Stanley Meyer Death & Technology Suppression
Inventor Stanley Meyer died suddenly on March 20, 1998 at age 57 during a dinner meeting at a restaurant. His last words were reportedly 'They poisoned me.' Meyer had developed and patented a water fuel cell that he claimed could power a car using water as fuel. After his death, his equipment and research were stolen. According to Steven Greer, the heirs put Meyer's remaining equipment up for bid. A group funded by a member of the UK House of Lords acquired it, took it to Michigan, and an engineering team successfully got the devices working — including a toroidal free energy device that had already been slapped with a national security order. When Greer was contacted for help because the team was being threatened, he wrote a two-page emergency strategy, but they didn't follow it. Subsequently, 18 or 19 members of the engineering team were killed. One survivor met with a businessman in Orange County, confirming all others had been eliminated. The technology vanished.