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- Subject: ABC News Groom Lake Transcript
-
-
- REPORT ON GROOM LAKE
- ABC World News Tonight
- April 19, 1994
-
- Peter Jennings: Finally from us this evening, the road to
- Dreamland. And there really is such a place, though you are not
- supposed to know about it, and the U.S. Air Force is unhappy with
- us because we're going to tell you about it. The Dreamland we are
- talking about is actually an Air Force base in Nevada. The
- Russians know about it, so why not you? ABC's Jimmy Walker has
- the results of an ABC News investigation....
-
- Jimmy Walker: We are one hundred miles from Las Vegas driving
- across the Nevada desert on public land. There is more here than
- meets the eye. A few feet off the dirt road, an electronic sensor
- is hidden in the sagebrush.
-
- Glenn Campbell: [Radio static in background.] The base control
- has relayed to the patrols that someone has crossed one of their
- sensors. That's us.
-
- Walker: So they now know...
-
- Campbell: They know we're here. They'll be here in about ten
- minutes.
-
- Walker: Sure enough, minutes later, a white Jeep goes by.
- Someone is very interested in who visits this particular piece of
- scrub. That someone is the U.S. Air Force. A helicopter flies
- out to investigate us. It comes from Groom Lake, one of the most
- closely guarded military facilities in the country.
-
- The secret air base which some people call Dreamland or others
- Watertown or still others Area 51 is located about twelve miles
- over in that direction. It's clearly visible but the government
- won't acknowledge that it even exists. And to photograph it would
- violate the Espionage Act.
-
- Military historians say the U-2 spy plane was tested at Groom
- Lake. More recently, the Stealth fighter. But the base does not
- appear on any map, and for the record, the Pentagon will only say
- that Groom Lake is part of the vast Nellis Range complex.
-
- Enter Glenn Campbell and Peter Merlin, members of a group that
- believes the Air Force has too many secrets and not enough
- accountability. Armed with lawn chairs and binoculars, they set
- up shop on public land overlooking the air base. And they're
- driving the Air Force crazy.
-
- Peter Merlin: There's some large hangers. One is quite enormous.
- And a control tower....
-
- Walker: As a result of the prying eyes, the Air Force is trying
- to expropriate this hilltop and an adjoining one to add to the
- 4700 square miles it already controls, saying it's needed for
- safety reasons.
-
- Campbell: There was the suggestion that people sitting on this
- ridge like we are doing might be hit by aircraft.
-
- Walker: The pending land grab has turned the hilltops into a
- tourist attraction, drawing even more attention to the base. Last
- month at a federal hearing in Las Vegas, officials got an earful.
-
- Angry Citizen at Hearing: The place is big enough already. How
- much expansion do they need? That place is safe. It's stupid.
-
- Another Citizen at Hearing: There have already been allegations
- that environmental crimes have been committed there. Now you're
- asking for 4000 more acres to hide behind.
-
- Walker: What's more, buy this model plane kit [Testor's "Thunder
- Dart"] and you get with it [on the] directions this 1988
- photograph of the base taken by a Soviet satellite. The pentagon
- says it's okay to show you this picture.
-
- Campbell: The only people this base is being kept secret from are
- the American people, the people who pay for it.
-
- Walker: Our story took an unexpected turn as we prepared to
- leave. We spotted a Sheriff's car heading our way.
-
- Deputy (at driver's window): We're investigating the possibility
- of a criminal offense.
-
- Walker: And what would that criminal offense be?
-
- Deputy: Sir, may I see your driver's license, please.
-
- Walker: They believed we were photographing the facility. They
- were wrong. We were detained, questioned and searched. Our
- camera, audio equipment and some video tapes were confiscated.
- The Air Force held the gear for five days before returning it. No
- charges were filed against us.
-
- And every work day, a fleet of privately owned unmarked airliners
- shuttle more than 1500 workers from Las Vegas to the base that
- doesn't exist.
-
- Campbell (looking through binoculars): Yup, secret base out
- there. Sure enough. Same secret base as yesterday.
-
- Walker: J
- ames Walker, ABC News, Lincoln County, Nevada.
-
- #####
-
-
- Subject: ABC News Groom Toxic Suit Transcript
-
- ----- GROOM LAKE TOXIC INJURY SUIT -----
-
- Below is a transcript of a report on ABC WORLD NEWS TONIGHT WITH
- PETER JENNINGS, August 1, 1994.
-
- [Supplement to the Groom Lake Desert Rat. The transcript is followed by
-
- a press release from George Washington University concerning the suit.]
-
- FORREST SAWYER (fill-in anchor): Some government employees are
- going to court this week, charging that their work has made them
- sick. What makes their claim so unusual is what they do and
- where--at a super secret military base called Groom Lake whose
- very existence we first reported just a couple of months ago.
- Here's our legal affairs correspondent Cynthia McFadden.
-
- CYNTHIA MCFADDEN: These people are not your average commuters.
- [Workers boarding jets at McCarran Airport.] Among them are
- engineers and technicians helping develop America's most secret
- new weapons. Every day they fly a half an hour into the desert
- from Las Vegas on an airline that doesn't exist.
-
- [In desert.] The planes land at an air base just behind these
- hills. Showing it to you would be a crime. And if you have ever
- worked at the air base, talking about it is a crime. And yet some
- of the workers say they now must talk about environmental crimes
- they say the government committed.
-
- VICTIM (in shadow, voice disguised): We all done a lot of
- coughing while the smoke was blowing in our direction. I
- developed cancer. I guess I'm not cured of it.
-
- CYNTHIA MCFADDEN: This man and at least a dozen others say that
- throughout the 1980s a deadly smoke was produced by weekly
- burnings in huge pits at the air base.
-
- WITNESS (in shadow, voice disguised): There were several trenches
- about 300 feet long and about 25 to 30 feet across and about 25
- feet deep.
-
- CYNTHIA MCFADDEN (to WITNESS): What was the purpose of the
- trenches?
-
- WITNESS: For the destruction of classified material.
-
- CYNTHIA MCFADDEN: Materials like those used to make the stealth
- fighter invisible to radar. Where better to dispose of the secret
- compounds than the secret air base, as seen in this 1988 Russian
- satellite photograph. An air base where the environmental laws
- didn't seem to reach.
-
- WITNESS: The running joke was, it was the place that didn't
- exist, so consequently anything could occur there.
-
- CYNTHIA MCFADDEN: The Air Force says that while we can't take a
- picture of the base, they can't object to our showing you this
- Russian photo. It shows where workers say the trenches were
- located.
-
- VICTIM: It was thick black smoke. Sometimes it was thick gray.
- The smell was very nauseating. It would burn your eyes. It would
- burn your throat.
-
- CYNTHIA MCFADDEN: And the smoke, say some of those who worked in
- it, made them sick.
-
- VICTIM: I developed a rash, skin rash. I used sandpaper to get
- the scale off, because it's the only way I can remove it.
-
- CYNTHIA MCFADDEN (to VICTIM): Do other men that you worked with
- describe a similar rash?
-
- VICTIM: One in particular, yes. He had it all over his body.
-
- CYNTHIA MCFADDEN: What happened to him?
-
- VICTIM: He died.
-
- CYNTHIA MCFADDEN: Robert Frost was a sheet metal worker at the
- base, until he started developing these rashes. Neither he nor
- his wife could figure out what had caused them. Just before his
- death, they sent a tissue sample to Peter Kahn, an expert on
- hazardous chemicals. His conclusion? Robert Frost had been
- exposed to types of dioxins and dibenzofurons, which are not
- normally seen in humans.
-
- PROF. PETER KAHN ("Rutgers University"): My only reaction is,
- what on earth has this man been exposed to?
-
- CYNTHIA MCFADDEN: Frost died in 1989 of cirrhosis of the liver,
- but his widow Helen says that while Frost did drink, he was no
- alcoholic. She believes the real cause of her husband's death was
- working at Groom Lake.
-
- HELEN FROST: Who does the government think they are that they can
- go around killing people. That's called murder.
-
- CYNTHIA MCFADDEN: The Air Force told Mrs. Frost that it had
- nothing to do with her husband's death, so she and her daughters,
- along with a dozen others who worked at the air base, have hired
- themselves a lawyer.
-
- PROF. JONATHAN TURLEY (to Frost family): Many of our clients may
- be developing more extensive injuries similar to your father's.
-
- CYNTHIA MCFADDEN: They want to lift the secrecy surrounding the
- burning and find out what the workers were exposed to. The
- government's position has been that these people have no right to
- go to court, that national security demands continued secrecy.
- Air Force and Environmental Protection Agency officials said that
- they would not comment on the pending legal action.
-
- PROF. JONATHAN TURLEY ("George Washington Law Center"): The
- secrecy oath doesn't mean that my clients have stopped being
- citizens of the United States. It doesn't mean that they are non-
- persons and they've got a non-injury.
-
- CYNTHIA MCFADDEN: The government says there were no environmental
- crimes committed there at Groom Lake, the Air Force base that
- doesn't exist. They say, nobody's sick. Jonathan Turley and his
- clients say given a chance they can prove otherwise.
-
- Cynthia McFadden, ABC News, on the road to Groom Lake.
-
- ----- GWU PRESS RELEASE -----
-
- Below is a PRESS RELEASE from George Washington University, Office
- of University Relations, Washington, D.C....
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
- August 2, 1994
-
- GW LAW PROFESSOR JONATHAN TURLEY FILES AGAINST THE EPA FOR FAILURE
- TO INSPECT SECRET AIR FORCE BASE FOR VIOLATION OF FEDERAL
- ENVIRONMENTAL LAWS.
-
- Washington, D.C. -- The George Washington University National Law
- Center Professor of Environmental Law Jonathan Turley, in an
- unprecedented move, filed suit today against the Environmental
- Protection Agency for failing to live up to its duties to inspect
- violations of federal environmental laws. This will be the first
- in a series of legal actions planned by Professor Turley.
-
- Turley is representing current and former workers at Area 51, a
- secret Air Force base in Nevada -- also known as Dreamland or
- Groom Lake. The suit alleges serious injuries, and at least one
- death, to employees due to the burning of hazardous and toxic
- wastes at the facility. Turley's suit further alleges that
- workers were denied requests for protective clothing -- including
- gloves -- in handling hazardous wastes. Workers, who signed
- secrecy agreements upon employment at the base, will be
- represented as "John and Jane Does" to prevent possible
- retaliation, including physical threats.
-
- This case is the first of it's kind. Area 51 is generally
- considered the most secret, classified base in the U.S. military
- network. "By forcing compliance at Area 51, we hope to establish
- a precedent whereby the military will be forced to acknowledge its
- responsibilities in every base and facility," says Turley.
- "Ultimately, this case is a direct confrontation between national
- security laws and environmental and criminal laws."
-
- Specifically, Turley will be asking the D.C. court to force the
- EPA to inspect and monitor the secret base. He will argue that
- the federal hazardous waste law does not give any exception for
- secret bases in its provisions and will be asking the court to
- force the EPA to fulfill a mandatory duty under the law.
-
- "We want to establish that workers at secret bases should not be
- forced to rely on the arbitrary protections of the military, but
- should be able to go to court to receive remedies for violations,"
- says Turley. He also intends to establish that secrecy agreements
- do not preempt environmental protections. Eventually, Turley
- plans to draft a new law on the judicial review of such cases and
- on issues ranging from anonymous legal actions to standing
- questions to citizen suit actions against the EPA.
-
- ###
-
- How to stymie a toxic-waste lawsuit
-
-
- February 20th, 1995 - Newsweek Article
-
- It Dares Not Speak Its Name
-
- Enviroment: How to stymie a toxic-waste lawsuit
-
- What's in a name? Maybe the key to a pathbreaking enviromental
- lawsuit.
- Five former and current government employees and the widow of a sixth,
- charge that the workers suffered blackouts, rashes, respiratory
- problems
- and dime size open sores after they were exposed to burning toxic
- wastes
- at a secret air force facility in Nevada. The widow, Helen Frost,
- contends that poisonous fumes, from plastics and chemicals that were
- thrown into open pits and doused with jet fuel, contributed to her
- husband's death in 1989. Lawyers have a tough enough time pinnin
- illness,
- let alone death, on exposure to toxics. But the worker's attorney,
- Jonathan Turley of George Washington University's law school, faces a
- more
- basic problem. For four months after the suit was filed, the
- government
- denied the very existence of the facility; now is acknowledges that
- there
- is an "operating location" in the area, but refuses to reveal its name.
-
- (The workers know the site by several names, but the Feds won't say
- whether any is right.) And in a Kafkaesque technicality, without the
- officially recognized name, which Turley filed a motion last week to
- get,
- the suit cannot proceed. If the site's a secret, it's badly kept.
- Russian spy satellites have amassed a nice bumful of snapshots of the
- facility, 90 miles northwest of Las Vegas on Nellis Air Force Base.
- UFO
- groupies know it as Area 51, or Groom Lake: hundreds have flocked to
- the
- perimeter, convinced the air force is reproducing a captured flying
- saucer
- at the site. It was also the testing ground for the U-2 spy plane and
- the F-117A stealth. But just as you can't sue someone you know only by
- nickname, so Turley's clients can't sue the Pentagon over a site whose
- proper moniker the government won't disclose. The plaintiff's request
- for
- the name, says a government brief, is "vague, overbroad, and
- unreasonably
- burdensome." If the Feds remain mum about the name, Turley plans to
- call
- o the witness stand the military attache at the Russian Embassy, whose
- testimony would show that Area 51 is eminently real, and no secret. If
- he
- gets past the procedural hurdle, Turley says, he has a strong case. He
- has evidence that the Air Force denied the worker's requests of
- protective
- clothing, and that Frost's body had high levels of dioxins and furans
- (produced when plastics burn) when he died. The Department of Justice
- and
- the Enviromental Protection Agency have launched a probe into hazardous
- waste violations at Area 51; an air force spokesman says it "takes its
- environmental responsibilities very seriously." Of course, if the
- Pentagon blocks the suit by refusing to release the name of the side,
- the
- validity of the charges won't matter.
-
- - Bruce Shenitz and Sharon Begley, Newsweek
-
- OUR WONDERFUL PROTECTIVE GOVERNMENT!
-
-
-