EG&G
EG&G (Edgerton, Germeshausen, and Grier) was an American defense and technology corporation that operated as a major contractor for the Department of Energy and the US military. The company managed operations at the Nevada Test Site and is widely associated with classified programs at Area 51.
| Type | private/defense |
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UAP Connections
EG&G is deeply embedded in UFO lore through multiple connections:
- Bob Lazar — Lazar claimed EG&G employed him to attempt to reverse-engineer UFO propulsion devices at Area 51's S-4 facility
- Wilson-Davis Meeting — EG&G's Nevada parking lot allegedly served as the meeting place for the disputed but likely accurate 2002 Wilson-Davis meeting notes, a key document in UAP disclosure research
- NEST Partnership — EG&G was a corporate team member of the Nuclear Emergency Support Team alongside Los Alamos National Labs, Sandia National Laboratories, Lawrence Livermore National Labs, and Raytheon. This connection places EG&G within the same operational framework theorized to have responded to the 1997 Peru UFO Crash Incident
- Project Redlight — EG&G has been alleged to have participated in Project Redlight on behalf of the DOE
Connection to DARC and Project Red Light
EG&G was awarded an indefinite contract for Project Red Light to support the Department of Energy and the US military. This contract gave EG&G responsibility to assist in the recovery of nuclear materials in cases of mishaps and to provide aerial and ground security for highly classified government and military sites. Project Red Light was described to Leonard Stringfield in his crash retrieval status reports by a witness claiming the project served to test NHI and reverse-engineered craft on the Nellis test range after craft had been shipped from Edwards Air Force Base. EG&G was additionally involved in the construction and operations of the Defense Advanced Research Center (DARC), the underground facility at Area 51 where Edgar Fouché worked on reverse-engineered craft technologies.