Scott Horton Show - Just the Interviews - 9/24/21 Barbara Grant on What Really Happened on the Final Day of the Waco Siege
Episode Date: September 28, 2021Scott is joined by Barbara Grant to discuss her new documentary which gives an experts perspective on the infrared footage capture on the final day of the Waco siege. Grant was busy working on a sat...ellite when it happened in 1993, but she later became interested in the infrared footage featured in the 2000 film Waco: A New Revelation. The footage shows several flashes occurring behind the compound. The film argued that these flashes were gunfire while the Government dismissed them as solar reflections. Grant, who has studied and worked with infrared technology, decided to use her expertise to try and get to the truth. In this interview, she tells Scott about her experience investigating and what she concluded. Discussed on the show: “When the Government Lied: Waco's Infrared Deception” (Vimeo) Waco: A New Revelation (IMDb) Waco: Rules of Engagement (IMDb) The FLIR Project Barbara Grant is an engineer, author, and educator trained in radiometry and remote sensing. This episode of the Scott Horton Show is sponsored by: The War State and Why The Vietnam War?, by Mike Swanson; Tom Woods’ Liberty Classroom; ExpandDesigns.com/Scott; EasyShip; Dröm; Free Range Feeder; Thc Hemp Spot; Green Mill Supercritical; Bug-A-Salt; Lorenzotti Coffee and Listen and Think Audio. Shop Libertarian Institute merch or donate to the show through Patreon, PayPal or Bitcoin: 1DZBZNJrxUhQhEzgDh7k8JXHXRjYu5tZiG. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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All right, you guys, introducing Barbara Grant.
She has made this new documentary that just came out in July, I think, called When the Government
Lied, Waco's Infrared Deception.
Welcome to the show. How are you doing, Barbara?
I'm doing very well today. Thank you, Scott.
Very happy to have you here. And is that correct? This document just came out a couple months ago?
Yes, I just produced it a couple months ago. That's correct.
Okay, great. So, obviously, the story goes back, you know, more than 25 years now.
And so I'm curious how you got into this, when you first saw the footage.
In fact, before that, if you could please tell us, because I saw it. I saw you.
at the beginning here that you're a real engineer involved in this technology. In other words,
you know, a very top-of-line kind of expert in the field of infrared footage and cameras and
all these things. So I guess if you could first describe that and then describe how you got
involved in this investigation and when. Well, my, okay, my background is in the field of
radiometry, which has to do with optical radiation propagation and measurement. And I
did my graduate work in remote sensing. So systems that look down at the Earth and take pictures. And so
that is related to a lot of things, including cameras for many different uses, whether they are
orbiting or whether they're being used closer to the Earth. So when the Waco tragedy occurred in
1993, I didn't pay any attention to it because I was working on a satellite. We were actually
trying to get a weather satellite in orbit to replace two that were beyond their operational
lifetime. So that's a full-time job, as you can imagine. And I didn't pay attention to this
situation until the end of the 1990s or the year 2000, when the re-investigation of the controversy
came on to the national scene. So I purchased a copy of a
film called Waco, A New Revelation, which was the second film, the first one, had been
nominated for an Academy Award.
And I was looking at the film again and again and wondering, why have I not heard about
this before from the infrared community?
Why haven't we discussed that issue, the issue of the flare at conferences?
And the fact is, people work on a lot of different projects.
So I was thinking, well, yeah, that's probably why.
So I decided to investigate.
And so what I did was track down the expert that they had in that video, Dr. Edward Allard.
I wrote an article about the controversy, and I contacted people with opposing views as well.
And my initial idea was to try and move the project along.
And by that, I mean, to add what I could to a national investigation.
I know that's a fairly tall order, but why not try something?
You know, I'm a knowledgeable member of the community.
Let me see what I can do.
So it was a short time after that that I met David Hardy, a Tucson attorney who was working with Ramsey Clark on the Branch Davidian civil trial.
The Davidians were suing the FBI for wrongful death.
And Dave and I were living in the same town, and we started communicating and working together on issues like infrared muzzle flash.
He's a shooter.
I'm an observer.
And so it just went from there.
Okay, great.
And David Hardy, a lot of people know, has done a lot of great work on Waco over the years as well.
So that explains his interest in it.
Now, just to recap a little bit here for people who are new to this subject,
the first movie was called Waco the Rules of Engagement
and it featured this forward-looking infrared footage
and then as you mentioned the sequel, Waco, A New Revelation,
has a much cleaner copy of the footage included in there
and appears to show men get out of the back
of one of the Bradley fighting vehicles and shoot
and then there's other clips as well
of what appears to be machine gun fire there
and then as you say the government witnesses say
well I'm skipping ahead but the government witnesses say no that's just you know sunlight glinting off debris in the yard that kind of thing but the reason this came up again in 99 was because in that same documentary they proved that there was a military and scenery round or two that were used even though they did not start the fire but they were used that morning and the government had lied about that so that was enough to kick off the new investigation the Danforth investigation of 1999 which included then
and people can watch part three of that series by Mike McNulty and Dan Gifford.
And I forget if Gifford was involved in the third one or not, but it's called the Fleer Project.
And it shows how they rigged the test at Fort Hood to make sure that it would not match up with the Waco footage, which is an important part.
And you don't address that in your video, but I just wanted to mention that for people who want to look at that.
And that is available on YouTube, by the way.
So that's the background of this investigation that you're talking about.
Yes, that's, well, actually, I got into this project before the FLIR project was produced, and I was an observer on that test.
Oh, you were an observer on the Fort Hood test?
No, no, no, no, no, no.
I was not an observer on the Fort Hood test.
I was into the, I was into my investigation during the time of the Fort Hood test.
But basically what had happened was, since I had contacted David Hardy, I later started contacting and or.
being contacted by several people connected with Waco and New Revelation.
One of them was Mike McNulty, and another very interesting to me was a gentleman by the name
of Maurice Cox, who had produced a very detailed report on why the geometry of the flashes
on the Fleer tape could not have come from solar reflections.
So I was working in this milieu, and really the exciting thing, shocking and exciting
was during the test that David and I did, which was really an initial gunfire test,
I hadn't expected to see anything because we had been told by the government repeatedly.
Oh, muzzle flash just lasts for too short a time.
It can't be captured on infrared.
But there we were at a shooting range looking at the absolute evidence that that was not true.
And so the FLIR project came later, and there was a much more detailed consideration of the types of weapon, ammunition, flash suppressants, et cetera, that might have been in use at Waco.
So all of this was part of a continuum, really.
And I was an observer on that FLIR test.
I wasn't a project scientist.
I wanted to observe.
And then, so, well, let's get back to the Fort Hood thing in a second, but based on your research, what is it that we're looking at in this footage?
Well, we're looking at, when we see the multiple repetitive flashes, I've provided a number of instances of those in my, in the video, we're looking at gunfire.
gunfire directed toward the building. Now, I will say I'm not a weapons expert, so I don't have
detailed knowledge on the weapons types, but it's definitely weapons fire. All right, but so why are you
so sure then? Well, because I took a number of approaches to reach my conclusion. The first thing
was to test muzzle flash.
And the second thing was I followed what Maurice Cox had done,
looking at footage of the tape from a number of different angles
and looking at the path that a sun reflection would take in those particular images.
And the path that a sun reflection would take was very different
from what I was seeing in the images, and not only that, we are not talking about one sun
reflection here, supposedly, in the case of the multiple flashes, we're talking about several.
So in order for the sun reflection hypothesis to work as the reason for the flashes, debris would
have to be shiny, watered down, and precisely positioned for the aircraft's camera to observe them.
So when I made my initial conclusion, I said that these are likely to be from weapons fire,
these flashes, multiple repetitive ones.
And as I studied the problem further, over time, I became completely convinced that that is what we're seeing.
I delivered my initial result really basically 20 years ago.
Okay.
And then now it's important that you don't argue that, no, there's.
no such thing as Sun Glint on an infrared camera. You're just saying that, in fact, I think you say in the documentary that in this one example, they're right. That is Glint. And we can even use that sort of as a baseline to compare it to these other examples. Is that correct?
That is absolutely correct. And the statement that this Fleer will not detect any kind of solar reflections, that's not accurate. That is not accurate.
Dr. Allard made that statement, and I think after a period of time, I think he would have was, I think he was very willing to go back and look at it again. But he'd had a major stroke beforehand. You know, that's the other part of this. Experts were, experts who'd concluded gunfire were dropping like flies. I had contacted Dr. Allard, and I was waiting for him to possibly send a report to me so that I could peer review.
view it or maybe give it to some colleagues. And I hadn't heard from him, hadn't heard from him.
So I called up his home number and a strange voice answered the phone or an unfamiliar voice
answered the phone and said that Dr. Allard was not available. I said, well, when would a better time
be to talk to Dr. Allard? And the man said there won't be a better time. Dr. Allard had a stroke
yesterday. So he was in the hospital. And this was prior to the Fort Hood test. See, he
was going to go out there to observe it. So his second in command was Mr. Ferdinand Zagel. Both of these
gentlemen had come from the U.S. Army's night vision lab. So they're very, very good at what they do.
And by the way, what I do want to say, when you are designing an infrared instrument,
a thermal infrared instrument, you typically don't design to see solar reflections. So I think
that that was a point that could have been done a little bit differently. So I could have
contacted Mr. Zagel.
He was on his way to Fort Hood.
And then, a short time later, he ended up in the hospital with blood poisoning, supposedly
contracted at Fort Hood.
And then there was somebody else.
David Hardy said, well, you know, there's this other fellow named Carlos, Carlos Gigliotti.
I was going to say, there was, wasn't there one more guy whose last name started with a G?
Yes.
He was a congressional investigator, right?
Yes.
Go ahead. I'm sorry. Yes. He worked for the House Government Reform Committee. I believe it's called currently the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. And he was out in Laurel, Maryland. And I'm sorry. What did you say his name once again before I heard? Did you there? Oh, that's fine. Gigliotti, Carlos Gigliotti. Ghi-G-I-O-T-I. Oh, by the way, I will say, there were a number of people who looked at this, but these are the specific ones.
that I had the most to do with.
So anyway, I had contacted Carlos.
I said, I'm trying to put a forum together for my engineering society, and David Hardy
gave me your name, and would you be interested?
And I left a message and got a call back very quickly, and he says, no, no, I'm not
interested.
I'm the only one who knows what's going on with a flare.
I have the answer, and I will reveal it when I'm not.
decide to call a press conference. And I said, can you give me a hint? Well, he said, the FBI lied. But I'm not
going to say anymore. I'm going to call a press conference and everyone will be able to hear my
results. Well, that was, I think it was sometime in March. And then I think it was the late
April. We're talking about the year 2000 here. Late April, I think it was April or May.
Dave Hardy called me and he said, well, Carlos is dead. So he had been found in his
office and nobody had seen him for weeks and he was dead. Yeah, I think, I'm not sure if it was
Hardy or not, but I'm pretty sure I heard David Hardy on the Carl Wiggles' World Show in San Antonio
talking about that back then. It must have been Hardy. I'm, I'm sure it was Hardy. Hardy has
been very involved in this all along the way. Yeah. And so, you know, I would talk to
I hope you don't fly around in single engine propeller planes or anything. I do not. I take as
much care as possible. You know, everybody's making jokes about this. One person. Yeah, it ain't
that funny when it's your life on the line, right? Yeah, two people. Two people is, that's more than a
data point. That's the beginning of the trend. So it's so it's very, it's very dark.
The situation is very dark.
And it was ultimately resolved in the government's favor.
The agents there didn't do anything wrong.
But when I looked at it, I can't really ask the question, did the FBI shoot?
Because all I see are flashes on tape.
I have no information to identify the shooters, right?
But there was more than the FBI there.
The Delta Force was there as well.
And apparently the SAS, you know, this is, this is documented.
So if somebody specifically asked the question, the FBI, did the FBI shoot and they answer no, well, that could be a true statement.
I don't know.
You know, I don't have the information to tell.
Others are probably much more expert in that than I am.
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Yeah, and in fact, just for the sake of argument, for all you know, some Branch Divideans
wax some FBI agents and took their tank over, and that's Branch Davidians stealing FBI weapons
and getting out of the tank and shooting their own people.
that's not your science right your science is what's causing that flash let other people argue about
who's who and i think you're right is probably delta force there's got stephen berry and uh jean
both saying that that's a former special operations officer right former CIA officer saying that
delta force guys admitted to them that they were in a firefight with the branch divinians in the
backyard there that day which makes perfect sense and i'm sure the hr t was was part of it as well but um but
The real point being, just from your expert point of view here, is just, right, we don't know what Carlos died of, and we don't know the names of the men pulling those triggers.
But the question is, what are we seeing on this tape? Is it a muzzle flash or is it not a muzzle flash? And I wanted to, to, you know, clarify this point with you. Makes perfect sense to me. But I ain't no science tition, so what do I know? But I think that you say in here that, look, it's as simple as a shadow test.
you're going to see a reflection from sunlight
when you are lined up in the same angle
as the shadow from the sun at that moment.
And you're not going to see it when you're not.
And that's just about as simple as that.
That is true for debris lying flat on flat ground.
That is absolutely true.
Now, we have a sequence, or I have a sequence in the video,
where someone is picking up a piece of glass
and flashing it toward the same.
sensor. And that's how you see it. So, you know, unless that happens, you will not get multiple
flashes if you are not at the appropriate angle. And I do have an example in there where we do see
a sun reflection at an appropriate angle. So the real clincher to the argument of these multiple
flashes not being caused by sun reflections is the fact that they are multiple flashes. You have to have
four or five debris surfaces or pieces of debris lined up at a very specific angle to generate
something like that.
One, I can imagine, sure, if it's at a certain angle, but here we have several instances
of multiple flashes.
So it's the combination of the multiple flashes with what I learned in gunfire testing,
and research and participating in tests.
It's the combination of those two conditions
that leads me to the gunfire conclusion.
All right, now, you make the point in the video
that just because there's a figure on the ground
doesn't mean that the infrared is going to pick them up.
It's all about relative temperature compared to the background,
and you show some examples of that,
and that explains why you can see some gunfire where,
and look, this is not 4K footage here
that we're looking at.
This is, you know, even compared to the original tapes, this is a dub and probably a dub
of a dub or whatever.
A dub of a dub of a dub.
Something like that, yes.
But, however, though, there are points that you can see even in the lower quality footage
in the rules of engagement, but especially in the higher quality footage in a new
revelation, where it's clear to my eyes.
And maybe I'm filling in slight gaps here, but I don't think so.
you can just see these black figures, relatively cool figures, getting out of the back of the tank.
And then the muzzle flashes come from those moving black figures.
So there's some footage where I think you're right to say, well, look, just because you can't see a person here,
it doesn't mean they're not there.
But in some of that footage, you can see the guys getting out of the tank and then firing.
Correct or not?
That is correct.
and what the government claimed in this one instance of the CEV at 1124 behind the gym,
they said it was heat reflections from the engine and the dark figures were pieces of debris on the ground.
Debris on the ground.
So when I look at that, I have to say, well, where did it come from?
Where did it come from?
You know, I don't see where that debris came from.
And by the way, why would it be so very shiny in an environment that had been run where it had been run over by the tanks for many minutes or the tank for many minutes as it was going back and forth into the gymnasium?
So even things that you think you see, they said, oh, no, it's sun reflection or it's heat reflection or my personal favorite.
it's a combination of instrument artifacts and malfunctions interacting with debris.
I mean, it could have been, I don't know, it could have been the lizard from Geico did it.
Yeah.
Well, no, about that one, though, I mean, because, I mean, that is a thing, right, that this is all an illusion.
This is not just a dub of a dub of a dub, but this is videotape in the first place captured by a machine that does have what they call artifacts.
of whatever different descriptions, I don't know.
And so, can you completely dismiss that?
If I'm talking about one flash here and one flash there,
I would be much more suspicious.
But, you know, part of the interesting situation
is that people that I knew of who analyzed the tape
were not given the system parameters of the FLIR
by the investigation.
They were just not given them.
So that leads people, that leaves people to assume things,
like how much spatial detail can you see on the ground
and how is the sensor operating.
I would have to say that if you see these multiple flashes,
you see them more than once, you see them in similar circumstances,
it's hard to dismiss that as a scan artifact.
Yeah.
I'm just trying to play devil's advocate.
No, no, I understand.
You're right. I've always known that this is what happened there from before I saw the footage.
I said, well, come on. They're only showing you the front of the house. We can't see what's going on in the backyard. And I presume the worst. And then so maybe that's why, you know, I'm so smart. Or maybe that's why I'm wrong, right? It's because this has been what I thought since the day of the fire.
And when I was just a kid, it's not like I knew anything about it. I was 16. But I knew that cops would do stuff like that.
because they like to sometimes.
But, and certainly in this case,
their patience had worn out, you know,
to put it lightly.
And same for the politicians in Washington, D.C. as well.
But, yeah, no, I mean, once you see the footage,
and when a new, pardon me,
when Rules of Engagement came out,
I went and saw it at the Dobie Mall
on the big screen when it was brand new.
and yeah it's just absolutely clear what's happening there there's just no question about it
and then as I was mentioned in the sequel there they have a CIA officer and a former Green Beret
saying yeah you know I talked to Delta Force guys who told me that yeah they did it all right
so that's good enough for me well yeah there are a number of different ways that one can come
to that conclusion and to me the evidence just the technical evidence is compelling one
thing I will say, which I find to be very interesting, the experts that the government chose to make
the definitive decision on whether or not this was gunfire didn't have experience viewing
muzzle flash on infrared. So that to me was a huge weakness. If you don't know what something
looks like on this type of video and you're asked to come to a definitive conclusion,
and that conclusion is going to be used to settle this matter once and for all,
that strikes me as a very poor way to investigate.
Right.
Or a very, you know, deliberate one when you have a predetermined conclusion you're trying to reach.
But now let me ask you this.
You know, you quote in the video, I forgot who, saying that, you know,
one of the developers or somebody, an authority figure here, saying that, oh, yeah, no,
Fleer is a great way to pick up.
out enemy ground fire. And that's, so then I wondered whether then, is that not the purpose of
the Fleer in the first place is to pick out enemy ground fire or what? Well, actually, that wasn't
one of the developers of the flare. That was an individual by the name of Paul Beaver, who was an
analyst for Jane's, for Jane's Information Group. So these people know what they're looking at.
Yes, he says, oh, yes, it's absolutely useful to do this. Now, that's not the only thing you
look for, but this gentleman said that he had been in a combat situation, and that's how we pick
out where the enemy is. Think about that statement for a moment. Why does he say it's useful
to detect where the enemy is? That's because you probably can't see people during this type
of situation, a cluttered battlefield, people perhaps taking cover somewhere, but you can see the
flashes. Right. It makes perfect sense. Okay. Now,
So can you tell us about the Fort Hood test?
I know, as you said, you weren't directly involved in it, but you were observing it closely.
And, you know, I could rant on and characterize it, but I'd rather hear you.
Okay.
Well, I was not a physical on-the-ground observer for the Fort Hood test, but by that time, I was looking at the test protocol.
So there I am going through the protocol, and I'm thinking, boy, you know, this,
took a long time to develop this particular protocol. So, you know, who's working on it?
Who is working on it? Because we were only told, I guess, publicly about vectors experts.
There were three experts, I suppose. But they were backed up by people who I believe had
significant infrared experience. Now, I've always heard from, I guess it was car,
Carlos's opinion and maybe Ferdinand Zagel's opinion.
Oh, these people weren't experts.
They did a lousy job at the test.
It was just terrible.
They're incompetent.
And at the end of the test, a civil trial was going on.
Attorneys for both sides in the civil trial were saying, the test proves our point of view.
No, the test proves our point of view.
So some were attributing this to vectors incompetence.
I see it differently.
I think there's a fair amount of intelligence in the test.
if there is enough information in the test to throw somebody off who doesn't know what the heck
muzzle flash looks like and this is the thing that really got me they picked specific pieces
of debris of debris aluminum glass curved aluminum and they lined them up in kind of a hopscotch
pattern of eight-foot squares. So the aluminum is here and the glass is here and the tin foil is
here and the crushed glass is over here. And they were very careful with this debris, which doesn't
at all mimic the conditions at Mount Carmel on that very windy, dusty morning. But they were
very careful. They watered down the field and covered it with tarps the night before. And so when you
had the test instrument, the FLIR, looking at that, I'd have to believe that the results at those
specific angles for that specific altitude probably were already known, known by whom,
whatever technical people with vast expertise laid out the debris field.
And see, as an analyst, I look at things like.
like organization versus randomness.
I mean, when things are falling in the middle of this tank assault on April the 19th,
they don't fall in specific patterns, but the debris tested was specifically patterned.
And I think that there was a lot of preliminary research and measurement going on at Fort Hood by the test
conductors.
In other words, they did the whole test before announcing it and they had people in communication
with their plane and figured out how to make it look like that, then they did it again and called
it the test, sounds like.
Well, yeah, they knew the proper imaging angles.
And, you know, it was just very, there was a lot of intelligence behind that test.
That's funny.
I need to go back and watch the Fleer Project because, you know, I have always focused so much
on how badly they rigged the gun test that I forgot about the part where they rigged the actual
glint test, too.
Well, what you see, I think, in the FLIR project, if I'm not mistaken, I haven't looked at it for a while, is, you know, the background conditions at the Ford Hood test did not resemble those at Waco.
Take a look at the Waco Flair.
Take a look at what you see in the FLIR project.
And it's like, I understand it's very, very, very difficult to replicate a scenario like that.
But when Fred Zagel was looking at the flare footage, I believe he said, you know, it's like this, it's like the instrument in the Fort Hood test was not working properly.
Not the instrument in 1993, but the instrument in the test, because according to his expertise, it looked like there was something wrong with the cooler.
Infrared detectors are cooled to very, very low temperatures.
and Fred, who had been looking at this kind of thing for 40 years and designing, building, testing,
fleers for a number of purposes, thought that the Fort Hood instrument wasn't working properly,
which led him to conclude that Vector was incompetent.
I think that the motive was darker than that.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, they could have had, you know, incompetent camera work on top of a rigged test anyway.
You know, it could certainly, there's not necessarily exclusive.
concepts, but the way I remember
it too, and correct me if I'm wrong, or
you could plead innocent if you don't remember it
this way or whatever, but the way I remember it
too was they
chose not a windy day, but
a windless day, and they took a
water truck and sprayed down all
the dirt just to keep all the dust down as much
as possible, and then they gave them
different rifles with extended length
barrels, and they gave them flash
suppress and ammunition, which was
different ammunition than what the HRT
had been assigned, or
I forget if anyone knew what the Delta Force had, but certainly different than what the HRT was shooting that day.
So, in other words, they made sure that it wouldn't show up the same, you know?
Oh, absolutely.
And that is why I really, I was extremely disappointed at the lack of expertise in the issue of gunfire demonstrated by people whose work decided the issue.
That's ridiculous.
You know, one of the benefits of working with people from different backgrounds is that you all come together and you add something.
So I really found it very helpful to work with a person like Hardy and to hear from somebody like Matt Cox.
And in addition to other people to get a better idea of what's going on.
But if you have this or that analyst with no experience,
no experience looking at muzzle flash and making that decision. Oh, my goodness. They're very
easy to trick. And I think the government did a job at it.
You know what, though? So I don't know how hard it is to get your hands on a vintage 1993,
one of these cameras, but can we do our own Fleer test and get M4s and the proper ammo
and the proper conditions and do the opposite? I know you have some testing.
with Hardy, but couldn't we reproduce
these whole conditions with the plane and everything?
Well, you know, that was
exactly what I believe Mike
was trying to do, Mike
McNulty, in the FLIR project.
The testing
that Hardy and I did was
preliminary and
I guess there is some of that in the FLIR project, right?
I'm sorry, I haven't seen it so long.
They had a,
they had a, what's called
a cooled, I don't want to get into
this too, in too much
detail, but a cooled mercury cadmium telluride, that's a detector material, a cryogenically
cooled detector, not exactly the same as the one that the FBI had used at Waco. But it was
similar, actually the same type of detector material, a different design. So they got as close
as they could with that to the instrument.
When I said earlier that we did not know what the camera parameters were
because the government did not release that information to analysts,
that's a significant omission.
The government knows what they were.
They know what they sold GEC Marconi.
They know what they sold them.
Did the people who put the debris field together have accurate system parameters
that analysts were somehow denied?
If so, how does that work when people are claiming that there's gunfire on the tape?
Why weren't analysts given that information?
So I think people know what it is.
They just didn't want to release it as hard as it would be to watch some of those effects.
Yeah.
Okay, so what else am I missing here?
What else are you missing? It's a good question. Well, as I said previously, there's a lot of
intelligence within what was at the time, a very, pretty narrowly focused infrared community.
And I would have to say that my interest was initially in trying to move the problem along.
So people, a lot of people with more experience than I were reluctant to talk to me or didn't want to tell me too much.
I think that it would have been, at a very minimum, bad for their careers or worse.
But they, essentially, they all agreed with you and no one's serious about this.
Oh, no, no, no, no, no. No. No, no, no, no.
I got a lot of people who stopped answering my phone calls.
Hold on just one second.
Be right back.
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Hey, y'all, Scott here. If you want a real education in history and economics, you should check out Tom Woods' Liberty Classroom.
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Well, that's different than disagreeing with you necessarily.
That's true. That's true.
I guess what I'm getting at is I know that there were, you know, as you said, people who weren't really experts on this who told the government what the government wanted to hear and all of this kind of deal. But I guess what I'm asking is in the independent community out there, was there anyone on your level who was saying, listen, I think you're barking up the wrong tree with this. I think that maybe the sunlight people really have a case.
Did anybody else? I think the way that I would put this is you're asking if people who were not connected with the test or with the analysis came forward to say, I have reviewed all this. I've reviewed the report by this expert, that expert, that expert. I have 25, 30 years of experience. And I can affirm that this is a solar reflection issue.
the answer to that question is no.
Yeah.
And forward or not, but I mean even talking to you about it, maybe off the record, even.
I didn't have people who talked to me off the record who came and said, you know what, Barbara, we agree with you, but we've been told by our supervisors to not discuss this.
I didn't get the we agree with you thing or we disagree with you thing.
I got a lot of non-returned phone calls.
Yeah.
And I guess that makes sense, too, if people just don't want to, you know, confront such a controversial issue either way or something.
They don't, but I think it would have been really interesting.
And you raise a really good point if an independent person with a lot of expertise had done kind of what I did, follow the investigation,
follow the testing, use analysis, and said, you know, I've been testing gunfire, and I have concluded that this is not it.
That would have actually been really interesting.
Yeah.
And, you know, it would have been nice for them, too, to say, hey, listen, I got a mortgage and I'm afraid, but I think you're right about this.
So good for you or something like that would be okay, too, you know.
They ain't got to be so afraid.
Or, hey, Barbara, I think you're wrong and I don't want to fight you publicly.
but, geez, here's why I think that what you're overlooking or something, you know, I don't know.
It would have been nice to have gotten a report like that. I did not receive one.
Yeah. Well, I mean, and that goes to the integrity of your work and just the fact that you're right, obviously, too. So what the hell? I mean, what are they going to say?
Yeah. Well, I actually came into this problem, you know, fairly late. So I was not, it took me a while, you know, and part of the reason is because this was new,
territory for me, gunfire, was not something I knew about. In fact, when I contacted Edward
Allard the first time, I asked him a simple question, what's around? I mean, I didn't know.
I didn't know anything like that. And the thing, too, is what really matters, I hate to put it
this way, but it's reality, who is paying your salary? Who is paying your salary? You see,
if you are working for a government lab, the government is paying your salary, and they have, they may have
specific things they want you to do and not to do. If you're self-employed, you need to get contracts to
continue to pay your salary. And if you're interested in pursuing something like this, you do it on
your own time. So at that time, I'm looking back at this now, but at that time, I don't think
they had anything called crowdfunding available. If I were doing this today, I would get a
crowdfunding effort going. Right. Well, listen, I mean, this is really important. I hope
that this show can help to make it go viral.
I've got to admit, I'm not sure which communities of people online care about this issue
anymore, but have you gotten much response from this?
You know, I have not been able to do much marketing.
So I haven't gotten a lot of response to this point, but I haven't really done a lot
of marketing.
But I'll tell you why it's relevant.
When you have a situation, see, the thing that you mentioned at the beginning, that's
just kind of raises many eyebrows is the presence of the military there.
So right now, our situation is quite different.
I mean, there are people worried about people coming to their homes asking for evidence of
vaccination.
No, I mean, I'm not saying it's happening, but people are thinking, well, this could
potentially happen.
There are people who are worried about being able to go to church.
You know, is there a church going to be shut?
down. And what I see in the Waco incident is a deception so, which to me very cleverly
crafted. It took a lot of expertise. And it was crafted in such a way. It was actually quite
brilliant of the government to higher analysts who didn't know what they were looking at. They
had other expertise, but muzzle flash was not it. Right. So, you know, you look at something
like that and you think, well, it sounds, it sounds like this was a one-time deal. But, but, but,
their strategy work then yeah well look i mean isn't at the point i mean waco was huge you know 80 people were
killed that day and all of this and and several earlier yeah six people had had been killed on the first
day uh davidians um but also i mean that's the lesson of it right is that you know as bill hicks
said uh the the great philosopher bill hicks said the lesson is the the lesson is the the
government always wins and you will lose and they will bust your house down and they will do whatever
they want and that was what they were trying to teach us but that's what we should learn from that
is that that's the eyes that the government looks at the american people through you know we're all
a bunch of branch dividians to them and so beware yeah well i yeah it's it's a very scary thing to
contemplate. Now, I do have to say one more thing because it's important to me as I would call
myself a Bible belief in Christian. Where was the Christian community on this? Where was the Christian
community on this? Well, I'll tell you where they were. I mean, is that a rhetorical question or you want to
know? Please tell me. Well, they were demanding that David Koresh be crucified because TV said that he said
he was Jesus. And you know what we do to people like that? We kill him. And that was what all of the
Southern Baptists and Methodists and Northwest Austin thought?
Well, see, that's really, really unfortunate.
Now, I was not asking a rhetorical question.
I did not know that because I didn't pay attention.
They didn't blue line, baby.
Yeah, these people are outlaws, and you don't thumb your nose at law enforcement.
Boy, it says in Romans 13, you do whatever the cops say or die.
That was where the Christian community.
was? I think that that's a mistake because regardless of somebody's beliefs, we are all under
the same system of laws. Whether somebody goes directly from the Bible or whether they have an
unusual religion and point of view, I'm not saying that that should absolve them of every crime,
but you have to give people the same consideration, the same consideration for all. And guess what?
I think that Christians, the liberty of Christians in this country to worship freely has been under some assault and I think it's going to get worse.
So let's take a look back at what was the Christian response and guess what?
You know, they may be coming for you.
Right.
And, I mean, really, in the last generation, it's been the Christians who've gone along the most with religious persecution of Muslims.
when they're by far the minority.
They're the ones who are, you know, the canary in the coal mine,
whether they're allowed to build a mosque where they want or not,
and Christians screaming their heads off that they're not.
And so that's the other thing about Waco, too,
is the Branch Divideans are not like your church.
The Branch Divideons are not like a lot of people's churches.
But just as you said, that's not the qualification
for whether their rights are to be.
protected or not, you know, and that, it's supposed to go for everybody, not just different
denominations of Protestants, supposed to go for everybody in this country.
Very troubling. Yeah. Well, listen, I got to tell you, I appreciate this so much when Jim
Bovart, I should have said this at the beginning that James Bovart sent me this, who, of course,
you know, was holding it down for the Libertary movement the whole time from the beginning on this.
Isn't that nice? Yeah. That is very, very good.
Very nice. Thank you.
Yeah, absolutely. And I just was so excited to see this. And I think you did a great job on it.
I really hope people will take a look at this. And you know what? People love this subject.
It's such an important subject. So everybody listening, do your part to help spread this around.
Maybe send it to other hosts that you know of radio shows and YouTube shows and whoever you know that could help spread this around.
He'll take an interest in this because this is it. This is the real smoking.
gun. This is the final proof. This is either the FBI HART or the Delta Force combat applications
group and or SAS. I think, I don't know if they were pulling triggers. I know they were there,
but they were shooting the Branch Divideans and killing them as their house was burning down.
That's a fact. And so, you know, that's really the end all of the whole argument. You know,
forget the first raid. Forget the first raid. Forget the
siege, forget anything. Forget even who started the fire. Oh, see, we're not done. I got to ask
about the fire. What time is it? Oh, no, I got to go. Oh, no. I was rambling, and I got to ask about
the fire. And you mentioned the origin of the fire. Can I call you back in half an hour? Please forgive me
for being so sloppy. You know what? Okay, let me, let me be very frank with you. I have not
studied that part of the problem. I have not studied that part of the problem. So that's a fair
That's a fair answer. Maybe we'll follow up on that someday, I hope. Take a look at some of the footage because you see that very bright flash followed by gunfire, followed by the fire starting. That's towards the end of the video.
And we do know from a new revelation that there were pyrotechnic, not incendiary, but pyrotechnic rounds found at all three origins of the fire and that they were all mislabeled as silencers too in the evidence.
You know, there's more information in that than what I can provide.
And maybe David Hardy knows more.
I mean, David Hardy has a top-level view of everything.
And he's very technical, actually.
He's a very technical guy in addition to being an attorney.
I'm trying to remember if I've ever even interviewed him before or not.
I must have at least one time.
He would have been interviewed by many people, including, I'm sure, you.
Yeah.
He must be in the archive there somewhere.
Or soon enough he will be.
But anyway.
Listen, I'm sorry.
I'm so over time.
But thank you so much.
You're very welcome.
Okay.
Thank you so much.
Okay, everybody.
That is Barbara Grant.
And you can find the documentary.
It's called When the Government lied, Waco's Infrared Deception.
And you can get it on Vimeo, but it's also on Android and Apple and Roku and Chromecast and whatever, all those things you can find it.
when the government lied, Waco's infrared deception.
Of course, the link will be in the show notes of this interview, too.
The Scott Horton show, Anti-War Radio, can be heard on KPFK, 90.7 FM in L.A.
APSRadio.com, anti-war.com, Scotthorton.org, and Libertarian Institute.org.