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The Suppression <strong>of</strong> Fuel Savers <strong>and</strong> Alternate Energy Resources 451<br />

station, at a desolate area now known as the U.S. Army Dugway proving<br />

ground, <strong>and</strong> the device still worked.<br />

Witnesses to his experiments included engineers <strong>and</strong> curiosity-seekers<br />

from <strong>other</strong> countries as well as local visitors from Utah Power <strong>and</strong> Light,<br />

the Secretary <strong>of</strong> State's <strong>of</strong>fice in Utah <strong>and</strong> <strong>other</strong> <strong>of</strong>ficials. As far as this<br />

author can discover, no one refuted Henry Moray's claim that his Radiant<br />

Energy device did run motors, light bulbs <strong>and</strong> a radio.<br />

The invention had unusual characteristics. Photographers exclaimed<br />

over the intensity <strong>of</strong> the light from the bulbs—remarkably brighter than<br />

100- or 150-watt bulbs normally shone.<br />

While the invention converted energy from the cosmos into light <strong>and</strong><br />

attracted well-known <strong>of</strong>ficials, some people entered Moray's life without<br />

leaving a calling card. For example, in 1939 he refused an <strong>of</strong>fer to take his<br />

work to Russia. Soon the anonymous threatening phone calls began,<br />

telling Henry there was a contract out on his life.<br />

Despite death threats, Henry Moray repeatedly worked on his strange<br />

electric generator in front <strong>of</strong> creditable witnesses. The only threat which<br />

stopped him from demonstrations came in the form <strong>of</strong> advice from his<br />

patent attorneys in Washington, D.C.—under patent laws he could have<br />

lost his rights to a patent if he showed his invention to just anyone.<br />

The U.S. Patent Office itself was not much help either. That agency<br />

rejected seven patent applications for his Radiant Energy Device because<br />

the device did not fit the physics known at the time. "Where is the source<br />

<strong>of</strong> energy" the examiners asked. One rejection notice from the patent<br />

<strong>of</strong>fice wrongly assumed that the energy was originally electromagnetic.<br />

Moray, however, only said it is electrical after it hit his semi-conductors.<br />

BULLETS PIERCE WINDSHIELDS<br />

Henry carried on multiple battles at the same time. Instead <strong>of</strong> being helped<br />

to research the Radiant Energy device, he was hindered. In time-wasting<br />

letters he fought the patent <strong>of</strong>fice, treachery from business partners, <strong>and</strong><br />

scientists who witnessed Radiant Energy <strong>and</strong> later denied it when their<br />

employers changed. And he had to be strong to keep his family's morale<br />

up in the face <strong>of</strong> unknown enemies.<br />

John Moray remembers an incident in Salt Lake City when he <strong>and</strong> the<br />

<strong>other</strong> children were in the family car, with his m<strong>other</strong> driving. Sitting in<br />

the back seat, the boy felt his heart lurch with shock as a bullet crashed<br />

through the car <strong>and</strong> lodged in the windshield in front <strong>of</strong> his m<strong>other</strong>. "A<br />

classic black sedan with all the shades down almost forced her <strong>of</strong>f the<br />

street, then sped away up 21st South."<br />

Withi n a few weeks, an unknown assailant had also fired shots at<br />

Henry's friend S. E. Bringhurst, the first president <strong>of</strong> his research institute.

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