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Time Travel Research Center
© 2005 Cetin BAL - GSM:+90 05366063183 - Turkey/Denizli
On the Record, KLAS-TV
December 9, 1989
George Knapp, producer/host
Robert Lazar, guest
Knapp: Hello, and welcome to On the Record. One month ago, we began a
series of reports about UFOs. With the exception of a few cranky newspaper
people, the response has been overwhelmingly positive. We've had requests
for more information from all over the country and from all over the world.
Tonight we're going to delve a little deeper into the subject with the man
who was the impetus for our report in the first place, Bob Lazar. Bob, good
to have you here. A thumbnail sketch of ,yourself for those who might not be
familiar with your background.
Lazar: I worked at Los Alamos National Lab.
Knapp: As a physicist ?
Lazar: As a physicist, and hired as a senior staff physicistat Area
S-4, for what I was told anyway was the United States Navy.
Knapp: Where is S-4 ?
Lazar: It's about 10 to 15 miles south of Groom Lake, about 125 miles
north of Las Vegas.
Knapp: How did you get the job ?
Lazar: I really don't want to mention the guy who I got it through.
But I was referred to a person at EG&G to drop off my resume to; that's
where I was interviewed; though the job is COMPLETELY unrelated to EG&G.
Knapp: What did they tell you you were going to be doing ? Or DID
they tell you ?
Lazar: No, they really didn't tell me until the very end. They said a
high-technology job, something that I'd be very interested in.
Knapp: Okay, so you get hired. And what happens ? Do you fly up there
?
Lazar: Fly up there. First day was reading briefings and that sort of
thing. And it became evident to me pretty quickly the level of technology
they were dealing with: gravitational propulsion and things that science has
really only barely touched on.
Knapp: We'll get into the things that you saw in a couple of minutes.
But it's been about a little more than three weeks since your identity was
made public. We had you on another program a couple of months ago -- using
an assumed name and having you in silhouette -- but since your identity has
been made public and since this information has been made public, what's it
been like ? What's been the response from people that see you on the street
?
Lazar: The response has been almost all favorable. In fact, everyone
that I've run into has been very supportive, very interested. I guess
there's just two or three letters.
Knapp: -- from people that don't believe you ?
Lazar: Yeah. Essentially.
Knapp: Responses from other media outlets as well ?
Lazar: Yeah.
Knapp: They want to interview you ? What do they want ?
Lazar: Essentially everything, yes. Radio interviews, TV interviews.
A lot of people want to dig back into my background and re-trace everything.
Knapp: Many of the people who have been calling -- calling us as well
-- were under the impression that either you've gone underground or you've
been silenced or we've been silenced by dark and sinister forces. Anything
like that happen to you so far ?
Lazar: That's ridiculous. People are always going over the deep end
on that. And no one's told me -- other than originally -- not to say
anything. And I'm sure no one's come forward to you.
Knapp: But in the beginning, they told you to keep quiet about this.
Lazar: Oh yeah ! It's the most secret program in the United States.
Knapp: In what way did they try to make sure you kept your mouth shut
?
Lazar: Everything up to death threats. I mean CONSTANT reminders of
it, signing away my constitutional rights for fair trial and that sort of
thing.
Knapp: And since this thing, your phone's been tapped, you believe ?
Lazar: Yeah, I believe. I have a tap detector, and occasionally after
I pick up the phone, a little red light goes on.
Knapp: The reason you came forward with the information to begin with
? Is it related to the fact that they were bothering you ?
Lazar: Yeah, it was essentially to stop that. What had happened was,
I sent in a request for my birth certificate, and as it turned out it wasn't
there anymore, that I wasn't born at the hospital ! And that kind of got me
wondering what's going on. I put in a request for some other information,
previous jobs, and that was also gone, and I thought something had to be
done before I disappeared.
Knapp: The same thing -- it was Los Alamos ? They've never heard of
you ?
Lazar: Yeah.
Knapp: Anything happened since the reports have aired ?
Lazar: They let me know that they were around by doing stupid,
childish little things. But nothing serious, no.
Knapp: You were worried about your LIFE though for a while there,
weren't you ?
Lazar: That was one of the reasons to come on and let everything out
on the air; it's a little of insurance.
Knapp: Are you worried any more ? Do you get the feeling you're over
the hump ?
Lazar: To some degree, yeah.
Knapp: Do you find that most people really believe you or that they
just want more information ?
Lazar: I think a lot of people believe what I said, but the majority
I think do just want more information, too. It's an in-depth subject.
Knapp: Let's look at some of the technology you saw. When did you
first get the idea, what's the first thing you saw that made you convinced
that it's not from here ?
Lazar: The first thing was HANDS-on experience with the anti-matter
reactor.
Knapp: Explain what that is and how it works and what it does.
Lazar: It's a plate about 18 inches in diameter with a sphere on top.
Knapp: We have a tape of a model that a friend of yours made. You can
narrate along. There it is.
Lazar: Inside that tower is a chip of Element 115 they just put in
there. That's a super-heavy element. The lid goes on top. And as far as any
other of the workings of it, I really don't know, you know, [such as] what's
inside the bottom of it . . . 115 sets up a gravitational field around the
top. That little wave guide you saw being put on the top: it essentially
siphons off the gravity wave, and that's later amplified in the lower
portion of the craft. But just in general, the whole technology is virtually
unknown.
Knapp: Now we saw the model. We saw the pictures of it there. It
looks really, really simple, almost too simple to actually do anything.
Lazar: Right.
Knapp: Working parts ?
Lazar: None detectable. Essentially, what the job was was to back-engineer
everything, where you have a finished product and to step backwards and find
out how it was made or how it could be made with earthly materials. There
hasn't been very much progress.
Knapp: How long do you think they've had this technology up there ?
Lazar: It seems like quite a while, but I really don't know.
Knapp: What could you do with an anti-matter generator ? What does it
do ?
Lazar: It converts anti-matter . . . It DOESN'T convert anti-matter !
There's an annihilation reaction. It's an extremely powerful reaction, a
hundred percent conversion of matter to energy, unlike a fission or fusion
reaction which is somewhere around eight-tenths of one percent conversion of
matter to energy.
Knapp: How does it work ? What starts the reaction going ?
Lazar: Really, once the 115 is put in, the reaction is initiated.
Knapp: Automatic.
Lazar: Right.
Knapp: I don't understand. I mean, there's no button to push or
anything ?
Lazar: No, there's no button to push or anything. Apparently, the 115
under bombardment with protons lets out an anti-matter particle. This anti-matter
particle will react with any matter whatsoever, which I imagine there is
some target system inside the reactor. This, in turn, releases heat, and
somewhere within that system there is a one-hundred-percent-efficient
thermionic generator, essentially a heat-to-electrical generator.
Knapp: How is this anti-matter reactor connected to gravity
generation that you were talking about earlier ?
Lazar: Well, that reactor serves two purposes; it provides a
tremendous amount of electrical power, which is almost a by-product. The
gravitational wave gets formed at the sphere, and that's through some action
of the 115, and the exact action I don't think anyone really knows.
The wave guide siphons off that gravity wave, and that's channeled above the
top of the disk to the lower part where there are three gravity amplifiers,
which amplify and direct that gravity wave.
Knapp: In essence creating their own gravitational field.
Lazar: Their own gravitational field.
Knapp: You're fairly convinced that science on earth doesn't have
this technology right now? We have it now at S-4, I guess, but we didn't
create it ?
Lazar: Right.
Knapp: Why not ? Why couldn't we ?
Lazar: The technology's not even -- We don't even know what gravity
IS !
Knapp: Well, what is it ? What have you learned about what gravity is
?
Lazar: Gravity is a wave. There are many different theories, wave
included. It's been theorized that gravity is also particles, gravitons,
which is also incorrect. But gravity is a wave. The basic wave they can
actually tap off of an element: why that is I'm not exactly sure.
Knapp: So you can produce your own gravity. What does that mean ?
What does that allow you to do ?
Lazar: It allows you to do virtually anything. Gravity distorts time
and space. By doing that, now you're into a different mode of travel, where
instead of traveling in a linear method -- going from Point A to B -- now
you can distort time and space to where you essentially bring the mountain
to Mohammed; you almost bring your destination to you without moving.
And since you're distorting time, all this takes place in between moments of
time. It's such a far-fetched concept !
Knapp: Of course, what the UFO skeptics say is, yeah, there's life
out there elsewhere in the universe; it can never come here; it's just too
darn far. With the kind of technology you're talking about, it makes such
considerations irrelevant about distance and time and things like that.
Lazar: Exactly, because when you are distorting time, there's no
longer a normal reference of time. And that's what producing your own
gravity does.
Knapp: You can go forward or backward in time ? Is that's what you're
saying ?
Lazar: No, not essentially. It would be easier with a model. On the
bottom side of the disk are the three gravity generators. When they want to
travel to a distant point, the disk turns on its side. The three gravity
generators produce a gravitational beam. What they do is they converge the
three gravity generators onto a point and use that as a focal point; and
they bring them up to power and PULL that point towards the disk. The disk
itself will attach ONTO that point and snap back -- AS THEY RELEASE SPACE
BACK TO THAT POINT! Now all this happens in the distortion of time, so time
is not incrementing. So the SPEED is essentially infinite.
Knapp: We'll get into the disks in a moment. But the first time you
saw the anti-matter reactor in operation or a demonstration -- you had a
couple of demonstrations -- tell me about that.
Lazar: The first time I saw it in operation, we just put -- a friend
I worked with, Barry -- put the fuel in the reactor, put the lid on as, as
was shown there.
Immediately, a gravitational field developed, and he said, "Feel it!" And it
felt like you bring two like poles of a magnet together; you can do that
with your hand. And it was FASCINATING to do that, impossible, except on
something with great mass! And obviously this is just a . . . And it was a
REPULSION field. In fact, we kind of fooled around with it for a little
while. And we threw golf balls off it. And it was just a really unique thing.
Knapp: And you had other demonstrations to show you that this is
pretty wild stuff, right ?
Lazar: Yeah, they did. They were able to channel the field off in a
demonstration that they created an INTENSE gravitational area. And you began
to see a small little black disk form, and that was the bending of the light.
Knapp: Just like a black hole floating around ?
Lazar: Yeah, well, a black hole is a bad analogy, but yeah,
essentially.
Knapp: And they gave you some kind of demonstration about time,
involving a candle ? Explain how that works.
Lazar: Yeah, they took a candle and lit it and put it in the
distorted gravitational field, which distorts time, and the candle just
stood there. It didn't melt or burn. It was REALLY unbelievable !
Knapp: You had to be floored by seeing all this.
Lazar: Oh I was ! That's why I'm kind of laughing about it now
because it must sound ridiculous to everyone. But it's just phenomenal. I
mean this is really alien technology.
Knapp: About the 115: We talked a little bit about it in the series
of reports. Explain what it is again and why you believe it could not be
manufactured here.
Lazar: Okay, it's a super-heavy element: On the periodic chart, which
lists all the elements found on earth and that can be synthesized, I think
the highest element we've synthesized has been about Element 106. Now from
103 -- or actually, anything higher than plutonium up -- the half-life
begins to drop; in other words, the element disintegrates. When you get up
to Element 106, it's only around for a very small amount of time. Even
science today theorizes that up around Element 113 to 116 -- somewhere in
there -- they should again become stable. This is in fact true. That's what
Element 115 is; it's a stable element.To synthesize it would be impossible.
The way we synthesize heavy elements is, we take a stable element like
bismuth or something like that, or plutonium, whatever, put it in an
accelerator, and BOMBARD it with protons. Essentially what you're trying to
do is plug in protons into the atoms and increase the atomic number. To do
that to the level of Element 115 would just take an infinite amount of power
and an infinite amount of time.
Knapp: What kinds of things, what capabilities would a heavy element
like this have -- I mean other than producing power ? Obviously, it can
produce a LOT of power, right ?
Lazar: It in itself is not anti-matter. It just has a unique property
of producing it. Any of the other basic properties it has I really don't
know of. But using just the anti-matter-producing property, the potential
for a weapon is staggering ! It's absolutely staggering !
Knapp:Like what ? A pound of it: what could it do ?
Lazar: Well, 2.2 pounds is the energy equivalent of 47 10-megaton
hydrogen bombs. I mean, it's a good bang ! And a pound of a super-heavy
element is maybe the size of a plum or something like that.
Knapp: I guess what I've heard most from people who just don't buy
the whole story is that sure, maybe you work at an area called S-4, and
maybe it is a secret area, but what you were shown is stuff that we've made.
That we made this 115 -- if it is 115 -- that we made the flying disks, that
we made these anti-matter reactors, because these are advances that you just
don't know about.
Lazar: Hardly. [laughs.]
Knapp: Why not ?
Lazar: Well, the 115, it's impossible. And the FACT that the main job
of everyone there is to find out how everything's made; I mean that just
contradicts everything right off the bat. The materials are completely alien
to us, and just the overall idea of the project is: Hey, can we duplicate
this with materials that we have here ? So obviously, it was something that
was found or given, for that matter, and we're just trying to duplicate it.
Knapp: The 115: Where do you suppose it came from then ? I mean, what
kind of environment would that kind of element come from ?
Lazar: The only place that 115 could be made would have to be in a
natural situation, somewhere maybe on the fringes of a supernova or
somewhere around maybe a binary star system, where there was more mass in
the primordial mix of that system, where heavier elements would have had a
chance to form, when the stars were collapsing and there were huge amounts
of energy being released. It's something along these lines; it has to be a
naturally-occurring element.
Knapp: You saw an anti-matter reactor. You saw gravity-propulsion
systems in flying disks, flying saucers. You saw this Element 115. You also
read a series of reports that had other stunning information. Can you give
an overview of the kind of things that were in these reports ?
Lazar: The reason I didn't do that before was, first of all they were
just reports. Everything else I had hands-on experience with. Now there was
LOTS of strange information in the reports, but there again it's just
printed material and it could be disinformation. I don't know. But certainly,
the information I did read in the reports about 115, the disks, the grav --
I mean, that all had material that related to that. The reports went into
aliens and even went along the lines of religious --
Knapp: Well, we can let our audience know. I mean we discussed this,
when we were putting this series of reports together, whether to get into
the alien thing or not, and we decided not to for the time being. It's not
like you're hiding something from the audience or whatever, it was just a
decision we made. But you did see reports -- whether they're true or not --
Government reports about aliens.
Lazar: Yeah.
Knapp: What were the reports ?
Lazar: There were photographs of aliens. There were autopsy reports.
There was really a wealth of information.
Knapp: What did they look like ?
Lazar: The typical "grey." I hate to say that, like anyone knows what
a typical grey is. It's a creature, probably three and a half to four feet
tall, a large hairless head, black, slanted eyes, long arms, very thin-looking.
I don't know how else I would describe them.
Knapp: What does an autopsy report look like ? What's included in an
autopsy report that you said you read ?
Lazar: The reason I call it an autopsy report is I saw the carcass --
it was obviously a dead alien -- carcass cut up and it was all dark inside
like it had an iron base. The reason I say iron is because it was very dark
blood or whatever. I'm not a doctor, but it seemed to be one large organ in
the body as opposed to identifiable heart and lungs and that sort of thing,
but just one gooey mess in it.
Knapp: What did the report say ? It had pictures; it had to have some
words: "Here's Exhibit A, an alien" ?
Lazar: Essentially so ! They had weights and densities of the organs,
said there were no conclusions drawn, but it was just a basic description of
what the person who was cutting open the body saw.
Knapp: Say where they came from ?
Lazar: Yeah, in one of the reports it said they came from Reticulum
4, was what it said.
Knapp: Where is that ? Any idea ?
Lazar: [laughs] Well, I'm told it's a star system in Zeta Reticuli.
Reticulum is the constellation. And by "Reticulum 4," they meant the fourth
planet out from that sun. In the same reports, we were identified -- instead
of saying Earth, we were identified as "Sol 3," meaning the third planet out
from our sun.
Knapp: Now you've read a lot of UFO material. Do you find yourself
mixing what you've read and what you've learned from up there ?
Lazar: No, that's why I stay away from the UFO researchers and things
like that. I really don't want to be associated with that. I don't research
the stuff. It's interesting to read, but no, I'm not mixing anything that
I've read into this stuff.
Knapp: We were just talking about the UFO field in general, and you
feel a little reluctant to get mixed up in it, although you ARE right now.
Lazar: Unfortunately, yeah.
Knapp: Why the reluctance ?
Lazar: I don't know. There are so MANY stories circulating around.
Everyone has their own view. Each UFO researcher says they have the right
story. And essentially, I don't want to side with anyone because I don't
know where that information's come from, though they do all have the basic
story: you know, there ARE alien crafts here; how they got here is, probably
aliens brought them here, unless we really have a neat setup with the UPS.
There's just so many different factions of them [UFO researchers], and they
all kind of war between each other; I really don't want to get associated
with them.
Knapp: Before you got into the program at S-4, though, you had an
interest in UFOs. It must be hard for people to swallow that here's a guy
who has an interest in it and he gets hired into the program.
Lazar: Well, there was a very brief time there I had sent out resumes
to several places, and I wanted to get back into the scientific field again.
Almost simultaneously, I met John Lear and read some of his material. And
initially, I thought he was just absolutely crazy. But apparently, he did
have a good source of information because, as it turns out, some of the
information that he had I actually had hands-on experience with.
Knapp: But your regard for UFOs in general: As a scientist, did you
think there was something to it ?
Lazar: Absolutely not.
Knapp: Absolutely nothing ?
Lazar: No. I would have stood on that 'til the day I died.
Knapp: Many of the people who have been calling are UFO groups or UFO
researchers who have demanded that you talk to them: We've got to talk to
this guy; we want to give him a lot more publicity so he stays alive; we
want him to give us information so that we can further check out his
background, etc.; we want to protect him; we want to help him.
You've resisted. You've done this program; you've done a couple of reports
with us; and you've done a radio show or two; in general, you've resisted
going into the UFO circuit. Why is that ?
Lazar: Just like I mentioned before: I just don't want to be
associated with those guys. And how many people are you going to open up
your background to and let them run rampant through it ? I mean, private
detectives, every UFO group in the world wants to do that! The idea was for
me to release the information, essentially to protect myself and take some
of the heat off. And I've done that. And that's all that needs to be done,
really.
Knapp: Certain UFO researchers claim they've been getting information
from you all along; you've been leaking stuff to them; and that they've read
these reports that verify the information. You've been working with UFO
groups while you were in the program at S-4 ?
Lazar: Not UFO groups. I did mention a couple of things to some
people. That's all I'm gonna say.
Knapp: Okay. In essence, were you breaking your vows that you made to
the Government ?
Lazar: Yeah.
Knapp: And why did you feel that was necessary ? I mean, you took an
oath, didn't you ?
Lazar: Yeah. But look at the magnitude of what was going on. I
believe that some of the technology -- maybe all of the technology -- should
be kept secret, until we have a handle on everything. But certainly, the
overview of what happened just cannot be a secret from anyone -- not just
the American people, but the rest of the world.
Let out the basic fact that we have these craft, at one time aliens did at
least visit and drop off something, however they got here, that there was
some contact made, and then cut it short. You don't need to release the
information on the gravity generators, the weapon potential -- which is
enormous -- and so on.
Knapp: What could you do with that technology ? Say you took the
flying disks, the anti-matter reactors, the gravity generators, gave it to
Los Alamos or Livermore, let them examine the potential abilities of this
stuff. I mean, how would this affect life on earth if this stuff was widely
available ?
Lazar: And mass-producable ?
Knapp: Yes.
Lazar: That's tough to say. I mean, you have a completely different
mode of travel. What happens when you can play with time ? That gets into a
really deep philosophical question there.
Knapp: But I mean, it would change a lot of stuff, change everything.
Lazar: Oh yeah ! It would change absolutely everything !
Knapp: Do you think it will ever come out ?
Lazar: Personally, no.
Knapp: What do you hope happens, both with yourself and with this
information ?
Lazar: There's been enough thorns put in their toes to where they do
try and release something.
Knapp: We'll have to have you come back, Bob. Thanks for joining us.
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