FigureBob Lazar (b. 1959)
aka Bob Lazar · Robert Lazar · Lazar
Las Vegas physicist who, in May and November 1989 interviews with KLAS-TV reporter George Knapp, claimed to have worked at a black-budget facility "S-4" within the Nevada Test Site (near Area 51) reverse-engineering nine recovered alien craft. Lazar's academic credentials at MIT and Caltech could not be subsequently verified; both institutions have no record of his attendance. He nonetheless described — in 1989 — an element designated "element 115" used as the reactor fuel, six years before the prediction was even tentatively borne out by laboratory synthesis.
What's documented
Las Vegas physicist and inventor. Lazar’s KLAS-TV interviews with George Knapp aired in three segments: an initial silhouette interview in May 1989, and on-camera interviews on 11–13 November 1989. He described a black-budget program at “S-4,” a facility he placed at Papoose Lake in the Nevada Test Site adjacent to Area 51, at which he claimed to have worked from December 1988 through April 1989 reverse-engineering nine recovered craft of non-human origin. His specific technical claims included an anti-matter reactor design using a stable isotope of an element with atomic number 115 — at the time (1989) no element 115 had been observed in any laboratory. The element was eventually synthesized at JINR Dubna in 2003 and officially named Moscovium in 2016. Stable isotopes of Moscovium remain unobserved as of 2026; Lazar’s specific stable-115 claim is therefore not confirmed, only the existence of element 115 itself. The skeptical case is substantial. Lazar’s claimed degrees from MIT (1982 BS physics) and Caltech (1982 MS physics) cannot be verified by either institution; his name does not appear in their student records, alumni rolls, or commencement programs. His employer claim — “Los Alamos Meson Physics Facility, Kirk-Mayer Inc.” — was partially confirmed by a Los Alamos phone directory listing him in 1982 and by an LANL internal newsletter mentioning him in 1982, both of which Lazar produced; LANL has stated he was not a staff scientist. He was convicted of a felony procuring offense in Nevada in 1990 (pandering, plea bargain). What does not collapse: the element 115 prediction, made on tape in November 1989, fourteen years before laboratory synthesis. That is the single fact about his testimony that is hardest to dismiss as confabulation, fraud, or coincidence. The honest read is that it remains unresolved.