOME: Oh, no, no, he absolutely did not know. He was told that he had an osteosargenic sarcoma in his knee and they would have to amputate in order to save him. There's some question about whether he did or didn't have that cancer and I do not know the answer to that. But three days before they amputated that leg, they injected him in the calf, intramuscularly, with plutonium.

AMY GOODMAN: Didn't they -- he describe to his wife how they put a target on his leg and they injected it in that?

EILEEN WELSOME: They eventually, with the consent of Mrs. Allen, I was able to get Elmer's medical records from U.C. San Francisco and in those medical records, the doctors talked about putting that target on his calf prior to the injection.

AMY GOODMAN: Now, he never knew he was a subject in a U.S. government experiment, but he suspected something, is that right?

EILEEN WELSOME: Yes. He told a good friend of his in Italy, Texas, that the doctors kept flying in and out of his room practicing to be doctors. And he told his friend, "They guinea-pigged me."

AMY GOODMAN: We interviewed Elmerine Allen a number of times and she talked about how growing up her father would say that, and then when she left for college, he said, watch out, ???Don't let the U.S. government guinea-pig you.??? And they always thought that Elmer had some kind of, well, Elmer was kind of quirky, and he had this delusion that the government experimented on him.

EILEEN WELSOME: The sad part about Elmer's story is that nobody believed him. He went to his doctor and told him, ???I think I've been injected with something.??? His doctor diagnosed him as a paranoid schizophrenic at the same time that he was conversing with the atomic energy scientists in Argon National Lab to provide them with tissue samples.

AMY GOODMAN: Wait, wait, his doctor said he was a paranoid schizophrenic at the same time his doctor was providing his tissues to the government scientists doing the experiment?

EILEEN WELSOME: That's correct. That's what the medical records show. So Elmer was not only used in 1947 when he was injected with this radioactive isotope, but he was continued to be used as a guinea pig for the rest of his life.

AMY GOODMAN: Being sent for example to where, Rochester, New York?

EILEEN WELSOME: In the -- the experiment had two parts. In the 1970's, the -- in the 1970's, a second generation of atomic scientists rediscovered this experiment. So they wanted to dig up all the people who were dead, who had been injected with plutonium, and they also wanted to bring whoever survived them back into the lab for further studies. And Elmer was one of those people.

AMY GOODMAN: Under what pretext since he didn't know, supposedly, that he was a U.S. government guinea pig?

EILEEN WELSOME: They told Elmer, and this is all documented in the medical records, that they knew he had a very serious cancer and they wanted to know where he had lived so long.

AMY GOODMAN:  Let's continue on this journey of the people who were injected, and the people who injected them. This certainly sounds a little like the Tuskegee experiments, but tell us, who ran this program?

EILEEN WELSOME: The program sounded in the Manhattan Project, the project to build the atomic bomb in the early 1940's. Side by side with the physicists worked a group of doctors who were interested in finding out how to protect their own workers in the Weapons Complex. And also trying to figure out what these new radio isotopes did in the human body. So basically, the beginning was the fathers of the bomb project, the medical doctors and scientists that were the tier below the Nobel Laureates, below the Oppenheimers and so on.

AMY GOODMAN: Did they know this was happening?

EILEEN WELSOME: Certainly the records indicate that Oppenheimer approved the injections of these patients with Plutonium, because Los Alamos was fighting a severe contamination problem and the scientists working in those laboratories were concerned about their own health.

AMY GOODMAN: Didn't Oppenheimer come from Berkeley, and you had Elmer who was injected in California?

EILEEN WELSOME: That's correct. There was a large component of the atomic bomb project in the Bay area.

AMY GOODMAN: Conducted where?

EILEEN WELSOME: At the University of California at Berkeley and also at the university of California San Francisco.

AMY GOODMAN: So we're talking about a nexus of university, military, working together?

EILEEN WELSOME: That's exactly right. During the Manhattan Project, it was a very strange hybrid animal where you had people that were in the military working for the military, and you had people that were getting paid by universities.

AMY GOODMAN: The robbing of graves?

EILEEN WELSOME: That occurred -- well, I don??™t know if I would quite put it so strongly as that, but they did exhume bodies.

AMY GOODMAN: With the family's consent?

EILEEN WELSOME: They sought the consent of the families, but they did not tell the families the true purpose for the exhumations.

AMY GOODMAN: What did they tell them?

EILEEN WELSOME: That they had been given some radio isotope or some chemical and wanted to see what it had done in the bodies of their loved ones.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, that's true, isn't it?

EILEEN WELSOME: Yes, but they didn't use the word Plutonium.

AMY GOODMAN: Can you name a scientist and can you tell us what the response has been?

EILEEN WELSOME: When I did my research, most of the scientists, with the exception of Himer Fridel, who was the assistant medical director of the Manhattan Project, were dead.

AMY GOODMAN: The Manhattan Project being --

EILEEN WELSOME: The atomic bomb program. But the scientist who had conducted the more recent studies defended them. That they were important to protecting the workers in the nuclear weapons complex or that they were harmless.

AMY GOODMAN: So let's go through the experiments. The 18 people injected with Plutonium, none of them knew that that had happened to them. But moving on, in a Massachusetts school, 73 disabled children spoon fed oatmeal that had radio isotopes in them, radioactive isotopes. What happened?

EILEEN WELSOME: In that case, this was a nutrition study and they were given radioactive calcium and other radio isotopes.
AMY GOODMAN: Every morning?

EILEEN WELSOME: In their oatmeal, it was either mixed into the oatmeal or in the milk. And these boys did not know what was being given to them, nor did their parents. And in fact, they were told that this was really something nutritious and good for them. They were asked to give blood samples, urine samples, feces samples.

AMY GOODMAN: How long did this go on for?

EILEEN WELSOME: It went on for a number of years. And these boys grew into men and did not find out what had been done to them until the 1990's.

AMY GOODMAN: Upstate New York hospital, 18-year-old girl thinks she??™s being treated for a pituitary disorder and gets injected with Plutonium?

EILEEN WELSOME: This was a young woman who like Elmer Allen wound up in a hospital at the wrong place and was injected.

AMY GOODMAN: Tennessee clinic, 829 pregnant women served radioactive iron as part of their regular treatment. What did they think they were getting?

EILEEN WELSOME: This was a study done immediately after World War II and these young women came to the clinic thinking that they were getting vitamins to drink, that this would help their babies. And in fact, what was being studied was how fast the radio iodine crossed into the placenta.

AMY GOODMAN: Where was this?

EILEEN WELSOME: At Vanderbilt University in Nashville.

AMY GOODMAN: And what happened to these women?

EILEEN WELSOME: They had all kinds of ailments, skin diseases, cancer, blood disorders, some of their offspring, their children that they were carrying at the time of this experiment died of cancer. And very strange cancers at young ages.

AMY GOODMAN: Were there any whistle blowers among the doctors and nurses?

EILEEN WELSOME: There was none whatsoever. The doctors closed ranks and considered this worthwhile science, and something they were doing to protect the country.

AMY GOODMAN: What about patients brought into the basement of the hospital and experimented on in the middle of the night, where was this?

EILEEN WELSOME: This was an experiment that was done in Cincinnati, Ohio. It was another one of these hybrid experiments that was half medical, half military. And in many cases, that's the problem with hybrid experiments. Often times, what's medically good for the patient is not militarily the best experiment. So these studies were done with cancer patients. They were told it would help their cancer. What the doctors were looking at was trying to figure out in the event of an atomic bomb detonation, how long could soldiers fight?

AMY GOODMAN: Your expose came out under the Clinton years. President Clinton set up an advisory committee on human radiation experiments, which did its own digging into radiation programs. Remarkably enough, the report, the final report, came out on October 3, 1995, the same day as the verdict in the O.J. Simpson case. I don't remember seeing the results being reported.

EILEEN WELSOME: It was really unfortunate, because everybody in the country was focused on O.J. Simpson and --

AMY GOODMAN: Or was it timed right? Because let's remember every day people were waiting to the Simpson verdict, so it clearly was not beyond the government commission to understand the attention of the nation was focused elsewhere.

EILEEN WELSOME: I hadn't thought about that, Amy. It's simply a possibility.

AMY GOODMAN: So the results came out anyway?

EILEEN WELSOME: The results came out anyway, and nobody paid attention to it.

AMY GOODMAN: And what were the results?

EILEEN WELSOME: Basically, they confirmed that thousands and thousands of experiments had been done on U.S. Citizens. That the victims were the most vulnerable people in our society: the young, the disenfranchised, the poor, people of color, people who did not know enough to ask questions. In other words, the subjects were not doctor's children or friends of their doctors; they were people who were vulnerable.

AMY GOODMAN: And how many places did this happen in the United States? The school in Massachusetts, the Cincinnati test, Elmer Allen was at the University of California Berkeley, how many sites were these government scientists working in?

EILEEN WELSOME: There were hundreds of sites. There were private hospitals, public hospitals, military installations, orphanages. About any place that doctor was working where they might be able to get a grant.

AMY GOODMAN: Prison?

EILEEN WELSOME: Yes, that was a really, really ugly experiment. A group of prisoners had their testicles eradiated.

AMY GOODMAN: Where?

EILEEN WELSOME: In Oregon mostly. And the purpose was for NASA. They were interested in knowing the effects of space radiation on astronauts.

AMY GOODMAN: And what happened to these prisoners?

EILEEN WELSOME: Many of them that I interviewed were still in prison. They had all kinds of medical problems and cancers and health issues.

AMY GOODMAN: Lawsuits?

EILEEN WELSOME: Many, many lawsuits filed. Some of the families were compensated. The Plutonium patients got an average per family of $400,000. I think that was the largest. And patients at other sites around the country got lesser amounts.

AMY GOODMAN: What about today? Do you think which have learned anything? And as people listen to this, I??™m sure there are many who will start to wonder.

EILEEN WELSOME: I think that the way to safeguard yourself, you as a patient or your loved ones as patients, is by asking questions. And the other way to safeguard -- the other way to prevent these things from happening again is to make sure that what we do is open an available to the public. Because openness is a disinfectant and it keeps these kinds of malignant, unethical experiments from happening.

AMY GOODMAN: Yet we have entered an age of perhaps greater secrecy than ever before.

EILEEN WELSOME: That's correct. In fact, I realized as I was doing my book, my intuition told me this was a small window that was closing and I don't think that today I could get some of the documents that I was able to get for this book.

AMY GOODMAN: Soldiers?

EILEEN WELSOME: Thousands of soldiers were used in bomb tests in Nevada.

AMY GOODMAN: How?

EILEEN WELSOME: Well, they were ordered into the blast area within minutes after a detonation. They flew in ??“ Air Force pilots flew into radioactive clouds. They detonated atomic bombs in the Pacific. The soldiers and sailors were then ordered in to retrieve various instruments that were contaminated.

AMY GOODMAN: And then there were not the people who were personally fed the radio isotopes, the kids at the school or the women who were given these vitamin cocktails that were radioactive. But there was the disbursing of radio activity in the air over cities, at schools?

EILEEN WELSOME: That's correct. One of the most famous is the Green Run at the Hanford Reservation.

AMY GOODMAN: In Washington state?

EILEEN WELSOME: In Washington State in which they released radio iodine and the prairie was very hot, but that was one of the controversial findings in this committee report. They did not say or recommend that the government be forbidden from doing this. They basically said you need to have a committee and at some point the documents should be made public. I thought that was one of the worst recommendations that they came out with.

AMY GOODMAN: I want to thank you very much for being with us. What was the biggest revelation for you in this research and looking at the Plutonium Files?

EILEEN WELSOME: The biggest revelation for me was to see how cruel and inhuman these very educated doctors were toward their patients.

AMY GOODMAN: And not telling them?

EILEEN WELSOME: And not telling them.

AMY GOODMAN: And the medical establishment today, is it backing them up?

EILEEN WELSOME: They were when I was doing my research on this book. They still defended these experiments as being important.

*NOTE FROM THE EDITOR: Democracy Now! Has provided this transcript free of charge, however donations help them provide closed captioning for the deaf and hard of hearing on their TV broadcast. Visit their website and help keep alive free media in America.

Source: Democracy Now
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=04/05/05/1357230

- STORY UPDATE DEPARTMENT -

Plane's Wreckage Puzzles Investigators< 17976/33373_cessnacollision.jpg cjimages/cessnacollision.jpg" title="" alt="" style="width: 250px; height: 191px;" hspace="50" vspace="20" align="right">
Clues hint at mid-air collision with 'unknown object.'
 
SPANISH FORT, Alabama  -- Moira Wade hitches her boat to a plastic pole stuck in the "puff mud" of Big Bateau Bay.

Then, in what has become a ritual, she tends to a makeshift memorial to her brother. She tapes artificial flowers on the pole, polishes a solar-powered lantern, and opts not to replace the framed photograph of Tommy. The sun still hasn't faded the old photo.

"I have to come out here," she says, her New York accent deeply out of place in this Alabama marsh. "I feel at peace when I'm here. And when I am not here, all I can think about is being here."

It is here where Wade's brother -- 54-year-old cargo plane pilot Thomas J. Preziose -- plunged to his death the evening of October 23, 2002. The pole marks the spot where the cockpit was found; the place where his remains were recovered.

Preziose's crash, like almost all air crashes, contained elements of mystery from the start. But accident investigators will tell you that this crash is more confounding than most.

Here are the most intriguing aspects:

-- Investigators found red streaks -- transfer marks, they call them -- on various pieces of the shredded Cessna pulled from the muck. The red does not match red mail bags or other objects known to be on the plane.

-- Investigators also found a small piece of black anodized aluminum embedded in the skin of Preziose's plane. The aluminum is not from the accident airplane.

Those facts led National Transportation Safety Board accident investigator Butch Wilson to conclude the Preziose's Cessna 208B Caravan "collided in-flight with an unknown object."

That statement, part of an interim report released last month, has heightened speculation among local pilots, aviation buffs and conspiracy theorists about the demise of Night Ship 282, the call sign for the Preziose's flight.

Theories abound. Some believe Night Ship 282 collided with a drug runner's plane, the loss of which might go unreported. Some wonder if Night Ship 282 was pelted by a meteor or space junk. Others think it collided with a military drone run amok, or perhaps was hit by a missile.

Some even suggest the plane was struck by terrorists, perhaps aiming at a larger plane nearby.

NTSB officials are not embracing their investigator's statement that Night Ship 282 "collided ... with an unknown object." They say the statement is analytical in nature, and does not belong in the factual report.

But neither are they running away from the possibility of a mid-air collision.

Instead, prompted by the factual report and by the interest it is generating, they have taken the unusual step this month of reclaiming the aircraft wreckage from the insurance company and shipped it to the Washington area for a closer inspection.

Still, investigators are reluctant to suggest that any theory looks more promising than another.

"I don't see a scenario that fits everything yet," said one source close to the investigation. "I think that's where we're at right now. As far as I'm concerned, nothing's ruled out. There's no reason to rule anything out. Everything's on the table right now."

Moira Wade describes her brother as fun-loving and gregarious, with an almost lifelong love of flying.

Born in the Bronx, the oldest of six children, Preziose started flying in the military, and wanted to be a helicopter pilot. Instead, he became an Army helicopter medic, serving in Vietnam.

Back home, he joined the New York Police Department, serving for 23 years before retiring in 1994. When the World Trade Center was attacked years later, he returned to the city and spent three weeks "digging people out," his sister says.

After his retirement from the force, Preziose held several jobs and ambitions, eventually landing as a simulator instructor, teaching pilots how to fly the Cessna Caravan.

But flying real planes, not simulators, was in Preziose's blood, according to his sister. And in July 2002, Preziose got a job with Mid-Atlantic Freight, flying a Cessna Caravan on a nightly cargo run from Mobile to Montgomery, Alabama, and Atlanta.

At 7:40 p.m. -- four months into his new job -- Preziose set off on a run. He was carrying 420 pounds of cargo for DHL, including a shipment of baseball hats.

It was dark and overcast, and there was light precipitation in the area, forcing Preziose to use his instruments.

Before departing from Mobile Downtown Airport, Preziose asked controllers at what altitude he would encounter freezing temperatures, saying he wanted to fly at 9,000 feet "because the radar's out." That comment -- some say -- indicates the plane's weather radar was not operating.

Controllers told him the freezing level was 11,500 feet -- well above his intended cruising altitude.

Preziose departed headed directly north, and controllers directed him to climb to 3,000 feet and turn right, towards the east. The controller also advised him that an inbound DC-10 aircraft was flying south at 4,000 feet.

A minute later, the controller told Preziose that the DC-10 was two miles away at the "one o'clock" position, suggesting that the large aircraft had passed him and was slightly to his right. But a post-accident analysis of radar data suggests that that was incorrect. The plane was still to Preziose's left.

Whatever the problem was, Preziose evidently saw the large plane. "Roger," he replied, "I got him above me right now."

At about the time he was speaking those words, Preziose's plane began a fairly rapid, but apparently controlled, descent. In the next 14 seconds, his plane dropped from 2,900 feet to 2,400 feet. It was then that Preziose made what was to be his last radio transmission: "I needed to deviate, I needed to deviate, I needed to deviate, I needed ... "

His plane began an uncontrolled descent into the swamp.

Preziose's last flight lasted about four minutes. A frog hunter in an airboat, pressed into service by rescuers, found the aircraft that night.

Preziose's Cessna was shredded; its parts scattered randomly over an area of about 200 yards. Its instruments were so damaged they did not provide any useful information. The autopsy didn't provide clues, either. Tissue samples revealed no sign of alcohol or drugs.

Early in the investigation, investigators noticed the red marks.

The marks were on many pieces of the airframe, concentrated on the skin of the plane forward of the main landing gear on the pilot's side of the plane, but also on other places on the plane.

Curiously, red marks were even found inside the nose landing gear wheel, which had been stripped of its tire.

The NTSB sent two pieces of airplane skin containing red marks to Wright Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio for analysis. But when the marks were compared to material from red cargo bags and a red Pitot tube covering, they were found to be "significantly different," the NTSB said.

The NTSB also obtained a piece of an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle from the U.S. Air Force. It also did not match.

Since the DC-10 -- a FedEx plane -- was in the vicinity, it became the obvious subject of suspicion. But a walk-around examination of the jet showed "no damage to the exterior of the aircraft," the NTSB report says.

Radar data also indicate the planes did not collide, showing the two planes never came closer than 1,000 feet in altitude or a mile horizontally and "never crossed paths," the report reads.
 
Investigators found a small piece of aluminum embedded in a piece of the wreckage. They concluded that the piece was not part of Preziose's plane.
"There's all sorts of speculation about what's happened to that airplane," said Michael Griffin, a flight instructor who regularly flies out of Mobile Downtown Airport.

"This is pure speculation on my part but this is a big drug trafficking area and it wouldn't surprise me at all (if Preziose was struck by a drug runner). He did make announcements that he needed to turn. ... He was probably panicked. He saw something that shouldn't have been there."

Or Preziose could have hit another plane "lost in the soup," he said.

Others, including Don Godwin, CEO of Mid-Atlantic Freight, the company Preziose was working for, dismiss those theories.

"If there had been another airplane, I feel certain there would have been pieces of another airplane at the crash site."

Godwin is captivated by the fact that the plane's engine broke in two main pieces.

"That's a big deal right there to me," Godwin said. "I think most everybody is convinced that that happened prior to the impact."

As for the cause? "The only thing that would come to my mind would be a high-speed drone," he says.

Or maybe a missile. "I believe whatever hit it flew right through it and probably ended up in the Gulf of Mexico someplace or somewhere in that bay," he said.

But investigators say they have not yet concluded that the engine broke up in air, and say that is still the subject of inquiry.
 
And military officials at Tyndall Air Force base, about 140 miles from the marsh where the plane crashed, are convinced that drones -- which are launched from the base -- had nothing to do with the downing of Night Ship 282.

The base did not launch any drones the evening of October 23, 2002, says Lt. Col. Jerry Kerby, commander of the 82 Aerial Targets Squadron at Tyndall, located on the Florida panhandle.

In addition, a drone launched from Tyndall could not hit the Alabama delta, Kerby said.

"It's not technically possible for us to get a drone that far west mainly because we will lose control, we will lose an uplink with that drone. If we lose an uplink or any kind of communications with that drone, the drone will command itself to shut its engine down and put itself in a parachute where it will float down into the Gulf of Mexico."

Another theory is that wake turbulence -- the tornado-like winds that spin off a planes' wings and can cause havoc with aircraft that cross their path -- might be to blame. It is particularly dangerous when a small plane crosses into turbulence created by a larger aircraft.

There is also speculation about the pilot's last words, "I needed to deviate."

To his sister, the meaning of the words couldn't be clearer.

"Knowing Tommy, he wanted to try to make people understand that something was going on that was unusual and so [at the] last second he grabbed hold of the mic and transmitted that information.

"And that is why he was saying, 'I see something coming at me and I know I am going to die and I want you to know what happened to me,'" Wade said.

Preziose's employer has a slightly different take. "I think he was talking to himself," said Godwin.

Godwin says he believes Preziose may have seen something about to hit the plane, pressed the microphone switch on the plane's control and said the words, meaning "I should have deviated."

Attorney Breedlove believes that Preziose, either fearing the effects of wake turbulence or actually suffering its effects, is telling the air traffic controllers that they should have steered him away from the course he was on.

And there are other interpretations. Some close to the investigation say that Preziose may have been acknowledging that he should have deviated his flight path because of foul weather.

One recent bit of speculation seeks to address those red markings. When the plane parts were pulled from the marsh, they were placed on a barge. The barge was red, several sources said.

But an NTSB spokesman said the investigator remembered seeing the marks on at least some of the wreckage before it was placed on the barge. In an effort to make sense of the marks, investigators plan to map the marks on a mock-up of the plane.

Preziose's plane crashed into Big Bateau Bay, off the coast of Alabama.
After tending to the memorial, Moira Wade picks up a long metal pole and probes the water and the mud beneath it. When she hits an object, the pole "tings" and she uses a rake to lift it to the surface.

"Oyster," she says, discouraged.

She then moves her boat, probing the mud only four feet from her memorial to her brother.

This time, her probing pays off. She lifts to the surface an object covered with mud and weeds, and dips it in the water to clean it.

"I think it is aluminum," she says. "I think this is from the engine. I am not sure. See it has a part number on it. Every piece has a part number. It looks like there has been some heat here. So it could be the heat from the engine."

She puts the piece aside, with plans to give it to the NTSB. She has complete confidence that they will be able to solve this mystery.

Resuming her search, she probes the mud again and brings up a mud clump. Rinsing it, she reveals several baseball hats.

"Oh," she says. "This is his cargo."

Even after NTSB investigators left Mobile soon after the accident, Preziose's sister and husband have soldiered on. Assisted by friends and volunteers who manned airplanes, helicopters and boats, the Wades spent 15 days at the site in the late fall of 2002, and have returned numerous times to continue their search for evidence.

To date, they have recovered about 700 pounds of wreckage that was not found during the initial search, including two blades of the propeller.

And the search continues. The Wades hope not only to find more pieces to Preziose's Cessna, but also to some other object, be it drone, UAV, missile or drug runner plane.

Part of her sense of responsibility comes from the fact that she is his sister. Part comes from the fact that she, like her brother, is a pilot. She flies Boeing 727s commercially.

"It is kind of like a duty among airmen to take care of each other and I am trying to oversee, to make sure that my brother gets a fair shake and that they just don't blame it on him, because they can't come up with any other [explanation]. I just want it to be factual so that when this man died, the truth of how he died will be known," Wade says.

Source: CNN
http://edition.cnn.com/2004/US/South/05/21/mystery.plane/index.html

- CONSPIRACIES ABOUND DEPARTMENT -

Top 10 Conspiracy Theories of 2003-2004
On August 6, 2001, while vacationing in Crawford, Texas, George Bush received an intelligence briefing called "Bin Laden Determined to Strike in U.S." It included revelations that al Qaeda members were conducting "surveillance of federal buildings in New York"; the World Trade Center was mentioned in the first paragraph, the prospect of terrorist "retaliat[ion] in Washington" in the second. According to the briefing, Osama bin Laden's organization was acting in ways "consistent with preparations for hijackings or other types of attacks, including recent surveillance of federal buildings in New York."

But Bush must have had headphones on, because 36 days later when he saw Flight 11 fly into the World Trade Center, he claims his first thought was, "There's one terrible pilot." Even after the second crash Bush assures us he was unsure what was going on: "I grew up in a period of time where the idea of America being under attack never entered my mind."

The attacks of 9-11 have since been used to justify two military actions that the government has chosen to call "wars," the more recent of which ??“ a "pre-emptive," which is to say unprovoked, assault on Iraq ??“ has yielded American soldiers their bloodiest two weeks of combat since 1971. Odd, then, that every expressed reason for the Bush administration's massive and deadly undertaking in Iraq, most conspicuously Saddam Hussein's alleged weapons of mass destruction, has evaporated under scrutiny. In fact, the only thing we know for sure is that the invasion isn't about oil. Tony Blair, among others, has been quite clear on this: any attempt to explain the war in Iraq as an oil war is a "conspiracy theory."

This makes one wonder whether other so-called conspiracy theories might be more worthy of consideration than we've been led to believe. Some months ago I wrote an article originally published in Popmatters magazine about this. In light of subsequent events, the time was right to revisit it ??“ particularly since the political climate in America, with its indefinite detentions and pointless color-coded alerts, has taken a more Orwellian turn than anyone ever imagined possible.

1. Prior Warnings.

Right after September 11, rumors began floating around that World Trade Center employees of the Jewish faith had been mysteriously alerted to stay home that fateful morning. This racist fantasy had an equally ugly counterpart among anti-Islamic reactionaries: that Muslims the world over knew of the 9-11 attacks in advance and managed, en masse and in their millions, to keep it a complete secret.

Such bizarre hearsay about collective foreknowledge has many unpleasant effects, not the least of which is to delegitimize an otherwise worthy question: was anyone told beforehand that something shocking might happen on or around 9-11? It turns out quite a few people claim to have received such warnings. Although the mainstream press tends to mention these accounts in isolation or attribute them to uncanny serendipity, when taken together they cry out for further explanation.

The airport security service for San Francisco mayor Willie Brown, for example, had contacted him eight hours prior to the strikes and warned him not to fly, and controversial author Salman Rushdie also claims to have gotten warnings before September 11 not to take to the tarmac. As reported in the Sept. 24, 2001 issue of Newsweek, several employees at the Pentagon cancelled their flight plans the night of September 10, citing "security concerns." And last but not least, Justice Department head John Ashcroft had stopped flying commercial aircraft two months before 9-11. Why? The FBI cited an unfavorable "threat assessment" ??“ but after September 11 has been unwilling to elaborate on this.

2. What Was With That Handshake, Anyway?

As I write a scandal is unfolding at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, where American soldiers are accused of torturing and brutally humiliating prisoners, possibly at the behest of military intelligence officers. In a particularly bitter irony, Abu Ghraib was once a favored torture chamber of Saddam Hussein, a fact that leads some to ask whether there are actually any good guys in the U.S.-Iraq conflict.

There are more reasons than this to wonder. Where Iraq's human rights violations are concerned, U.S. foreign policy has long been sterner in rhetoric than in deed, dating back at least to the 1980s ??“ when many Bush administration figures were dealing with Iraq on behalf of then-president Reagan. Among these were Mideast envoy Donald Rumsfeld, whose 1983 meeting with Hussein resulted in a videotaped handshake that has since crossed the world countless times on the Internet. Speculation abounds as to what may have transpired at this meeting, but one thing is certain: at the time Hussein was employing chemical weapons almost daily in his hideous war with Iran. In 2003 the Bush administration referred to these gas attacks as part of its justification for invasion, but for whatever reason it has taken 20 years for Rumsfeld et al. to discover their own outrage over these horrific crimes.

3. That's Our Plan and We're Sticking to It.

From the toppling of the Taliban to the creation of the Homeland Security Department, September 11 has been used to justify virtually every action that the Bush administration has taken since. But as with so much concerning the administration, this is more complicated than it appears. Case in point: conspiracy theory web sites ??“ and later on, mainstream progressive e-zines ??“ have made much hay of the Project for the New American Century, an extragovernmental pressure group which has long been bent on conquering Iraq. As far back as 1998, PNAC sent the Clinton administration a now-notorious letter insisting that the sanction-choked country posed an imminent danger to the United States. P-Nackers such as conservative writer Bill Kristol argue that the oil moguls and weapons firms PNAC represents have long been preoccupied with Iraq out of an abiding humanitarian concern, but the fact remains that where Iraq is involved, September 11 has not altered policy so much as it has been used to justify policies that were already in place.

4. The Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Your Liberties.

Similar stories haunt the USA Patriot Act, which was promoted as a response to 9-11 but in fact resembles anti-terrorist measures passed following the Oklahoma City bombing as well as an anti-drug bill that was scuttled in 2000 for being too "reactionary." The stunning 9-11 attacks created a more compliant social climate for such harsh measures, so that after the attacks Congress passed the Patriot Act without even bothering to read the provisions it had earlier found so untenable.

Different people draw different conclusions from this. Unabashed conspiracy sites like www.prisonplanet.com speculate that the government deliberately orchestrated the 9-11 attacks in the hopes that this would drum up support for war and indoctrinate the American people into willingly abandoning their freedom. Others such as Gore Vidal make slightly more temperate accusations, that corruption and real-politik policies left American security in a dire state of neglect, setting the stage for the attacks. Whoever is right, it seems clear that although life in America has changed radically in the wake of 9-11, the plans in the highest levels of the government have remained oddly unchanged.

5. The War in Iraq Is Not About Oil.

We have noted with relief the assurances of those on high that the Iraq War has nothing to do with control of natural resources. We can therefore assume that the following facts, though interesting, are completely irrelevant:

Iraq holds the world's second-largest oil reserves, and owing to decades of wars and sanctions many of these fields lie un- or underdeveloped, simply waiting for sufficiently motivated energy firms to come along and tap them.

As luck would have it, executives from such firms are exceptionally well-positioned to influence the current administration.

Oil and gas prices in the U.S. are currently the highest they've ever been, a problem that oil from Iraq is likely in the coming years to help alleviate.

And finally, the highest priority of the administration's military forces when they moved into Iraq was to secure its oil ministry, even as museums and hospitals in Baghdad were being looted.

6. Bread and Circuses.

For a long time following 9-11, strange facts such as these were rarely mentioned in the mainstream media. This is no longer true. Anomalies from the August 6, 2001, Presidential Daily Briefing to the agenda of PNAC are now common knowledge, but many people seem not to have noticed.

Why this is? Part of the answer probably can be found by looking at the assumptions underlying the media's coverage of war. Although they will occasionally cover news items that might damage the U.S. government's credibility, in general the American media have waxed awfully uncritical since the cynical days of Vietnam, and particularly since 9-11. For example, the attack on Afghanistan, which was portrayed as a response to 9-11, was also presented as a kind of World War II re-enactment in which the U.S. ??“ with its 700 or more military bases in 120 countries worldwide ??“ was cast as a "sleeping giant" in a stunt intended to link 9-11 and Pearl Harbor. Bush spoke of America, which has engaged in more than 200 military actions since 1945, as a "peaceful" nation, but "fierce when stirred to anger." The "axis of evil" speaks for itself.

Such puffery not only misrepresents the U.S. government as benevolent in foreign affairs and reluctant to use military force, it also dehumanizes Islam in American eyes, much as the Japanese were dehumanized in World War II. It is additionally useful for shaming those who question government actions, tarring them as a kind of Fifth Column. But the most important effect of the war on terror/World War II analogy is to create the illusion of clear lines between good and evil in the current conflict when in fact those lines, as in Vietnam, are becoming blurrier by the day.

7. What You Gonna Do When They Come For You?

Propaganda of earlier decades is usually pretty easy to recognize. In hindsight, for instance, most of us can see that the duck-and-cover newsreels of the 1950s and '60s were selling Americans a bill of goods about the "survivability" of nuclear war.

But how good are we at recognizing media PR today? Some would say not terribly ??“ at least if the popularity of reality TV is any indication. From Survivor to Fear Factor, reality shows all ask us to identify with people whose lives are being captured on camera, often almost continuously. And they encourage us to think that's okay.

This is happening in the context of an increasingly intrusive surveillance apparatus in America and Western Europe, where the average city-dweller can expect to be photographed by closed-circuit cameras anywhere from a dozen to 73 to 300 times a day. Not many people complain about this, perhaps at least in part because Big Brother has changed the way Americans feel about Big Brother. But it's hard to imagine earlier generations accepting such a state of affairs, weaned as these generations were on novels and movies ??“ 1984, Fahrenheit 451, even Videodrome ??“ which warned that excessive surveillance would spell the end of freedom.

8. Chip Me!

In the finest homesteading tradition, the Jacobs family of Boca Raton, Florida, has volunteered to plumb a new technological frontier: They have agreed to have "VeriChips," computerized ID tags about the size of grains of rice, surgically implanted in their bodies. On May 10, 2002, their dream was realized. Today the Jacobses constantly emit a low-frequency hum that's readable with a specialized scanner, which makes their medical histories accessible in much the way your Shoppers Food Warehouse preferred customer card allows your cashier to learn, with a single swipe, that you prefer Charmin.

Implantable chip technology is in its rudimentary stages today; in the future, more sophisticated chips are likely to be put into your kids as homing devices to help discourage child abductions; they could serve as permanent biometric identifiers; still more advanced models might even be able to monitor your body chemistry and administer precise doses of psychiatric drugs to regulate your mood.

Despite the Jacobs' enthusiasm, some are less than tickled about this new technology, particularly since being chipped, like owning a credit card, will probably someday become a prerequisite to such life necessities as renting an apartment. Also, once the chip is in your body, you have precious little say in what the device does. The ramifications of this are ominous, particularly where chips that administer psychoactive drugs are concerned. In his conspiracy nightmare "Blueprint for a Prison Planet," Nick Sandberg sums up the worst-case scenario: "With implant technology accepted as being part of life in the twenty-first century," he wonders, "who is going to notice if they no longer require us to actually program them, but seem to do it without our help, no longer allowing us access to our true feelings even if we wanted them?"

9. Peak Oil and the End of the World.

Chicken-littlism may well be humanity's oldest avocation. Since the beginning of what some of us like to call "civilization," doomsayers from the Muggletonians to the Heaven's Gate cult have frantically and confidently spoken of the world's imminent demise ??“ and each time, they've been all wet. The latest pessimistic vision of the future regards "peak oil": the idea that as rising demand for oil outstrips the capacity of producers to supply it, formerly stable economic systems will be thrown into disarray, leading eventually to the kind of anarchy foretold in movies like Mad Max.

One would hope peak oil is a hand-wringing fantasy on a par with the survivalist craze that accompanied Y2K. But there are some facts in favor of the peak oil agitators: a recent, stubborn rise in gas prices, with little relief in sight; the ominous fact that the world's total oil production declined in 2001 and 2002, and rose in 2003 by only .5 percent, while demand rose by nearly 2 percent; and the otherwise inexplicable war in Iraq ??“ which, though a political liability in the short run, is likely in the long haul to yield the U.S. virtually unending supplies of oil just when the peak oil theorists claim it's going to start getting quite scarce.

If the peak oil theory is right, the Iraq war, terrible though it is, will be remembered ??“ like the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand or the Nazi invasion of Poland ??“ as a mere prelude to a much bloodier affair. According to proponents like Kenneth Deffeyes and Colin Campbell, the coming decline in oil supplies will trigger privations in seemingly unconnected economic sectors. Industrial agriculture, for instance, depends heavily on oil and so much of the world's population will face starvation in a future of dwindling fossil fuels. Many oil-peakers speak of a coming "die-off," as the world population adjusts to the resources available to it ??“ by perishing in the billions from war, famine, exposure, and civil unrest.

10. Life After the Fall.

The peak oil theory has been around for some time now, so some people have thought long and hard about its consequences. Such folks include new-urbanists like Jane Jacobs ??“ who forecast that Americans will see fewer lengthy commutes and more self-sustaining local communities, as higher prices at the pump obviate automobile addiction in the U.S. ??“ and more pessimistic "anticivilization" thinkers like Internet scribe Ran Prieur and Richard Heinberg, who foresee a future in which a much smaller populace ekes out a spartan but sustainable existence, feeding largely off the detritus of late capitalism's industrial-sized excesses and marveling at the degree of this generation's waste. Conventional wisdom holds, somewhat vaguely, that alternative power sources such as hydrogen or nuclear power will come along at the last minute to rescue the West from such a fate. But the anticivilization thinkers have worked long and hard to imagine the consequences if no such alternative is found.

It's worth noting that the world they envision is one in which many people live today. It resembles, for instance, the privations of Sadr City ??“ the now-famous ghetto of Baghdad where running water is unreliable and raw sewage flows in the streets ??“ or the arid countryside of Sudan, where political upheaval has displaced a million people and the prospect looms of another Rwandan-style genocide, complete with the same indifference from the supposedly humanitarian West.

In The Soft Cage, a book on the rising surveillance state in America, Christian Parenti quotes Slovenian writer Slavoj Zizek regarding 9/11. Writing of that horrifying taste of third-world violence in the first-world streets of America, Zizek sardonically welcomes Americans to "the desert of the real." "The point," Parenti explains, "is not to justify the crimes of 9/11," but instead to awaken Americans to the reality that "the world is a brutal, vicious place and that America is deeply implicated in its worst aspects." In other words, even if the well-to-do in the West can somehow avert the fate that the peak oil theorists predict, for peoples around the globe the end of the world is now ??“ and this has been true for a long time.

Mike Ward is a contributor to PopMatters.

Source: Alternet.org
http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=18735

- WORST KEPT SECRET DEPARTMENT -

Area 51 Hackers Dig up Trouble
 
To the Area 51 buffs who travel to the Nevada desert in the hopes of catching a glimpse of unexplained lights in the sky or to bask in the mythic allure of the region, 58-year-old Chuck Clark is almost as much a part of the local color as the Black Mailbox.

A resident of tiny Rachel, Nevada -- 100 miles north of Las Vegas along the Extraterrestrial Highway -- the amateur astronomer and author has spent years keeping an eye on the spot the government calls the "operating location near Groom Lake, Nevada." He's said to be a frequent presence at the Little A'Le'Inn, where you can purchase post cards and tee shirts, enjoy an "Alien Burger," and walk out with a copy of Clark's "Area 51 & S-4 Handbook" to guide you on your journey into the desert.

But this self-appointed military watchdog is harder to find these days: messages left for him at the Inn go unreturned, and his media appearances have dried up like Groom Lake itself. "I think he's really not as motivated to talk to the media anymore as he used to be," says friend and fellow base-watcher Joerg Arnu. The reason: it turns out the truth really was out there, and the government didn't appreciate Clark digging it up.

Clark didn't find the Roswell craft or an alien autopsy room -- in fact, while officially shrouded in secrecy, the 50-year-old base is generally believed to be dedicated to the terrestrial mission of testing classified aircraft. "The U2 spy plane, the SR-71, the F-117A stealth fighter, all were flight-tested out of the Groom Lake facility," says Steven Aftergood, director of the Federation of American Scientists' Project on Government Secrecy. The myth of Area 51 memorialized in films, T.V. shows and novels is a function of the secrecy that surrounds it. "It is a concrete manifestation of official secrecy at its most intense, and that invites a mixture of paranoia and speculative fantasy that has become ingrained in popular culture," says Aftergood.
A month prior to the raid, one of the Area 51 road sensors went missing -- vanished, like an abductee pulled into a flying saucer.

Even without aliens, the facility has its secrets, and last year while roaming the desert outside the Groom Lake base Clark stumbled upon one of them: an electronic device packed in a rugged case and buried in the dirt. Marked "U.S. Government Property," the device turned out to be a wireless transmitter, connected by an underground cable to a sensor buried nearby next to one of the unpaved roads that vein the public land surrounding the base. Together, the units act as a surveillance system, warning someone -- somewhere -- whenever a vehicle drives down that stretch of road.

Similar devices had been spotted in the area in the early 90s, but they were crude and bulky, stashed in the bushes and easily spotted. They were later withdrawn. The new road sensors are more clandestine, given away only by a slender antenna poking up through the dirt. "They're very, very hard to find, because there's just this little wire, like a blade of grass," says Arnu.

Arnu, a Las Vegas software engineer, has shared Clark's preoccupation with the Groom Lake base since 1999, when he made a trip to the area to see what all the fuss was about. "I thought, okay, I'll give it a try, see what's out there... A couple of days turned into a couple of weeks and before I knew it I started developing a website about Area 51," says Arnu.

So when Clark found the new generation of road sensor, Arnu drove out to help investigate further. The pair found that, at close range, they could use a handheld frequency counter to pick up the wireless signals given off by the devices as a car passes. Over the following month and half, Clark and Arnu engaged in a kind of geocaching game with the Men in Black, systematically sniffing out the road sensors with the frequency counter, exhuming them, and opening them up. They discovered that each device was coded with three-digit identifier that could be read off an internal dial, allowing Arnu to make a list that correlated each unit's I.D. number with its GPS coordinates, creating a virtual map of a portion of the surveillance network surrounding the Groom Lake facility. Some of the sensors were miles away from the base.

"We dug up about 30 or 40 of them on various access roads leading to the base on public land," Arnu says, insisting that he and Clark always carefully reburied each unit after logging it, and even tested it with the frequency counter to make sure it was still working before moving on to the next one.

Based on their survey, Clark and Arnu have estimated that there are between 75 and 100 sensors, on public land used by hikers and photographers in addition to curiosity seekers. "I think it is absolutely inappropriate," says Arnu. "You have to understand that people going out there-- not everybody is interested in Area 51... They track these tourists on public land going about their hobby."

When they'd gathered sufficient evidence that the Air Force was bugging the desert, Arnu and Clark revealed the road sensors on Arnu's website, Dreamland Resort, a forum and information site for Area 51 aficionados and the "Official Home Page of the world-famous Little A'Le'Inn." The reaction from the government was immediate, according to Arnu: the road sensors were fitted with a new feature aimed at better eluding detection. Now the transmitters would wait a minute or two before broadcasting an alarm, so that desert wardrivers are out of range before the transmission takes place -- at least, using relatively insensitive detection equipment like a frequency counter.

Undeterred by the innovation, in June of last year Clark led a news crew from Las Vegas' KLAS television station into the desert and showed them some of the road sensors.

The following week, according to the station's report, FBI and Air Force agents raided Clark's trailer home in Rachel, and carted off his computer, photographs and records. The next day, Arnu got a call at work from the FBI. "They demanded that I speak with them the very same day," he says.

The investigation sparked something of a backlash in Nevada. The Las Vegas Review Journal editorialized against the FBI's tactics. In the Las Vegas Mercury, George Knapp, the newsman who filmed the KLAS segment, asked how far the government should be allowed to go in protecting the secret base. "If you or I accidentally kick one of these hidden transmitters, should the feds be able to seize our Macintosh and photos of Aunt Betty?" Arnu describes the probe as an intimidation tactic. "It didn't lead anywhere," says Arnu. "It was basically a dead-end from the beginning because we didn't break any law... We dug [the sensors] up without damaging them or destroying them."

But court documents unsealed earlier this year reveal that there was an unsolved mystery lurking around Groom Lake. It seems that a month prior to the raid, one of the road sensors went missing-- vanished, like an abductee pulled into a flying saucer.

The government didn't charge anyone with stealing U.S. property, but last December they charged Clark with a single count of interfering with a communications system used for the national defense. On March 12th, 2003 Clark allegedly obstructed, hindered and delayed "a signal from a mini intrusion device" located outside "the Nevada Test and Training Range" -- a reference to the government land that encompasses the Groom Lake site.

"He removed one," says Natalie Collins, a spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney's Office in Las Vegas. "It says that there, so it's fine for me to confirm that."

In a deal quietly reached with prosecutors last January, Clark agreed to "either locate and return the sensor removed on March 12, 2003 or pay restitution to the United States Air Force to replace the missing sensor." In exchange, the government agreed to suspend proceedings against Clark and to place him on a kind of probation called "pretrial diversion": if Clark goes a year without interfering with any of the road sensors, and doesn't otherwise break the law, the government will drop the felony charge.

Clark's phone number is unlisted, and he didn't respond to repeated messages left for him at the Little A'Le'Inn over the course of several months, and inquiries passed through Arnu. Clark's attorney also declined to return repeated phone calls on the case.
Arnu says his friend never told him about a missing sensor, or his agreement to return it. "I refuse to believe that Chuck would be stupid enough to remove one," says Arnu. "I know... that he agreed to lay low for a year." Clark's adventures near the most famously secret patch of real estate in the world appear to have pulled him beneath the very cloak of secrecy he poked and scratched at for so many years. He has, in a sense, become a part of Area 51.

Source: Securityfocus.com
http://www.securityfocus.com/news/8768 
- A PICTURE IS WORTH A THOUSAND WORDS DEPARTMENT -

Chile: A 17976/33372_chilecreature.jpg

I'm from Concepción and have been working in Santiago for little over a a year. On May 10 this year I decided to take some photos at Parque Forestal, taking some 10 shots which I downloaded to my PC the following day .
 
I thought it would be interesting to photograph a group of Carabineros (state police) on horseback patrolling the sector. The photo was taken at 17:40 hrs approximately from the corner of JM de la Barra and Av. Cardenal José María Caro, in front of bellas Bellas Artes and looking east.
 
It was a cloudy day and the sun was hidden, for which reason my digital camera  ( Ko 17976/33370_chilecreature2.jpg bsp;
This is the reason why the photo shows motion (those knowledgeable about photography will know the reason why). Furthermore, the Carabineros were some 20 meters distant, and I employed the camera's optical zoom (10x) which added to the blurred result. .
 
The fact is that I am very impressed by this image. I attest to the fact that it is not a fraud nor anything similar. For this reason I have made it public and I contacted the staff of CIFAE Chile. I would like to know the true nature of the image that appears in it and if anyone has ever caught anything similar in a photo. Nothing more.
 
Germán Pereira A.
 
Ing. Civil Mecánico

Source:http://www.elcajon.cl/ovniaventura/parquef.htm
Translation (c) 2004. Scott Corrales, Institute of Hispanic Ufology (IHU). Special thanks to Liliana Núñez O.  

- UNLOCKING THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES DEPARTMENT -

Mysterious, Lucrative, Cool. 17976/33367_kabbalah.jpg br>

Celebrity and mysticism do not, on the face of it, mix. It is hard to imagine Julian of Norwich fluffing up her hair extensions to go before the cameras and declare her "long-term commitment" to living a luxurious life in a glamorous foreign city, as Victoria Beckham did last week. But the red string bracelet that Posh has been wearing on her wrist of late indicates that a mystical path nourished by 4,000 years of Jewish religious tradition has acquired yet another convert. Or rather a modern version of it has.

The Kabbalah Centre, based in Los Angeles but with branches in London and elsewhere, has devised a trendy interpretation of an ancient belief system that seems particularly attractive to the superstar classes. From Madonna to Britney and the Beckhams, a growing band of celebs appear to have supplemented their daily workout at the gym with a quick dip into the unfathomable complexities of Kabbalah's sacred text, the Zohar, while the nanny looks after Apple Blossom and Pixie Blue. Or at least they're wearing the bracelets.

The Unknowable God who inhabits eternity has been given a make-over, and in an engagingly hands-on manner, is now appearing online on behalf of the Kabbalah Centre, offering to improve your cash flow, take your sexual energy to new levels, arrange for you to meet your true soul-mate, predict your future, and ensure that you radiate beauty to all who see you.

It's a tall order, of course, but devotees definitely get a new religious name. The singer Madonna, for instance, is now Esther (though some might have felt that Madonna as a name was already religious enough).

You will also need one of those bracelets (said to ward off the Evil Eye of people jealous of your success) for £27, and "holy water" at £2.70 a small bottle which may sound pricey until you learn "there are centuries of wisdom in every drop". Fair enough. And although it is not explicitly stated, the same is probably true of the Blessed Restoring Face Cream available at £78. Suddenly the unknowable and unreachable god is all too knowable and reachable. In fact, I think I saw him recently on a lifestyle programme. He was the one who hated grey hair and saggy skin, wanted everyone to look as young as possible and have themselves a really good time. Enlightenment. But it's all a long way from the esoteric musings of ancient texts. Particularly the face cream.

Every religion has its own theory of the universe, its own set of moral goals, its own grubby history, and its particular spiritual practices. Kabbalah is no different. The name means "tradition" and as a form of mysticism it is rooted in traditional Jewish practices such as the study of the sacred Torah, worship, dedication to communal institutions, caring family relations and repentance. Its moral purpose is to purify the human character and soul, help people to commune with others and God, promote worship and loving deeds, identify with the Divine and strengthen the power of the Holy Presence in the heaven above and the world below.

Mysticism and institutional religion have always had a difficult relationship, however. A pattern repeats itself across all faiths: the mystics read and enjoy the original holy text, are even inspired by it, but instead of stopping there they pick up the holy text again and this time, start to read in between the lines. That's when institutional religion gets nervous - for once between the lines, as between the sheets, you are very free indeed.

If you strip away the colourfully Baroque cosmology of the movement, the Kabbalah is an ancient and profound form of personality typing, arising out of the Image of God. This may seem presumptuous, but the Jewish Torah describes God's features and emotions in very human terms, and the Kabbalah continues this tradition.

Its guiding principle, therefore, is that the Unknowable God has made himself known by revealing himself in 10 different manifestations. Each of these manifestations or Sefirot corresponds to a particular human personality type. And so it is that all Kabbalists, as they reflect on their character, the light and the shadow, can find themselves in the divine form. In themselves, they represent a particular truth about God, and are thus part of the image of God.

In its purest form, the Kabbalah promotes personal awareness, helping individuals to see the particular gifts they bring to the world, and their place in the wider community, and also gives the individual a deep sense of integration or union with the divine. Its moral energy comes from the call to each individual to restore a glory to their particular manifestation which is perceived to have been lost. Such is the Kabbalist path to union with God.

Perhaps surprisingly, the defining work on the Kabbalah was compiled in 13th century Spain. The Zohar or Divine Splendour was written by the Rabbi Moses de Leon of Granada, and claimed to be a treasury of knowledge from the second century. With its own Holy Text at last, the Kabbalah reached its peak of popularity in the 16th and 17th centuries.

Sadly, the naughty but profitable fun of having perceived secret powers came to preoccupy Kabbalists. The chief concern of many was in the sphere of magic, concocting and deciphering charms for people, and composing mystical anagrams with strange combinations of letters, words and numbers. They busied themselves also with prognostication and prophecy, attempting communion with the dead, and a host of other fantasies. No wonder a rabbinic proscription warned that the hidden names of God - those 10 personality types - should only be revealed to a man "who is modest and meek, in the midway of life, not easily provoked to anger, temperate and free from vengeful feelings".

Whether, in the light of that final injunction, this is the best time for Victoria Beckham to be embarking on this particular journey, only she knows. And of course, it is true - as you need only turn on Songs of Praise to see - that religion cannot be watched, only experienced; you really do have to be there. Nevertheless, it is hard not to conclude that the fashionable version of the Kabbalah draws more on magic than insight, and secrets rather than union with God.

The Kabbalah Centre is said to be worth at least $23m and its founder, Rabbi Philip Berg, has three homes in Beverly Hills. Rather than the demanding spiritual discipline traditionally associated with the Kabbalah, modern followers are told they can practise 20-second "speed meditation" and understand ancient text subconsciously by running their hands over the words. "We feel very strongly that we need to warn people that this is a cult," Rabbi Barry Marcus of the Central London Synagogue has said; and the Chief Rabbi has stressed the Kabbalah Centre "does not fall within the remit" of any Jewish authority in Britain.

However, while the supposed secret on offer continues to seem clever and remains reassuringly expensive, I prophesy a financially blessed future for the Kabbalah Centre. So come on Candy Floss, hurry up - or we'll be late for Peach Bowl's party. I've bought her a nice red string bracelet.

Source: Independent.co.uk
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/health_medical/story.jsp?story=523985

- VOICES FROM THE VEIL DEPARTMENT -

T 17976/33368_seance.jpg
 
Voices from beyond the grave come to rest in Manitoba.

WINNIPEG -- Winston Churchill sounds sleepy. Or maybe he's been drinking. Or perhaps his voice was a bit distorted as it travelled all the way from the afterlife, through a British psychic, onto a cassette tape and across the Atlantic in a battered suitcase.

The voice, which vaguely resembles a lugubrious version of the former British prime minister's, is just one among thousands that arrived at the University of Manitoba's archives this week.

The university already has a reputation for collecting paranormal artifacts. It even has a research fund dedicated to the purchase of such material.

Jim Ellis, a retired Canadian pilot living in England, shipped several suitcases and trunks containing an estimated 1,700 to 2,000 audio tapes, along with 300 books and reams of typewritten notes.

The material documents three decades of meetings with Leslie Flint, who was among the last surviving practitioners of independent direct-voice mediumship, a technique by which psychics claimed to speak with the disembodied voices of the dead.

Such séances had been wildly popular during the 1920s and 1930s, and Mr. Flint's client list was rumoured to include Hollywood starlets and British royalty. But by the time Mr. Ellis met Mr. Flint in 1971, the renowned psychic's business was dwindling.

"I realize of course it's not easy for you to appreciate or understand," the purported voice of Mr. Churchill says. "Not being able to see the person concerned, sometimes it must be really disconcerting."

Rather than reacting with skepticism or fear, Mr. Ellis was strangely attracted to Mr. Flint's gifts.

"I learned that there's another world, another level of consciousness we all live on," Mr. Ellis, now 83, said from his home in London.

The former member of the Royal Air Force spent much of his retirement sitting in the living room of a large house in London that Mr. Flint used as a meeting place. (The house had belonged to one of Mr. Flint's clients, and he inherited the property when she died.)

With the drapes drawn and the lights out, Mr. Ellis said, the rotund psychic would sit motionless in his jacket and tie, concentrating on spirits. Mr. Ellis said he never saw Mr. Flint move at all, although he says the voices were generally louder when it was dark.

"The voices seemed to come from the air, from no place at all," Mr. Ellis said.

An endless variety of characters spoke to the gatherings: Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Marilyn Monroe, Rudolph Valentino, even Archimedes.

Some of them brought messages about their lives, such as Ms. Monroe's assertion that she hadn't committed suicide but, in fact, swallowed too many sleeping pills by accident. But mostly the spirits talked about the afterlife, Mr. Ellis said, describing a parallel world in which people can walk through walls and travel by teleportation.

Although his client roster shrank, Mr. Flint was still holding regular gatherings until a few years before his death in 1994.

Records about his life might have been lost or forgotten, if not for a recent resurgence of interest in studying the paranormal.

"Fifteen years ago, I can't see anybody following up on this," said Shelley Sweeney, head archivist for the University of Manitoba.

Research into life after death gained popularity after many people suffered through the First World War, Ms. Sweeney said, and similar concern now about death might be playing a role in rekindling interest in Mr. Flint.

"It's really gaining in popularity again. Maybe it has something to do with people's fear, whether it's global terrorism or wars."
 
Source: The Globe and Mail
www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/ArticleNews/TPStory/LAC/20040522/DEAT22/TPNational/Canada 
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