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FBI Raids Over Area 51

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Webmaster Joerg Arnu stands on his property on Sept. 17, 2020, in Rachel, Nevada, where he creates websites including the one adverse to Alienstock. 

(L.E. Baskow/Las Vegas Review-Journal) 

Associated Press

A Nevada man who operates a website focusing on the top-secret U.S. military base Area 51, long an object of UFO and space alien rumors, said Thursday that military and federal investigators raided his home in what he called a bid to muzzle him.

“I believe the search, executed with completely unnecessary force by overzealous government agents, was meant as a message to silence the Area 51 research community,” Joerg Arnu said in a statement about the November 3 raids at his home in Las Vegas and the tiny desert town of Rachel. “The question now is: How far will they go?”

“I am not a spy,” Arnu said in an email to The Associated Press, “I and the vast majority of members of my web site support the military and we understand the need for secrecy to keep our country safe.” In a statement posted on his “Dreamland Resort” website and provided to AP, Arnu said the searches happened without any warning, “I was only told that the search was related to images posted on my Area 51 web site.”

Arnu told CBS affiliate KLAS-TV he was held outside while agents searched the home. He told the station he was shown a few pages from a lengthy search warrant, most of which remained sealed.

“As it is right now, I have no clear understanding of what I’m being charged with or why my property was seized,” Arnu told the station. “Cell phones, memory sticks, backup drives, my camera equipment that is worth almost $10,000, my drone, everything was taken.”

Arnu told KLAS-TV that another team of agents kicked in the door of his Las Vegas residence, detained his girlfriend and then conducted another search. “She was led out into the street in full view of all the neighbors, and subsequently our homes were searched.”

Lt. Col. Bryon McGarry, public affairs chief at Nellis Air Force Base in Las Vegas, said he was aware that Arnu’s properties had been searched by FBI and Air Force Office of Special Investigations agents. McGarry said he could provide no additional information. A press official with the FBI in Las Vegas declined to comment. The Air Force OSI did not immediately respond to email messages.

Arnu said that since 1999 he has owned and operated his internet site, subtitled “Secrets of Area 51 Revealed.” A new posting on the site dubs it “Endorsed by the FBI and USAF OSI.”

The searches were reported Wednesday by the Las Vegas Review-Journal, describing the site as a collection of YouTube videos taken from drones flown around Area 51, satellite images of the base, a discussion forum, and articles about UFOs, test flights and mysterious black projects.

Arnu said he was conferring with his lawyer but declined to provide his lawyer’s name. He said he believes material on his website “was legally obtained and legal to publish,” but said he has removed some of it in an effort to defuse the situation.

“Considering how this went down I have no intention of removing any more material unless ordered to do so by a federal judge,” he added.

Arnu’s home in Rachel is one of a cluster of residences in a roadside town built around a quirky ten room alien-themed motel called the Little A’le’Inn on a seemingly endless straight stretch of highway about a two-hour drive north of Las Vegas.

The site, near one of several remote gates to the sprawling Area 51 military complex, drew worldwide attention in September 2019 after more than two million people responded to a Facebook prank inviting them to ‘Storm Area 51’.

In the end, amid fears that tens of thousands of people would arrive for unregulated events and overwhelm local infrastructure and services, a peak crowd of about 3,000 gathered at a festival grounds hastily erected as home base for what became dubbed ‘Alienstock’.

“They’re not going to find what they’re looking for,” Arnu added. 

Story originally ran on CBS News November 18, 2022

The sign for the Little A’Le’Inn with a flying saucer hanging from a tow truck in Rachel, Nevada, near Area 51. 

(Photo: Getty) 

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