1999 Tour

USA Today Ad On September 17th, 1999 our supplier announced a nationwide tour with a full page ad on page 15 of the USA Today national newspaper. This was not the approach one would expect ifthe claims they were making were not true.It was out front and as loud a challenge for law enforcement and big business advocates to attend the tour as anyone could make.

Our supplier announced that they wanted take over electric production in the entire country. Not only did the huge headline challenge the authorities, but the whole ad put out a challenge to the scientific community of this country. In paragraph four it read: "Bring your own test meters and measure the devices for yourselves!" What con man would do this? A con would hide it all in a box and not let anyone near it with test instruments.

The ad announced 45 locations for 47 shows to happen across the entire nation over a 60 day period. There was plenty of time for doubters and skeptics to prepare to come and debunk the claims. There was lots of time for law enforcement to get ready to arrest those running the show for making false claims and bring their experts in with devices to prove this was a fraud.

Admittedly several, if not all shows were attended by law enforcement officials. At some of the shows uniformed police officers were in attendance. Several plain clothes police officers came up to tour staff and showed their badges. The tour staff was informed by several Attorney Generals that if the show came to their states they would be arrested, but the staff did every single show.

At every show we demonstrated a motor that took four hundred watts of power from DC batteries and produced three horsepower of mechanical energy (2,300 watts). We invited people to bring their AC and DC meters, their own scopes, their own dynamometers. Lots of scientists came and took measurements. They were even welcomed to come up on stage and challenge our claims but that never happened.

The scientists and public officials were given ample opportunity to disprove the calims being made. The tour staff just insisted it be done in public so they could be held liable for their testing as we were. They were not given the opporutnity to test in private so they could later lie about the results they achieve. 

Not once during the tour did anyone prove that the claims being made were false. Doesn't that mean the cliams being made were true? If so, would it have been reasonable to expect the media would cover a story that announced such good news? As far as we know, there was not one positive story generated from the tour.