NARRATOR:<i>
Tonight on</i> The Tesla Files... JOE KINNEY:<i>
The beauty of the New Yorker,</i> <i>you can see things
the way they were 80 years ago.</i> So clandestine. KINNEY: This is the original
main breaker plant. TAYLOR: I can just see
Tesla down here flipping some of these things. <i>We want to get inside
the original lab.</i> STAPLETON:
Holy smokes! TAYLOR:<i>
We have really high confidence</i> <i>that underneath
this 200-foot tower</i> that there was a deep tunnel <i>right in the center
of this octagon area.</i> We'll start with
the ground-penetrating radar. SEIFER:
This is the Holy Grail. That's amazing! ♪ ♪ NARRATOR:<i>
Shortly before he died</i> <i>alone in a New York hotel room,</i> <i>scientist and inventor
Nikola Tesla</i> <i>claimed to have 80 trunks</i> <i>filled with his life's work--</i> <i>everything from detailed plans
for wireless electricity</i> <i>to weapons so powerful</i> <i>they could destroy
entire cities.</i> <i>But after he died,</i> <i>only 60 of Tesla's 80 trunks</i> <i>were reportedly found.</i> <i>For decades, people
have wondered what happened</i> <i>to the files contained
in Tesla's missing trunks.</i> <i>Could they have contained
secrets,</i> <i>secrets that could
forever change the world?</i> ♪ ♪ SEIFER:<i>
Okay, guys, our next stop</i> is the Hotel New Yorker.
This is where Tesla lived the last ten years of his life. NARRATOR:<i>
August 2017.</i> <i>Acclaimed Nikola Tesla
biographer Marc Seifer,</i> <i>along with astrophysicist
Dr. Travis Taylor</i> <i>and investigative journalist
Jason Stapleton,</i> <i>have traveled to New York City</i> <i>to investigate
the mysterious circumstances</i> <i>surrounding the controversial
scientist's death in 1943.</i> We're gonna meet Joe Kinney,
who's the hotel historian. He's also an engineer. He's met many, many people who have wanted to see
Tesla's rooms. TAYLOR: And so he's heard
all of the scuttlebutt, all of the little nuances, and all of the little theories
and hypotheses about what was going on there. So, it might be enlightening. NARRATOR:<i>
For the past several weeks,</i> <i>Marc, Travis, and Jason</i> <i>have been searching
for evidence that would lead</i> <i>to the discovery
of some 20 trunks</i> <i>filled with scientific papers</i> <i>that were reportedly taken
from Tesla's hotel rooms</i> <i>at the time of his death.</i> <i>Evidence that the trunks
existed was revealed</i> <i>in a number
of recently released--</i> <i>though still redacted--
FBI files.</i> Hey, you must be Joe.
Nice to meet you. -Hey, Travis.
-Hey, I'm Travis. -Glad to meet you. Hey, Marc.
-Good to see you again. -Welcome to the New Yorker
Hotel. -Thank you. <i>Joe Kinney has worked at
the New Yorker Hotel since 1996</i> <i>and serves as
the building's project engineer</i> <i>and unofficial archivist.</i> <i>He has made the study
of Tesla's years at the hotel</i> <i>one of his top priorities
and is considered an expert</i> <i>on the scientist's
financially troubled</i> <i>and lonely final years.</i> Let's go see what we can
find out about Mr. Tesla. -Yeah.
-Okay, lead the way. <i>Built in 1929,</i> <i>the New Yorker Hotel was once</i> <i>one of the city's largest
and most fashionable hotels.</i> <i>In addition
to ten private dining salons</i> <i>and five restaurants,</i> <i>it boasted the largest
barbershop in the world.</i> <i>But if Nikola Tesla was broke,</i> <i>as was widely believed,</i> <i>how did he come to be living</i> <i>at such
a state-of-the-art hotel?</i> SEIFER:<i> When you think
about the Hotel New Yorker,</i> <i>you first think
about Tesla living</i> <i>in his apartment
and the files that he had.</i> And it all comes alive
in looking at this fantastic,
incredible hotel. -(ding)<i> -Trying to envision what
it was like for him being here</i> <i>at its height in the 1930s
and the 1940s.</i> So, what I'm thinking is, this is where Tesla walked down
every day, -this very path.
-KINNEY: Yeah. TAYLOR: Does this look
like it did in 1943? The floor plan's the same, but the décor
is completely different. There was a door
just about right here. So, effectively,
it was a two-room suite. TAYLOR:
Okay. KINNEY:
Come on in. STAPLETON:
Holy smokes! This is tiny. This is unbelievable. Wow. -This was, like... -How many
years did he spend in this room? -Ten.
-Ten years in this little room. There are probably prison cells
bigger than this room, right? Well, you're just imagining
so much a bigger place -in your mind, you know?
-Yeah. This is where he did
his research, he would've kept his papers,
any documents, -things like that.
-KINNEY: Yes. NARRATOR:<i>
Born during a lightning storm</i> <i>in the small Croatian village
of Smiljan in 1856,</i> <i>Nikola Tesla grew up obsessed
with electricity</i> <i>and the limitless possibilities
of electrical power.</i> <i>Emigrating to the United States
in 1884,</i> <i>he quickly established himself
as a genius</i> <i>in the field
of electrical engineering,</i> <i>especially after his invention</i> <i>of the alternating current
electricity delivery system,</i> <i>which is still the standard
used today.</i> <i>But just as rapid
as Tesla's rise to fame</i> <i>was his downfall.</i> <i>Known to have a quarrelsome and
almost paranoid personality,</i> <i>he burned bridges
with powerful colleagues</i> <i>like Thomas Edison</i> <i>and investors
like J.P. Morgan.</i> <i>The press often sneered
about what they described</i> <i>as the inventor's wild claims</i> <i>concerning everything
from the wireless distribution</i> <i>of electricity
and telecommunications</i> <i>to weapons of mass destruction.</i> This is the room
where he was found? Yes, it was. By one
of the New Yorker housekeepers. After he dies, who shows up? Does he have next of kin to come
collect the body and his things? His closest relative,
Sava Kosanovic, came. -Kosanovic, the, uh, ambassador
from Yugoslavia. -Okay. Kosanovic was able to see the
room and look inside the safe. How did, uh, his relative know
how to get into the safe? They brought a locksmith. -So, they actually had to break
into the safe? -Yes. Now, were the things in the safe
supposed to be there? And what was the process there? Well, the contents looked
like they'd been disturbed. -So, somebody had beat them
to it? -We don't officially know
who the first was. Well, do we unofficially know
who the first was? Well, they think it was the OSS
or the FBI. -So...
-Holy smokes. NARRATOR:<i> In the three days
between the time</i> <i>Nikola Tesla put
a "Do Not Disturb" sign</i> <i>outside the door
of his hotel room</i> <i>and the time his body
was discovered by a hotel maid,</i> <i>could someone else
have entered his room?</i> <i>If so, was it the very last
person to see Tesla alive</i> <i>or the first person
to find him dead?</i> According to very qualified,
educated sources I met here, the FBI and the OSS had the rooms just down the hall
from here and were monitoring Tesla
closely, perhaps waiting for him to pass. That's intriguing. Joe said that there was
a possibility that there were FBI agents
or OSS agents that were living
on the same hallway with Tesla. <i>That makes me think that he's
being watched the whole time.</i> <i>Now, if this is true, then
they would've known instantly</i> <i>when he was dead.</i> They had all the time in
the world, three days, probably, <i>that they could've gone in
and taken documents,</i> <i>changed documents,
done whatever they wanted to.</i> What I think's interesting is
that one of the files says that a Mr. Doty and a Mr. Fitzgerald,
uh, accompanied Kosanovic, and they were supposedly
hotel managers. <i>But there's a Mr. Doty,
who was in war intelligence,</i> <i>and Bloyce Fitzgerald,</i> <i>who was an Army representative</i> <i>who worked at Wright-Patterson
Air Force Base,</i> and those two guys have
the exact same last names. So, it seems to me
it's very possible it was Army intelligence
and Navy intelligence. Also, those names
were not of any general managers -at that time.
-You know that? KINNEY:<i> I have tons
and tons of documents</i> <i>advertising
it was Frank L. Andrews,</i> <i>general manager, signed.</i> NARRATOR:<i>
If Frank L. Andrews</i> <i>was the manager
of the New Yorker Hotel</i> <i>at the time of
Nikola Tesla's death in 1943,</i> <i>then just who were Doty
and Fitzgerald?</i> <i>More importantly, what exactly
were they doing there?</i> <i>Could it be they were following
the orders</i> <i>of government physicist
John G. Trump,</i> <i>the man hired by the Office
of Alien Property</i> <i>to collect all
of Tesla's belongings,</i> <i>including some 80 trunks
filled with scientific papers</i> <i>and then evaluate them</i> <i>for their possible
strategic importance?</i> <i>The same John G. Trump who was
the uncle of Donald Trump,</i> <i>the future president
of the United States.</i> That clearly sounds to me like there was a cover story for whoever these two guys were that
came in and got the documents. And I-I don't believe this room
is big enough to house everything
that he was working on. Well, some people believe
it was stored -in the tunnels underneath
your feet. -SEIFER: Tunnels? -Yes. -Where are those? -TAYLOR:
They're in this building? -Yes, they're about 30 feet
below ground. -TAYLOR: Wow! Well, we need to go see that.
Yes. -Absolutely. -Okay.
Let's go take a look. -Cool. -Elevator still functional?
-No, it's not. It's removed,
but it goes up to the entrance -that you came in today.
-Okay. -But Tesla would've -definitely taken this?
-Oh, for sure. Right now,
we're on the very southern part of the hotel, and we're walking out of the hotel proper. We're under the sidewalk now. STAPLETON:
Holy smokes. Wow. Right now, we're-we're actually crossing 34th Street
underground. SEIFER:
So, this way led -to the railroads?
-KINNEY: Yeah. TAYLOR:
It is so clandestine. -It is a little sneaky,
isn't it? -Yeah. Just walk around down here. Marc, think about what this
looked like in its heyday. This would have been... SEIFER:
It fires your imagination. Yeah, it really does.
Yeah, it really does. NARRATOR:<i> In recent years,
Tesla and his discoveries</i> <i>have proven to be more
prophetic and more accurate</i> <i>than they were thought to be
in his lifetime.</i> <i>He is now credited
with envisioning everything</i> <i>from X-ray technology
and fluorescent lighting,</i> <i>to cell phones, self-charging,
driverless cars,</i> <i>and remote control.</i> <i>Is it possible Tesla's precious
scientific files</i> <i>could still be somewhere
at The New Yorker Hotel,</i> <i>hidden away some 30 feet
below ground?</i> KINNEY:
This is the, the demarcation between
the hotel tunnel and the platform for the E train
or the subway. So, you can walk right out
these doors -and be in the subway?
-Right. KINNEY:<i>
This was open 24 hours a day.</i> <i>At 2:00 or 3:00 in the morning
he could have come through here</i> <i>to Penn Station, caught a train</i> <i>to anywhere he wanted to go
in the city.</i> What I think's neat
is he can go out here, he could access the
Hotel Governor Clinton where he had
a safety-deposit box. He's also got trunks
in the Hotel Pennsylvania. NARRATOR:<i> The tunnels
under The New Yorker Hotel</i> <i>were designed as part
of an elaborate system</i> <i>of underground passages
that connected</i> <i>with other hotels
and subway lines.</i> <i>If Nikola Tesla really did have
sensitive files</i> <i>or important inventions stowed
away at other hotels,</i> <i>this underground network would
have provided him</i> <i>with the perfect means of
moving them from place to place</i> <i>without detection.</i> So, this is the original
generator room. STAPLETON:
Man, we are deep down in it now. I personally believe that Tesla
came down here and showed these guys how
to make this plant run right, because he was an expert
on DC as well. SEIFER:
What's all these switches? KINNEY: This is the original
main breaker plant of the entire hotel. STAPLETON:
Holy smokes. NARRATOR:<i> When The New Yorker
Hotel was completed</i> <i>in 1930, it was unique</i> <i>among all buildings in the city
because it could boast</i> <i>of having the largest private
power plant</i> <i>in the United States.</i> TAYLOR:
I could just see Tesla down here flipping some of these things. NARRATOR:<i>
Using coal-burning furnaces</i> <i>and high-pressure boilers,</i> <i>its DC generators were capable</i> <i>of producing some 2,200
kilowatts of electrical power,</i> <i>more than three times the
capacity the hotel required.</i> TAYLOR:
When I was a young engineer, we were designing a new lab for
high-energy laser systems. And it took us about five years just to design the power grid
for that building. And that was just to run lasers that weren't even gonna use
the type of power that this thing could supply
in The New Yorker. <i>I can't imagine they put
a generator in there</i> <i>that was gonna generate that
much power and for what use?</i> NARRATOR:<i> During the course
of his career,</i> <i>Nikola Tesla was known
to require incredible amounts</i> <i>of electricity
for his experiments.</i> <i>Could this help explain
the reason why Tesla chose</i> <i>The New Yorker Hotel
as his headquarters?</i> <i>Did he need the hotel's
incredible power plant</i> <i>for some secret purpose?</i> TAYLOR:
So it ran on its own power. KINNEY:
It was islanded. If you think about Tesla's past, everywhere he went
and did his experiments, he would brown out
the locations. Right? Sometimes black out
the locations. This place had its own power. And that had to be appealing
to him that if he were going to do
experiments here, he wouldn't be worried about blacking out
the city block around him. 'Cause this was a building -that-that ran on its own.
-That was right. It was, it was
ahead of the curve. And Tesla was right
at the very front of that. Why would you incur the cost
of building a generator that supplied three times the amount of power,
and why would this man, who was so interested
in electricity, find himself at one of the most
prestigious hotels in New York City, and he also
had all of the power that he could ever want? You start layering those things
in and you start to realize, there may be more to this story
than we understand. Well, this is the
Manufacturers Trust Company bank vault. Holy smokes. That's a big vault door
right there. That is cool. Do we know if Tesla held
anything here at all? Well, it would make sense
that if he's living here, and banking was done
in person then, it makes sense
that he would have a safety-deposit box here
or more. STAPLETON:<i>
He could put research,</i> <i>he could put... the technology
that he was working on,</i> <i>that no one could see.</i> I'm starting to form a picture in my mind that this was
intentional. This specific location. Where he had independent
electricity, more than he could
possibly need, that he had his own dual suite. Well, when you add on top
of that, though, the fact that there's rumors that the FBI
and the OSS were in the building as well, I'm beginning to think that
he didn't choose the building. I think it was chosen for him. SEIFER: Well, Joe, we appreciate
so much you showing us this. A pleasure to do so. TAYLOR:<i>
Thanks a lot, Joe.</i> ♪ ♪
♪ ♪ NARRATOR:<i> Shortly after
conducting their search</i> <i>for information about
Nikola Tesla's missing files</i> <i>at The New Yorker Hotel,</i> <i>Jason, Travis and Marc,</i> <i>along with Tesla researcher
Tim Eaton,</i> <i>have begun shifting their focus
to the team's next destination.</i> This is just
off the charts great. I have to say I'm incredibly
excited. This is the Holy Grail. STAPLETON: I think it's so
important that we get a chance to kind of take
this investigation to the 21st century. NARRATOR:<i> Nikola Tesla
had spent nearly a year</i> <i>in Colorado proving
that electrical energy</i> <i>could travel through the air</i> <i>and use the ground
as a conductor.</i> <i>But by 1901, the scientist was
eager to prove</i> <i>that his Tesla coils
could do more</i> <i>than illuminate light bulbs
wirelessly.</i> <i>He wanted to electrify
entire cities.</i> <i>After prominent banker
and industrialist J.P. Morgan</i> <i>offered him the opportunity</i> <i>to have his own
state-of-the-art laboratory</i> <i>located 74 miles east
of New York City,</i> <i>Tesla abandoned Colorado</i> <i>for what he hoped would be
a permanent location</i> <i>in which to realize his life's
dream: Wardenclyffe Tower.</i> Tesla built an almost
200-foot tower out in the middle of nowhere
in Wardenclyffe, <i>and we know almost nothing
about it.</i> <i>It's as though there is</i> <i>a concerted effort to ensure
that nothing of value</i> <i>that Tesla created or wrote
down was saved or protected.</i> NARRATOR:<i> Marc has arranged
to meet with Jane Alcorn...</i> -Morning, Jane. Nice to
see you again. -Hi, Tim. <i>...president
of The Tesla Science Center</i> <i>at Wardenclyffe,</i> <i>an organization which oversees
the property.</i> So let's go over
to the tower base. NARRATOR:<i>
In return for J.P. Morgan's</i> <i>hefty $150,000 investment,</i> <i>Tesla promised
that Wardenclyffe Tower</i> <i>would primarily serve
as a communications station,</i> <i>transmitting radio signals
across the Atlantic.</i> <i>But when Tesla tried
to get Morgan</i> <i>to additionally finance
his effort</i> <i>to convert Wardenclyffe</i> <i>into a wireless
power transmitter,</i> <i>the two men had
a bitter falling out.</i> <i>Tesla lost his most
powerful patron,</i> <i>and was forced to abandon
Wardenclyffe in 1906.</i> ALCORN:<i>
Well, this is the last 16 acres</i> <i>of Tesla's original
200-acre property,</i> and we are now stepping up
on the tower base. It's made from concrete with some stones that probably
came from the local beaches. And if you look at the trees
around us and imagine a tower three times
the size of these trees, that's how tall the tower was:
187 feet. Have you known anybody who has, uh, ever seen tunnels
underneath the tower? There are local anecdotes about what might be
potential sightings of tunnels or related
construction. NARRATOR:<i>
Because of Tesla's theory,</i> <i>that electricity could be
transmitted wirelessly</i> <i>by using the earth's
natural conductivity,</i> <i>Tesla was rumored to have built
a virtual maze</i> <i>of brick tunnels located
deep beneath the main complex.</i> I've read about where he drove
these metal pipes deep, deep into the earth and there
were these tunnels that were somehow connected
to it. Now, Jane, from the pictures,
that looks like the laboratory, but it looks all boarded up. It looks-- Can you tell me
a little bit about that? It is boarded up
for a very good reason. We had a lot
of contamination inside from the prior owners and there
was a lot of asbestos inside, which has been removed,
but it's riddled with mold, -and so... -So we can't
go inside and look at it? ALCORN:
No, no. STAPLETON:
Can we get a drone in there? Well, there's a potential, but that might be difficult,
because it's a lot of little rooms,
and-and turns and twists, so you might be able to,
but you might not. Uh, but definitely
no humans inside. NARRATOR:<i>
As their plan to find out</i> <i>what lies buried beneath
Wardenclyffe gets underway,</i> <i>Travis and Jason break off
to get a closer look</i> <i>at the ruins of what was once
Tesla's laboratory.</i> <i>Originally designed and built
for Tesla</i> <i>by the noted architect
Stanford White in 1901,</i> <i>the laboratory at Wardenclyffe
offered nearly everything</i> <i>the scientist
could have hoped for.</i> <i>But after Morgan pulled
his funding,</i> <i>Tesla was ultimately forced
to leave the facility.</i> <i>The laboratory stood abandoned
for nearly 20 years,</i> <i>until it was repurposed</i> <i>as a photochemical development
facility in 1939.</i> We don't actually know how we're
gonna get into the building, <i>but it's getting really late in
the day, and so what we decided</i> <i>to do was hire
a local drone operator</i> and actually fly the drone
through the building. -Hey, Joe. How you doing? -Doing
well. How are you, Travis? All right, you got the drone -ready to go, man? -I do indeed.
I do indeed. -Hey. NARRATOR:<i>
Drone operator Joe Quigley</i> <i>will help the team see what,
if anything,</i> <i>could still be hidden</i>
inside<i> Tesla's laboratory.</i> -Hey, Jane, how you doing?
-Hello. -So, Joe, this is Jane.
-Hi. -Hi, Jane. And, uh, so, Jane, what I was
just telling Joe is that, ideally, we'd like to go
into the wooden door down here. ALCORN:
Well, it's blocked off. TAYLOR: So, we can't open it
and put anything through there? ALCORN:
No. No. Sorry. -I understand.
-We don't want any bodies inside that building
until it's having... So, then what are the ways that
we<i> could</i> possibly get in there? Well, the site that you could
get in is really this door. I would be able to unlock that
for you to let the drone in. Nobody can go inside, um, because
of the contamination there. TAYLOR:<i>
I realize that</i> there might be some toxic mold
or something inside this building, but
we really need to get inside it if we want to figure out what Tesla was doing here
at Wardenclyffe. So this is the building part that was built after the fact,
right? ALCORN:
Right. This is built many years after Tesla was no longer here. Well, what are the odds
that we're gonna be able to fly through here
and get to there? There are gonna be
a lot of ob... of obstacles. -You need help?
-I<i> do</i> need help. All right.
You got it? -How heavy is it? Oh, it's not
that bad. -Hold your breath. -Wow. Smell that.
-Oh, you can smell it -right when you open the door.
-Phew. That's mold smell. -Yeah.
-How far can I go in? Just keep to the vestibule where at least you have
some ventilation. -Otherwise,
it's really dangerous. -Okay. (whirring) NARRATOR:<i> As the drone
slowly makes its way</i> <i>toward the main building,</i> <i>it is obvious that more
than a century of neglect</i> <i>has taken its toll.</i> <i>Except for brief glimpses, it's
hard to find any resemblance</i> <i>between the current building
and photographs</i> <i>of what was once
Tesla's gleaming,</i> <i>state-of-the-art laboratory.</i> STAPLETON:<i> You know, the thing
about Wardenclyffe is, is that</i> now we get to actually be here. <i>We get to do
the investigation ourselves,</i> <i>and we get to determine
and find out, once and for all,</i> what's truth, what was fact
and what's fiction. (overlapping chatter) -(laughing)
-TAYLOR: There you go. -Oh, look, there's-there's...
-Oh. -TAYLOR: Look. The graffiti
on the wall! -Yup. STAPLETON:<i> When the drone
cleared the corner</i> and you got to see it drive down
into the lab, and we got to see <i>the old brick against the wall
and the graffiti,</i> <i>it was amazing to get to see</i> what nobody had been able
to see for years. TAYLOR: What a shot
of that hallway, man. SEIFER:
This is amazing. -EATON: Oh, look at that!
-Oh, man. EATON:
Wow, that's incredible. With all the stories
and documentation, <i>any little bit of information
inside the laboratory,</i> <i>and just getting here
and being able to see things,</i> <i>I think I'm gonna be able</i> to maybe figure out more
of what Tesla was doing. All right, well,
I appreciate it, Joe, man. -Good job! -Thanks a lot, Joe.
That was awesome. -Thanks a lot, man. Great job.
-Appreciate your help. <i>-Yeah.
-Yeah.</i> NARRATOR:<i>
Early the next morning,</i> <i>Travis and Jason meet
with Mario Carnevale</i> <i>from Hager Geoscience,
Incorporated,</i> <i>one of the country's
leading geophysical firms.</i> Well, we appreciate you coming
out and, uh, and helping us. The only thing we know about
what's underneath the ground at Wardenclyffe is, like,
secondhand knowledge, hearsay from people
that say Tesla told them, or they walked down in there during the time
when it was being built. So, there's no idea
what's down there. NARRATOR:<i> Because virtually all
of Tesla's drawings and designs</i> <i>for Wardenclyffe
have mysteriously vanished,</i> <i>many scientists have speculated</i> <i>that Wardenclyffe was little
more than an elaborate hoax,</i> <i>designed by Tesla
to squeeze money</i> <i>out of investors
like J.P. Morgan.</i> <i>But if Travis' suspicions
are correct,</i> <i>Wardenclyffe may have been
Nikola Tesla's</i> <i>greatest
scientific achievement.</i> <i>One designed
with a far more strategic</i> <i>and more secret purpose</i> <i>than that of a mere
transatlantic radio station.</i> There's legends that...
that there was a big tunnel right in the center
that went really deep. And then there's stories that there are tunnels
radiating outward. And so, what we would like to do
is try to map that. 'Cause if we can figure out
what it looked like, we might can figure out
what he was doing here. What we envision doing is to use
ground-penetrating radar... -Mm-hmm.
-...and electrical resistivity to image the subsurface and try
to locate these features. NARRATOR:<i> Ground-penetrating
radar, or GPR,</i> <i>uses electromagnetic radiation</i> <i>to locate structures
hidden deep underground.</i> <i>It works by sending microwaves</i> <i>from a machine
called a "transmitter,"</i> <i>which then bounce back to
an object called a "receiver"</i> <i>when they encounter
any objects in the soil</i> <i>that have a different
electromagnetic resistance.</i> How deep will the radar
penetrate? Well, we brought several
different antenna frequencies so that we can resolve features from just a few feet down
to maybe a hundred plus feet. I'd like to have a... like, a
model built where we can turn it in different directions and kind
of see at the different levels. -A 3-D model.
-Well, yeah. Well, yeah. -Yeah. That's the simplest way.
3-D model. Can you guys build one of those
off of what you're gonna do? Yes, we plan to take our data
and build a 3-D model. That'll be amazing. NARRATOR:<i> A model of what lies
beneath Wardenclyffe?</i> <i>Could the GPR data
actually reveal the truth</i> <i>behind Tesla's
most ambitious invention?</i> TAYLOR:
We have really high confidence that underneath
this 200-foot tower, that there was a deep tunnel
right in the center -of this octagon area.
-Mm-hmm. -Yeah. So, I think that
that's the best place to start. -Let's see if we can find
that tunnel. -All right. -Okay. -Okay, yeah, let's go. -Well,
let's go to our trucks and -take off.
-Grab some gear. -Yeah. Hey, what can we do to help? -Is all this coming out?
-All right. Yes. MARIO: We'll start with
the ground-penetrating radar. These are the hundred-megahertz
antennas. We'll assemble them--
the transmitter and receiver. Then we'll drag it out
to the location, <i>lay a tape out,
hook up the cables,</i> <i>and make a run at...
at the, uh, shaft.</i> All right, so this is gonna be
line one. TAYLOR:
All right, here we go. Showing about how fast,
you think? MARIO:
That's good, actually. -Keep going?
-MARIO: Yup. So, we're transmitting one scan
every inch, actually. -TAYLOR: Got it? -MARIO: Yup.
Oh, hold on a second. Well, here, this is interesting. We're getting, um... I can see a disruption
of that boundary. See that? -STAPLETON: Mm-hmm. Yeah. -You
see it's coming across here? -Right over there. -MARIO:
That's right at the midpoint. NARRATOR:<i> The radar crew has
discovered a major anomaly</i> <i>right where
the tower's underground tunnel</i> <i>was rumored to exist.</i> <i>Could this mean that Tesla
had built Wardenclyffe,</i> <i>not as a radio station,</i> <i>but as a place to replicate
his Colorado experiments</i> <i>on a much larger scale?</i> -How deep?
-Somewhere around 13 to 15 feet. -13 to 15 foot? -It looks like
there's some kind of cover, and then it opens up. This is amazing! You can see how wide it is. So, it's roughly eight
or nine feet in diameter. And then you think
it opens up beneath that? -So... -Well, I think, yeah,
as far as I can see it's... -So that sounds like a cover...
-STAPLETON: That's -a good first test, man. Yeah.
-...a cover to a tunnel -that goes down.
-Right. That's amazing. NARRATOR:<i>
A tunnel?</i> <i>Could Travis and Jason
have just discovered</i> <i>what many have long thought
could be a virtual maze</i> <i>running not only
deep</i> beneath<i> the site</i> <i>of Tesla's Wardenclyffe Tower,
but also</i> out<i> from it?</i> <i>But if so,
where would those tunnels lead?</i> <i>And why were they constructed?</i> This ground-penetrating radar
scan is gonna tell us a lot of detailed information
about what's under the ground. <i>With this level of information,
we might be able to get insight</i> <i>into what he thought
he was gonna do</i> with the Wardenclyffe Tower. STAPLETON:<i>
Marc mentioned that</i> <i>when he came here originally,</i> over that direction,
there was an igloo-shaped dome that was supposedly was an
entrance to one of the tunnels. So, if you guys
are running that line and-and checking
all the way down... You're gonna go all the way
to the end, right? We have a 170-foot line
that goes from roughly the wooded area
down to the fence. STAPLETON:
Okay, perfect. Our crew doing the survey
reports an anomaly that is oriented
in that direction. Where? Pointing towards that monument. TAYLOR:
That's amazing. STAPLETON:
We've been here one day, man, and we have already found two really interesting pieces that are helping
to reassemble this puzzle. And that's from raw data, -without even having the data
processed, right? -Right. So, I can't-- I can't wait
to see what we're gonna have once you get all of this data
put together, processed, and we get a full 3-D picture -of what-what it looks like
underground here. -Yeah. TAYLOR:<i>
We haven't been able</i> <i>to find blueprints
for Wardenclyffe</i> anywhere, so I have no idea
what's under the ground and what Tesla had in mind. <i>This ground-penetrating radar,
when we get all the data back</i> <i>and they run it through
the supercomputer algorithms</i> <i>that they've got
to run it through,</i> it's gonna give us
a full 3-D rendering of what's underneath the ground. That'll be just as good
as a blueprint. Hey, we'll get out of your hair. You guys keep going. -Okay.
-All right, thanks a lot. -Take care.
-All right. Bye-bye. NARRATOR:<i> While the ground
beneath Wardenclyffe</i> <i>has begun to reveal
its secrets,</i> <i>Jason and Travis
are beginning to think</i> <i>that not all of Tesla's
activities at Wardenclyffe</i> <i>were limited to developing
wireless electricity.</i> STAPLETON:<i>
You know, I didn't realize</i> before we got here,
like, the scale of this. It really is huge. There's 16 of these... -granite blocks.
-Granite blocks. NARRATOR:<i>
Granite blocks?</i> <i>Could Travis and Jason
have just discovered</i> <i>another important secret</i> <i>connected to Tesla's
experiments at Wardenclyffe?</i> Granite has different
properties. Some granites
can be really good insulators, <i>or you can make them have
conductive properties.</i> <i>Tesla did his experiments
in Colorado</i> <i>over a granite basin,
so I suspect</i> that granite was important
in his experiment that he was doing
at Wardenclyffe. They all got these copper rods that have been driven into 'em. TAYLOR: I think he did that
for electrical reasons. I think that this is connecting this copper
to the granite electrically. It reminds me
of The Bell,<i> Die Glocke.</i> -You ever heard of that? -No,
what's The Bell,<i> Die Glocke?</i> We found it in, uh, in Germany after the war, World War II, and it sat on a thing
that looked like this. -The same shape?
-The same shape. It's just odd. NARRATOR:<i>
Shortly after the fall</i> <i>of Nazi Germany in 1945,</i> <i>a team of Allied scientists</i> <i>discovered
formerly top secret information</i> <i>about a Nazi invention
known simply as</i> Die Glocke <i>or The Bell.</i> <i>Although there remains
some debate as to whether</i> <i>the device
ever actually existed,</i> <i>there are those
who remain convinced</i> <i>that evidence it did can be
linked to a mysterious</i> <i>scientific facility called
the Henge.</i> <i>Located in a remote valley just
outside Ludwikowice, Poland,</i> <i>the Henge features an unusual
concrete platform,</i> <i>similar in size and shape
to the one at Wardenclyffe.</i> <i>Even more bizarre are
the various claims</i> <i>that</i> Die Glocke<i>
was intended to be</i> <i>everything from an
anti-gravity craft</i> <i>to a time-travel device.</i> <i>Could the Nazis have come
into possession</i> <i>of some of Nikola Tesla's
missing files?</i> <i>Files that dealt
with scientific discoveries</i> <i>on a scale never before
imagined?</i> TAYLOR: I'm excited.
We're going to be able to get a picture of what's
happening under the ground here. STAPLETON:
Yeah. NARRATOR:<i> Three weeks
after their exploration</i> <i>of Tesla's compound
at Wardenclyffe,</i> <i>Dr. Travis Taylor and Jason
Stapleton meet with Marc Seifer</i> <i>at the Army/Navy Club
in Washington, D.C.</i> -How you doing?
-Good. How are you? NARRATOR:<i> They are eager
to review the results</i> <i>of the ground penetrating
radar survey</i> <i>conducted by the team from
Hager Geoscience, Incorporated.</i> On this little thumb drive
right here are the results of the
ground-penetrating radar at Wardenclyffe. So, Jason, why don't you
plug that in over there? -Have you seen it yet?
-I have not seen it yet, so I'm itching
to see what's on there. -So this is the 3-D rendering.
-Wow. Wait, I gotta get closer
to this. <i>I've been at this
for over 30 years.</i> To see what, actually,
Tesla had done underneath the ground
was earth-shattering. <i>I think the scientists around
the world are gonna be amazed.</i> <i>This is a truly--
a historic event.</i> -This is the picture
of the tower, right? -Yeah. So that's sitting on top,
right where the octagon is. You see, right in the middle? And then, in those
yellow pieces there, those are grounding rods. Those are metallic rods, and the red parts are
the tunnels. SEIFER:
Wow. TAYLOR:<i> The ground-penetrating
radar data that we now have,</i> we know for sure that there were
indeed tunnels built underneath
the Wardenclyffe Tower. All these things that we heard
rumors and stories of, turns out that they're true. And how many tunnels
do we have here? -Well, at least four.
-At least four. That's incredible. You know,
the interesting thing about it, in his Colorado notes, he describes digging a hole. This is a much bigger version
of that, it looks like. They had no reason to believe
that the tunnels didn't go all way on out to the ocean, like some of the stories say. The thing that bothers me,
though, is, as far as blueprints
are concerned, all we have is this
ground-penetrating radar and pictures. H-How can that be? Yeah, it's worse than you think. I've been breaking myself to try and find
these blueprints, and I just went
to Stanford White's estate. Stanford White's the guy
who designed Wardenclyffe. Has no record in his estate
of any blueprints. I went to municipal court
records-- nothing. J.P. Morgan's archives. You'd think that he would have
some records of what he was paying for--
nothing. There's a record in a court
filing, under number 11. A blueprint copy of map of
Wardenclyffe, in Long Island. So, we know that
there were blueprints, and at least we have one citing that says
the blueprints existed, but I can't find them anywhere. I think it's not a business
thing that shut him down. I think he was so successful
that it became something that we didn't want the rest
of the world to know about. It wasn't enough that J.P.
Morgan just pulled the funding, because he could always go
somewhere else, he actually had to get rid
of all the evidence. I'm telling you, why else would
you go and remove all the history of it,
all the documents, everything? So nobody else could rebuild it. NARRATOR:<i> Nikola Tesla had made
a powerful enemy</i> <i>in J.P. Morgan.</i> <i>Morgan had enormous interests
in Alaskan copper mines,</i> <i>which would have far less value</i> <i>if copper wires
became obsolete.</i> <i>But pulling Tesla's funding was
only J.P. Morgan's first step</i> <i>in shutting down Wardenclyffe.</i> <i>Tesla's reputation also
had to be destroyed.</i> <i>And to that end, Morgan began
to circulate stories</i> <i>that Wardenclyffe had been
a hoax.</i> <i>He also made certain
the inventor</i> <i>would never regain either
his financial footing</i> <i>or his once-envied reputation</i> <i>in the scientific community.</i> I'm not a conspiracy theorist,
but I gotta tell you, man, there's--
something nefarious is going on. This isn't a conspiracy.
This is deliberate. I'm telling you somebody, whether it's our government or the war department
at the time or whatever. I think they went and they took
all of these blueprints and hid them so no one else
could get them in the world. They didn't want our enemies
to have them. What now, though?
We've done so much digging, I don't know what else to do. I think we look
at evidence today. Let's think reverse engineering. Let's look at what's existing
today and go backwards. Military applications, whatever. -I think that's the next step.
-Okay. I'm gonna try and get you guys
out to California to meet with the founders
of Tesla motors. The people that created
the electric car which they named after Tesla. -Sounds like a logical place
to start, then. -All right. -Yep. We got it. Let's go.
-All right. -Okay, guys. -STAPLETON:<i> We'll talk
to you soon.</i> -SEIFER:<i> Okay.</i> STAPLETON:<i>
Take it easy.</i> NARRATOR:<i>
In Colorado Springs,</i> <i>Nikola Tesla proved
he could transmit</i> <i>wireless electricity.</i> <i>At Wardenclyffe,</i> <i>he hoped to distribute
that electricity</i> <i>to everyone in the world.</i> <i>But after suffering
a bitter humiliation</i> <i>at the hands of his enemies,</i> <i>Tesla was determined
to take on the world</i> <i>with a series of inventions
so powerful,</i> <i>so revolutionary,</i> <i>and so potentially
destructive...</i> <i>...that they were stolen
at the time of his death</i> <i>and kept hidden
from the public,</i> <i>at least until they are found.</i> TAYLOR:
Holy smokes. <i>Next time on</i> The Tesla Files... This is a patent
for his death ray. <i>I've had a theory here
that he was doing some kind</i> <i>of super-weapon program
for our government.</i> I have in the garage, the second
production Tesla ever made. TAYLOR:<i> It's like riding
a roller coaster!</i> <i>It was amazing.</i> <i>This hotel might be
a laboratory.</i> That really is
an incredible idea. This ties the Tesla papers
to military intelligence. <i>This is huge.</i> CAPTIONING PROVIDED BY
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