465 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
465 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
The Groom Lake Desert Rat is posted here with the permission of the author
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Glenn Campbell.
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THE GROOM LAKE DESERT RAT. An On-Line Newsletter.
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Issue #6. April 6, 1994.
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-----> "The Naked Truth from Open Sources." <-----
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AREA 51/NELLIS RANGE/TTR/NTS/S-4?/WEIRD STUFF/DESERT LORE
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Written, published, copyrighted and totally disavowed by
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psychospy@aol.com. See bottom for subscription/copyright info.
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In this issue...
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CAMMO DUDES RAISE THE ANTE
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[Note: This file ends with "#####". Check for truncation.]
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----- CAMMO DUDES RAISE THE ANTE -----
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IS IT ILLEGAL TO PHOTOGRAPH A NONEXISTENT BASE?
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These can't be happy times for the "Cammo Dudes," the anonymous
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camouflage-clad security guards who patrol the outer border of the
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Groom Lake base and adjoining public lands. The recent national
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publicity has brought a steady stream of tourists to the Freedom
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Ridge viewpoint, and the Dudes have to track them all. A security
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system set up to catch relatively crude Soviet spies seems ill-
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equipped to deal with hordes of high-tech Americans in their sport
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utility vehicles, toting the latest electro-optic gadgets from the
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Sharper Image catalog.
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Particularly irksome to the men in beige is enforcement of a vague
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1948 federal statute against photography. According to Section
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795 of Title 18 U.S.C., it is illegal to photograph any
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"installation or equipment" defined by the President as requiring
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such protection, with a potential fine of up to $1,000 and one
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year in prison. This statute is cited in signs approaching the
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border, but we have not yet found any case of it being tested in
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court. The main legal problem is that if the base does not
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officially exist and is not publicly defined anywhere, how can a
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visitor know when he is taking a picture of it? The military
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could claim that ANY picture taken of ANY land within the
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Restricted Zone is illegal, but by that definition you couldn't
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take a snapshot anywhere in southern Nevada if military-controlled
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mountains happened to appear in the background.
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Given that detailed photos of the Groom base taken from public
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land have already been widely published and televised without a
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peep of protest from the military, the average citizen might
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assume that any such regulations are mute. The technology of 1948
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was certainly different from today, when camcorders can fit in the
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palm of your hand and telephoto lenses can get clear shots from
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dozens of miles away. If the military does not control people's
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movements and activities on public land and cannot restrict the
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possession of cameras themselves, it is pretty near impossible for
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them to control photography.
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But that doesn't prevent the Dudes from trying. They diligently
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track and observe all visitors to see if they might be carrying a
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camera. If they see one, they call the Sheriff. A deputy makes
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the long trip from Alamo to interview the suspects. He asks if
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they were taking pictures, and if they admit they were, he asks
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for their film. It has taken a while, but the watchers have
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eventually caught on that he is "asking," not "ordering" them to
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turn over their film, and all they have to do to retain it is say,
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"No."
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The burden of proof is then on the authorities to show "probable
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cause" that a crime has been committed. Visiting Freedom Ridge
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and having a camera in your possession do not constitute probable
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cause, since there are no legal restrictions against either. To
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justify a warrant for search, seizure or arrest, some witness has
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to come forward to say he saw you taking pictures. This is a
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problem for the Dudes because they, like the base itself, do not
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officially exist. If the patrols saw you taking pictures, they
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are unlikely to make an official statement to that effect, because
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that would place them at risk of public exposure in the court
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system.
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When they see a camera on Freedom Ridge, the Dudes still call the
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Sheriff. The deputy who responds goes through the motions of
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investigating the complaint, but not with much apparent
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enthusiasm. The Dudes dump their problem on the Sheriff's
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Department but provide no support should the situation get hot.
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This has lead to a number of embarrassing encounters where the
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county has been left holding the bag.
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In March 1993, a crew from a Dallas TV station was caught red
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handed. When stopped by the deputy, they admitted to taking
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footage of the base from White Sides Mtn. The deputy asked for
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their video tape, but they refused. After a standoff of a couple
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of hours in which the station's lawyers were called and the feds
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consulted, the feds declined to pursue the matter, and the crew
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walked away with their tape.
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In August 1993, Psychospy and several of the legendary
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Interceptors were camped on Freedom Ridge when they were awakened
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by a Sheriff's deputy, escorted to this remote site by a Cammo
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Dude. The deputy asked to search our bags for cameras, but we
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declined the offer. Without our consent, opening our bags would
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have required a warrant. If any of the Cammo Dudes had seen us
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with cameras earlier, they were apparently unwilling to make a
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statement to that effect, and again, the feds backed down. The
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deputy had made a long drive and a stiff hike for nothing.
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The issue of "probable cause" is a natty one for the Cammo Dudes.
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If they don't exist, won't interact with visitors and can't
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testify in court, how can they pursue a case against alleged
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photographers? By the time the Sheriff arrives any infraction
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that might have occurred is long past. Film, cameras and even the
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suspects themselves can easily vanish in the 40 minutes it takes
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the deputy to arrive. Without a direct admission from the suspect
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or the testimony of a Dude, any prosecution of the 1948 statute
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would seem hopeless to pursue.
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The Dudes never give up, however. The problem of tourists
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photographing the nonexistent installation has evidently caused
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enough chagrin in the secret base hierarchy to make them to pull
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out all the stops. In their latest move, they've gone to the top
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secret "Q" Division of the Special Weapons Research Directorate
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for a high-tech James Bond gizmo to quash those Interceptors once
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and for all....
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----- THE SUPER MEGA SPY CAM -----
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On March 23, Psychospy was visiting Freedom Ridge accompanied by
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the usual media rif-raf. This time it was a reporter and a
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photographer working for the New York Times Magazine. We drove to
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the top on the now well-beaten "Freedom Ridge Expressway," then
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lounged at the viewpoint for an hour or two. Two Dude patrols, a
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Cherokee and a white pickup, watched us from separate hilltops
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behind the line as we scanned Groom Lake with a spotting scope.
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All we saw was your run-of-the-mill secret base, just sitting
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there, no big deal.
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Turning the scope toward the Dudes, however, one of the visitors
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caught something new. The occupant of the pickup, about a mile
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and half from us, was now out of his vehicle and doing something
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in the desert about 50 feet away. At low magnification, he seemed
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to be standing behind a large, dark green form about as tall as he
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was. The shape of the blob was reminiscent of the Creature from
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the Black Lagoon when first emerging from the slime, and we might
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have wondered at first whether the man was being attacked by the
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creature's desert cousin.
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Switching to higher magnification revealed that the blob was
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actually a tripod draped in camouflage netting, and on top was
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some sort of bulky device that the man was looking through. It
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was very hard for us to make out the details from our distance,
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but the device resembled a large studio video camera pointed
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directly at us. Psychospy was reminded of the device spotted atop
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a camouflaged van during the Freedom Ridge Field Trip in January.
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[See DR#1.] It was apparent to us that this was a surveillance
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camera, probably of high magnification given its size, and that it
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was probably attached to a VCR deck. They were obviously trying
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to collect evidence of people photographing the secret base.
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At times like this, we find it immensely helpful to have the
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Sheriff's radio frequency (154.86 MHz) programmed into our
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scanner. Sure enough, shortly after we spotted the "Super Mega
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Spy Cam" looking up at us, we heard from the Sheriff's dispatcher
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that Range Security had called with a complaint. Three
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individuals, including the notorious GLENN CAMPBELL and a reporter
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from "The New York Press," were seen taking pictures from "the
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area referred as Freedom Ridge."
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We were outraged at these unfounded charges. Psychospy didn't
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have a camera. The reporter didn't have a camera. The
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photographer... darn it, where did he go to? Up until now, anyone
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taking reasonable precautions could pretty much snap whatever
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pictures they wanted. CNN did it. So did local stations from
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Boston, Dallas and Las Vegas and major newspapers and magazines
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from around the country. Big time news crews, used to filming in
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really dangerous situations in wars around the world, drive past
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the wordy No Photography signs without even slowing down. Even
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the little guy without the backing of a powerful news organization
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could get away with a few snaps as long as he didn't wave his
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camera around. The Dudes can't see much from over a mile away,
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and even if they did, they probably wouldn't come forward to
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testify.
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The Super Mega Spy Cam (SMSC) changed all that. On the Sheriff's
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frequency, we heard our own license plate number reported.
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Reading license plates from a mile and a half away is no mean
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feat. With that magnification, you could not only see if someone
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had a camera but maybe even the f-stop and exposure settings.
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What's more, everything the operator sees is probably also being
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recorded on tape, perhaps for use in court. Over the radio, we
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heard that the District Attorney and local Justice of the Peace
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were being notified, as well as the legal advisor for the range.
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This could mean only one thing: search warrants.
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The authorities had never gotten this serious before, and all
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Psychospy can say is, it couldn't have happened at a better time.
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The Times guys wanted action, and the Cammo Dudes were graciously
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providing it. Full red carpet treatment. The reporter had dodged
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bullets and counted bodies in the Gulf War, while the photographer
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cut his journalistic teeth in Afghanistan, Haiti and the L.A.
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riots. These guys couldn't be happier than to relive the thrill
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of battle, this time with no real risk of being shot. With the
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Sheriff still twenty minutes away, we decided it was time to pack
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up. In full view of the Dudes and the SMSC, we casually loaded
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our gear into the 4WD, rolled down the dirt track at a leisurely
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pace, then stopped at a lower ridge where we waved at the guy in
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the white Cherokee.
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Then we vanished.
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It was a pleasant day and we had plenty of time, so we decided we
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would take an alternate route. We turned off the track and down
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into a ravine where the Dudes couldn't see us. We went as far as
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we could in the 4WD, then we decided to take a stroll. We hiked
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about fifteen minutes down a gorge to some protected ledges near
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the base of Freedom Ridge. There we relaxed and broke out the
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Mountain Dew and pretzels.
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After a while we began to feel really guilty. Over the radio, we
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heard that the deputy had discovered our car and was now tracking
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us on foot. He was good. Psychospy was used to dealing with the
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uninspired Cammo Dudes who hardly ever left their vehicles. Now
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we were being pursued by a professional who was reading our
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footprints in the sand. Sooner or later, he would find us, and he
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would be pissing mad.
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We debated the merits of hiking back to meet the deputy instead of
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putting him through the wringer. We had no problem with playing
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with the anonymous Dudes--That's what they are there for.--but the
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deputy deserved more respect. Obviously, he was not here of his
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own volition. The Dudes had dumped an impossible problem on him
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and expected him to solve it. We felt bad about making him sweat
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and were getting ready to head back to face the music when
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miraculous redemption came from the skies.
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Black Hawk.
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Suddenly, our escapade became all worthwhile as we dove for cover.
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We huddled behind bushes along the sides of the ravine as the big
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green helicopter combed the hillsides looking for us. It made
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several passes down the ravine, as the Times photographer snapped
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away, but they apparently didn't spot us. As they began to search
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other areas, we realized that we would have to make ourselves more
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obvious if we wanted to bring the chopper back. We hiked down to
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the bottom of the ravine and out into the open desert. Wanting to
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be spotted but too proud to wave the white flag, we crouched
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behind spindly bushes that didn't do much to hide us. The
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helicopter came back, and they managed to detect us. It circled
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around us a couple of times, then came down low, hovered directly
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above us and blasted us real good.
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All right!
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It is very tempting in cases like this to overestimate the threat.
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For example, in a similar story published in Popular Science,
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where Psychospy and aviation expert Jim Goodall were "picnicking"
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under a small tree, the helicopter that blasted us seemed to get
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closer and closer with each telling of the tale. In Popular
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Science, it nearly took off half the tree, when in reality it
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never physically touched it, only hovered within a couple of feet
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(or roughly 25 to 30 feet above us). In the later encounter, the
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Times reporter conservatively estimated that the helicopter was 50
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feet above us, although Psychospy and the photographer thought it
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was less. In any case, it was close enough at least to blast us
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with sand and force us to close our eyes. The helicopter "sat" on
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us for about ten seconds, then it rose straight up.
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The obvious message was, "Ha, we found you!"
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Regardless of whether the chopper was 30 feet or 50 feet above us
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(or whether we were frightened or thrilled by the encounter), this
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action violates the Air Force's own regulation regarding operating
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altitudes, which, except for take-off and landing, require a
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minimum altitude of 500 feet above any person, vehicle or
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building. (AF Regulation 60-16, Section 5-10.) Never during our
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visit did we leave public land, and at the time of the "assault,"
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we were about a half mile from the border.
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The helicopter went back to where the deputy was and transported
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him to a hill that was closer to our position. Then it hovered
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near us at a fairly respectable distance, about 100 feet above and
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100 feet away, as it waited for the deputy to reach us. As it
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hovered, we had a chance to examine the helicopter in detail with
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binoculars. We were looking for tail numbers but found none.
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There was a faint Air Force insignia and a few other minor
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markings but otherwise nothing to identify the craft. Certainly,
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this must be a violation of a regulation, too.
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When the deputy arrived, he was not a happy camper. He asked us
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if we had cameras on the hill. Psychospy replied, in lawyer-like
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tones, that what we were doing on the hill was our private affair
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and that we had no desire to discuss our activities. The deputy
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said it was the wrong answer. We were seen taking pictures from
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Freedom Ridge, and based on this information, he could hold us
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until search warrants could be obtained. Psychospy replied that
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the deputy must do what he has to do.
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That's when the photographer broke down and confessed. He
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admitted that he did have a camera on Freedom Ridge but that there
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was no film in it at the time. His only goal in displaying it was
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to provoke the Dudes into sending out the helicopter. The only
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shots he took were of the Black Hawk buzzing us over public land.
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Showing no emotion, not even a smirk, the deputy relayed this
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story over the radio to his superiors at the Sheriff's Department.
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He asked them what he should do next. After a long pause, the
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word came back that the subjects could either voluntarily turn
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over their film or they would be held until a search warrant could
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be obtained for their vehicle.
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The reporter and photographer huddled for a moment, then they
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began to argue violently. The photographer did not want to turn
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over his film. He was a professional, he said, and he had broken
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no law. The reporter insisted that he must turn over his film,
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that it was the only way to get out of this sticky situation. The
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argument went on for five minutes at least, while Psychospy paced
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around in the background, shaking his head and rolling his eyes to
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high heaven.
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Finally, the photographer gave in. Psychospy nearly cried as he
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watched this proud man, veteran of countless Third World
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conflicts, reduced to quivering jelly by the Cammo Dudes and the
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Lincoln County Sheriff's Department. Haltingly, painfully, the
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photographer emptied his camera and his bag and turned over his
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film to the Sheriff. Both rolls.
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There was some debate on the Sheriff's channel about whether the
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photographer might have shot more than two rolls. We don't know
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what was happening off the radio, but presumably the Sheriff was
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contacting the Dudes about what they wanted to do. We heard from
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the deputy that there was some talk of executing a warrant anyway,
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but evidently the will was not strong. As we hiked back up the
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hill with the deputy to where our cars were parked, the reporter
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took the opportunity to interview him. At the top, the deputy
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provided the photographer with a receipt for the two rolls, and we
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parted amicably.
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Did the photographer shoot more than two rolls? Perhaps the
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answer will be revealed in a future edition of the New York Times
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Sunday Magazine.
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----- ANALYSIS -----
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The journalists had identified themselves as working for the New
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York Times, but we sensed that it didn't have much to do with how
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we were treated. It seemed to us that the Sheriff's Department
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had gone through the motions of investigating the complaint but
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had no interest in pushing it any further than necessary. It
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seems that whenever the Sheriff's Department goes out on a limb to
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pursue an AF complaint, the AF leaves them hanging. The Cammo
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Dudes may complain a lot, but they never back it up with a court
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appearance or any kind of public action that might "reveal" their
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existence.
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Realistically, serving a search warrant would have opened a
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Pandora's box of problems for the Sheriff that the nonexistent
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feds would immediately wash their hands of. If the Sheriff had
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searched our vehicle, found exposed film and seized it, a noisy
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custody battle would become inevitable. If the Sheriff searched
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the vehicle and find no exposed film, nationally publicized
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embarrassment might follow, with the Cammo Dudes, as usual,
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providing no support to the county.
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Even the Super Mega Spy Cam doesn't help any. At best, what the
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tape might show is close-up pictures of people using cameras on
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public land. It doesn't provide any indication of what the people
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are pointing their cameras at. The tape alone provides no useful
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legal evidence unless someone is willing to testify that the base
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exists, the cameras were pointed at it and that the Groom
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installation is designated by the President as requiring
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protection from photography.
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Any attempt to prosecute a photographer who stays on public land
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would seem a legal and public relations nightmare as long as the
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Groom base is unacknowledged. Indeed, any such court case might
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only provide an opportunity for activists to prove, without a
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legal doubt, that the base does indeed exist. It seems unlikely,
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then, that the feds would ever press charges, especially in the
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current climate where any case would be intensely watched.
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Without the political will to prosecute, complaints to the Sheriff
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and the execution of search warrants would seem only a means of
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harassment. As it stands now, calling the Sheriff when people are
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seen with cameras seems little more than an attempt by the Cammo
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Dudes to coerce visitors into "voluntarily" relinquishing their
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film.
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----- HOW TO TRAP A DUDE -----
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#1 6-APR-1994 10:36:20.65 NEWMAIL
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With so much public interest in the mysterious Cammo Dudes, every
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journalist wants to interview one. Trouble is, whenever you
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approach them on public land, they literally run away, dashing
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across the border where you can't follow.
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The day before the incident reported above, Psychospy and the
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Times reporter were touring a different part of the border with
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several other visitors. While traveling in a three-vehicle convoy
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down a rugged dirt road, we passed one of the Dudes in a white
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Cherokee, evidently alerted by the ILLEGAL ROAD SENSORS we had
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tripped. After he passed, the reporter jumped out of our vehicle
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and ran after him, trying to get him to stop, but the driver
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gunned the engine and sped away.
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Fortunately, we saw a second Cherokee coming down the road a few
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minutes later, and this time we knew what to do. After our lead
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vehicle passed him, it turned diagonally across the road, and the
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trailing vehicles did the same, trapping the Dude between. The
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reporter then sauntered over and conducted a leisurely interview.
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What did the driver have to say? "No comment" pretty much sums it
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up. "Don't ask me any questions," was his most memorably line,
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although spoken in an amiable tone. The Dude was clearly
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embarrassed at being so easily captured, but he did have the
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presence to ask the reporter who he was writing for.
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The reporter's reply was relayed through the Cammo Dude
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bureaucracy, but got strangely garbled in the process. The next
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day, the Dudes reported to the Sheriff that the journalist was
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from "The New York Press." We had never heard of this publication
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but speculated that it must be one of the gay community newspapers
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out of Greenwich Village.
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Perhaps the Dudes are more worldly than we thought.
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----- INTEL BITTIES -----
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CAMOUFLAGE FATIGUES. The Cammo Dudes are dressed in SIX-COLOR
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DESERT camouflage, not the three-color style more widely available
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in Army-Navy stores. Some visitors have come in three-color and
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felt oh so gauche. Don't embarrass yourself. Six-color cammo is
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available at Army-Navy 1 in Las Vegas or by mail from US Cavalry
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(catalog: 800-777-7732).
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FREEDOM RIDGE STATUS: Still open. No closure date set.
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===== SUBSCRIPTION AND COPYRIGHT INFO =====
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(c) Glenn Campbell, 1994. (psychospy@aol.com)
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This newsletter is copyrighted and may not be reproduced without
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permission, EXCEPT FOR THE FOLLOWING: For six months following
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the date of publication, you may photocopy the text or send or
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post this document electronically to anyone who you think might be
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interested, provided you do it without charge. You may only copy
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or send this document in unaltered form and in its entirety, not
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as partial excerpts. After six months, no further reproduction of
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this document is allowed without permission.
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This newsletter is published on an irregular basis whenever
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conditions warrant. Email subscriptions are available free of
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charge to any internet user. To subscribe (or unsubscribe) to
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current and future editions, send a message to psychospy@aol.com.
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We will acknowledge your request within a few days; if you receive
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no reply it may indicate an addressing problem. In that case,
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call 702-729-2648. Hard copy subscriptions to this newsletter are
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available for $1.50 per issue, ordered from the address below.
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(e.g. $15 for the next 10 issues, mailed anywhere in the world.)
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The US mail address for psychospy, Glenn Campbell, Secrecy
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Oversight Council, Area 51 Research Center, Groom Lake Desert Rat
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and countless other ephemeral entities is:
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HCR Box 38
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Rachel, NV 89001 USA
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#####
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