Trementina Base in New Mexico and other underground verified Vaults and Tunnels about 2 hours away from Epstein's Zorro Ranch information from the Vault builder

in #tremintinabase4 years ago (edited)

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See video reports below if you prefer to listen while doing chores/work.

What is covered

  • This is a connector article on Epstein's Zorro Ranch and how he acquired the lease of those acres for his compound. See link in sources below.

  • This article endeavors to discuss a base located in New Mexico, whose roots started in California. This organization from the Church of Scientology still has bases in California and other locations.

  • We will be looking at the history of the California base which parallels much of what we have discussed concerning the Programming from the Playboy Mansion and their hidden vaults of footage/connections to studios and Epstein's reach/vast connections related to the "honeypot."

  • The story of the man charged with continuing the work of building these vaults which includes Tremintina and other locations and how he was inducted as a child through programs and camps.

  • A brief history of the man who started the Church of Scientology L. Ron Hubbard and what they claim to be storing in these vaults.

  • Information to some land formerly owned by Tremintina (Church of Scientology) which was purchased by the Federal government for a steal of a price. Why?

  • Some of the operations and cases involving the far reaching power of the Church of Scientology, lack of transparency and harassment schemes of anyone divulges information related to their dealings. Why the lack of Free Speech? Why all the secrecy? What is there to hide?

Let's start with the beginning of this organization in California.

The Village Voice states,

Over the years, we’ve talked to a lot of former Scientologists, many of whom worked at the church’s secretive desert headquarters in Southern California, “Int Base.” They were cut off from their families and the outside world, and became accustomed to living in secrecy.

Here is what is known about Int Base
Gold Base (also variously known as Gold, Golden Era Productions, Int Base, or Int) is the de facto international headquarters of the Church of Scientology, located north of San Jacinto, California, in unincorporated Riverside County, about 100 miles (160 km) from Los Angeles. The heavily guarded compound comprises about 50 buildings surrounded by high fences topped with blades and watched around the clock by patrols, cameras and motion detectors. The property is bisected by a public road, which is closely monitored by the Church with cameras recording passing traffic.

It's 520 acres

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Quite the compound

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Notice how and where this building sits

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Now here is where this compound is in reference to the coast and water access

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And here is where the entire compound is again in relation to that theatre.

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The Church of Scientology acquired the property, which had formerly been a resort called Gilman Hot Springs, in 1978. It had previously been a popular Inland Empire vacation spot and spa established in the 1890s but went bankrupt in the late 1970s due to changes in American vacation habits. Bought for cash in great secrecy by the Church, using the alias of the "Scottish Highland Quietude Club", it has since been developed and expanded considerably.

The base now houses numerous Church organizations and subsidiaries, including its in-house media production division, Golden Era Productions, which has its own movie studio on the site. The Church's leader David Miscavige and other senior church officials live and work on the base. It is also the location of a $10 million mansion built for Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard. Although he never lived there before his death in 1986, the mansion and his living quarters are still maintained in anticipation of his predicted reincarnation. A number of prominent Scientologists have studied Scientology at Gold Base, notably Tom Cruise.

Back to the article from Village Voice by Tony Ortega in 2012

But even these people adopt a somewhat hushed tone when they tell me about the most secret organization in all of Scientology, the Church of Spiritual Technology. Mention CST, and even longtime former members of the church admit that they knew almost nothing about it, or even where CST’s own super-secret headquarters was located.

“I was in international management and the Watchdog Committee for 20 years, and I never knew where CST was, the whole time,” says Amy Scobee, a former high-ranking church official.

“CST was very hush-hush. Even among the Int staff, it wasn’t well known. Anyone coming from CST, it was very sensitive,” says Gary Morehead, who was chief of security at Int Base and oversaw the interrogation of executives who had gone awry. He had to sign a bond promising that he’d keep confidential anything that came out in those interrogations, which are known as “sec-checking.” When it came to CST executives, however, Morehead says he had to sign a second bond.

“Sec-checking them, you had to sign a special bond that you would keep things secret. You were ‘bonded for CST’,” he says.

Over the years, information has leaked out about CST and its extremely odd work — building underground vaults to ensure that the words of Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard survive a nuclear holocaust. It’s still rare, however, to have a press interview with a former CST employee.

But Dylan Gill, who helped build vaults in California and New Mexico — which each include houses built specifically for raising the reincarnation of Hubbard — says he finally wants to tell his story.

“You couldn’t tell anybody at Int Base about it. Nobody knew where the CST headquarters was,” Gill tells me while the sound of one of his young children putting up a fuss comes into and out of our telephone conversation. Today Gill, 41, lives in Las Vegas with his wife and two kids and life is pretty normal.

Back in time to when Dylan Gill was a boy and his experience with the Church of Scientology

But in 1988, as a member of Scientology’s elite “Sea Org,” having signed a billion-year contract and promising to dedicate himself and his future lifetimes to the church, Gill found himself being driven up into the San Bernardino Mountains.

Gill was originally from Santa Cruz, California, and had been brought into Scientology at the age of 11. An aunt was the first to get into the church, he says, and then her husband, Gill’s uncle.

“My dad and I weren’t communicating well, so my uncle got us into Scientology,” he says. “My whole family are artists, sort of beatniks.”

Beatniks
Elements of the beatnik trope included pseudo-intellectualism, drug use, and a cartoonish depiction of real-life people along with the spiritual quest of Jack Kerouac's autobiographical fiction.

In 1948, Kerouac introduced the phrase "Beat Generation", generalizing from his social circle to characterize the underground, anticonformist youth gathering in New York at that time.

Basically a partying crowd with the "do as thou wilt" theme.

As in the case with many other young church members, Gill soon started getting recruited for the hardcore Sea Org.

“My aunt, the family’s original Scientologist, suggested I go to the EPF at Flag,” he says, referring to Estates Project Force, the sort of “boot camp” that new Sea Org members go through, at “Flag,” the church’s spiritual headquarters in Clearwater, Florida.

“I was made to sign a Sea Org contract at 14, and was sent to Flag. I did my EPF, and that’s when CMO picked me up,” he says, referring to the Commodore’s Messenger Service, an elite group within the elite Sea Org that tends to be populated by young recruits. (Hubbard’s original messengers were teenaged girls who ran errands for him on the yacht Apollo in the late 1960s.)

It’s common for Sea Org members to marry young — as we’ve written numerous times before, former SO members tell us that the only way to get any privacy was to get married and move out of the single-sex barracks that were for unmarried workers. “I got married to a second-generation Scientologist,” Gill says. And then he and his wife were both recruited to CST.

Gill was sent from Florida to Scientology’s administrative headquarters in Los Angeles, a former hospital that takes up a full city block and is known as Pacific Area Command (PAC) by Scientologists.

“I was sent to PAC for clearances,” Gill says, and he explained that even if a young church member proved squeaky clean enough to become a Sea Org member, he’d have to be even more unblemished for CST. And after passing that gauntlet, Gill was on his way to Rimforest.

“I was replacing the ‘estates secretary,’ who was going to the RPF,” he says.

CST’s estates secretary had been overseeing numerous construction projects at the headquarters, but he had run afoul of Scientology’s top management. As punishment, he was taken down to Happy Valley, a ranch near Hemet, California, and several miles from Int Base itself. There, he was going into the Sea Org’s prison detail, Rehabilitation Project Force (RPF), to do grueling, menial labor and to be interrogated by Gary Morehead and his security crew.

I asked Gill if he knew what his predecessor had done so wrong. “It was pretty arbitrary,” he says. “You’re dealing with so many projects and so much money, there’s no way you’re going to succeed. It’s set up so you’ll eventually fail,” he says.

Gill was sent up to take over the estates secretary position, and would oversee a budget of about $14 million to fund 16 different ongoing construction projects at the Rimforest complex.

He was 19 years old.

[Map above. Scientology’s administrative headquarters are in Los Angeles, housed in the former Cedars of Lebanon hospital on a street that was renamed L. Ron Hubbard Way (Scientologists refer to the place as “Big Blue” or “PAC base,” for Pacific Area Command). But the highest levels of international management are housed at a secretive desert base near Hemet, about 85 miles east, which Scientologists call “Int Base” or “Gold,” because it houses Scientology’s audiovisual studios, Golden Era Productions. CST’s compound, however, is in the mountains above San Bernardino, near Lake Arrowhead — as Amy Scobee pointed out, even high-level executives at Int Base had no idea where it was.

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The complex consists of multiple “production” buildings, barracks, and other structures. Highlighted three here — the production building that stands over the vault itself, the “LRH House,” and the entrance to the compound.]

The compound at Rimforest had quite a few structures, but the point of the thing — the point of all of CST’s bases — was its vault.

When Gill arrived in 1988, he says, the Rimforest vault was about a third of the way to completion. It consisted of twin, cylindrical underground repositories with corrugated steel walls, and a suspended concrete floor about a third of the way up from the bottom of the cylinders.

“They were about 17 to 20 feet tall,” Gill says. “There were two portals where it goes between the two steel pipes.”

As with similar vaults farther north in California, in New Mexico, and another one under construction in Wyoming, the point of the vaults is. . .

to store L. Ron Hubbard’s writings and lectures in the form of etched steel plates in titanium containers, as well as in other forms, so that his “technology” could survive a nuclear attack and help reform society in an apocalyptic world.

Do you suppose that is the Only purpose Asking for a friend!

But in 1988, that was still well in the future. The titanium capsules were still in the planning stages, and much of CST’s work involved simply archiving all of Hubbard’s written and spoken words, organizing them, and xeroxing them on acid-free paper.

“The capsules were still being researched. The etching of the plates was being started, and compact discs were being researched, too,” Gill says.

“CST made a lot of trips to China to get a deal going on the time capsules and new e-meters,” he adds.

I asked him what the plans for the titanium capsules looked like. “It was like a banker’s box, and you’d have a place to fill it with inert gas, like argon gas,” he says.

So at this point, the vaults themselves were empty. But there was still much work to be done to them. “We hadn’t loaded anything into the vaults yet. We were still waiting for the time capsules. But we were pushing to get everything by LRH archived. Plates etched, Compact discs copied. The plan was to make each base completely self-sufficient,” Gill says.

While the vault would hold all of the Hubbard materials, each base would need housing for staff, and all of it would need to have power from big, reliable generator sets. “That was one thing I did. We went to Caterpillar and got generators for all of our bases,” he says.

See footage of the compound and evidence of the vault here,

Scientology Trementina Base DJI Phantom 4 Flight 1

They took their work very seriously. In the production buildings, where the Hubbard archives were being handled, they had actually constructed full-blown clean rooms, the kind of thing you normally only expect at high-tech firms. “There’s an argon gas system that will flush out the air in the room in three seconds,” he says.

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Everything about his job, Gill says, was done on an emergency basis; each new order had to be treated with even more urgency than the one before, whatever the expense.

As an example, he tells me about a time one winter when things were icy and the footing was unsure. “A French woman tripped walking between the main production building to a building where staff lived. She broke her wrist. I got an order to solve the problem. What I came up with was heated pathways. We put in three to five miles of pathways connecting the dining area to the production building to the staff housing, using stamped concrete pathways with glycol hosing in it. We set up a pump room on a thermostat. When the temperature dropped, it would pump heated glycol into the pathways and melt the snow,” he says. “We got a guy from Germany who had developed it for runways. He was living in LA. We brought him up to design it. It was a huge deal. I think it was around $20,000.”

Well that's interesting, because when I was doing a study of just one of Epstein's dwellings, people took note that Epstein was one of the few whose mansion Never had snow on the walk

Another time, he says, they came up with a way to reduce the number of times staff had to go into town: “We put in a dry cleaning machine at the base so we didn’t have to go outside to do that.” Gill says the machine alone cost between $50,000 and $70,000 in that project.

Gill didn’t only oversee construction projects at CST’s Rimforest headquarters. He also spent much of his time at Trementina base, in New Mexico.

Like Rimforest, the main point of Trementina is its vault. But it has another feature that has also made it somewhat notorious, and previously caught the attention of news organizations: its bizarre giant CST logo carved into the desert floor, intended to be seen from the sky.

it has another feature that has also made it somewhat notorious, and previously caught the attention of news organizations: its bizarre giant CST logo carved into the desert floor, intended to be seen from the sky. According to a news report done by KRQE, the logo was carved into a forest of trees and is only visible from the air. It is claimed it can be seen from space.

The logo is a registered Trademark of the Church of Spiritual Technology considered a Branch of the Church of Scientology. It is this branch which owns the Trementina property. This same symbol shows up a the Creston Ranch in California.

Many in the area of Tremintina had no idea it even existed.

Does anyone else wonder if this is all just a convenient cover for other connections?

The news crew was denied access to the vault, but offered the chance to go inside if they canceled the news segment. Why all the secrecy?

Interesting, listen at the end where they say the segment was interrupted because the cable company decided that exact moment to do a nation wide emergency broadcasting test. Creepy?

You can listen here where this is talked about. Bringing this right in at this time and it is short.

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This below is the INT complex here, the three photos directly above are in NM Trementina Base Compound

The complex consists of multiple “production” buildings, barracks, and other structures. We’ve highlighted three here — the production building that stands over the vault itself, the “LRH House,” and the entrance to the compound.]

“My [first] wife had already been up there posted as the HCO secretary,” he remembers. (He’s now married to someone else.) “I think there were only 18 people in the entire org at the CST headquarters.

Where he was taken was a complex in the mountains above Los Angeles. Gill, who worked there and at other CST bases for the next three years, refers to the compound as “Rimforest,” which is the name of a nearby hamlet southwest of Lake Arrowhead. Other ex-Scientologists tend to call the compound “Twin Peaks,” which is the name of another nearby mountain village.

This concerns Tremintina compound as he makes references back and forth to the CA compound because he was continuing work on both simultaneously,

When Gill arrived at Trementina base for the first time, the airstrip was still being cut out of the desert. “The priority when I was there was finishing the LRH House,” he says.

As at Rimforest, Tremintina’s vault was in place, but was mostly empty. I asked him to describe it to me.

“It’s a huge door with a timelock on it. It’s like a huge safe, like a safe in the bank,” he says. And inside? “It’s all white, like painted cement. One long shaft, with a dividing wall about halfway down, with another vault door inside of the main vault.”

There was equipment, too. Reel-to-reel players, for example, and other devices that could make use of the things that would be stored. “It’s like an external library,” Gill says. “There’s everything you need to make use of the materials. Multiple binders of instructions…whoever survived a nuclear war could use it, if mankind was going to rebuild society.”

I told him I understood that concept, but why the big logo visible from the air (which at that time was still being planned)?

“That’s where LRH is supposed to go, when he returns,” Gill says. Once Hubbard adopts a new body, he’s expected to make his way to one of the CST bases. “That’s where he’s supposed to be raised and be taken care of,” Gill says. “So the symbol is a way for a spirit to find its way back to where it belongs.”

I hadn’t heard that one. Naturally, people have made fun of the symbol, saying that it looked like it was intended to signal space aliens coming to Earth. Instead, Gill was telling me it was there to signal the wandering spirit of L. Ron Hubbard.

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Suddenly, I realized that Chuck Beatty really was only half-joking when he noted that CST’s logo seemed reminiscent of the Kool cigarettes trademark, the brand that Hubbard smoked like a fiend in life. (Beatty, a former Sea Org member, is a sort of unofficial historian of the church.)

There’s another interesting feature at Trementina. The vault entrance is not visible from the outside: a large, multi-story house was built around it to conceal it. Gill says it’s called the “Ventilation House.” Trementina’s LRH House is some distance away, and is only one story. (An image of the ventilation house can be seen at the top of this story, taken from a CBS investigation that flew over Trementina.)

Gill also installed generators at another vault site on the northern California coast near Petrolia, California.

What is interesting is the claim made by USA Hitman, (find source below)

The property history of Trementina Base is complex. The Federal Register shows that CST has owned two properties in the same area at different times. The one they originally built the underground vault on, between 1986 to 1992, was traded to the U.S. government on 24 August 1992.

Now it states,

the property history of Trementina Base is complex. The Federal Register shows that CST has owned two properties in the same area at different times.

Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management Number: G-910-G3-0006-4210-04; NMNM 83264

  • The United States issued an exchange conveyance document to the Church of Spiritual Technology, a California corporation, on August 24, 1992, for the surface estate in the following described land in San Miguel County, New Mexico, pursuant to section 206 of the Act of October 21, 1976 (43 U.S.C. 1716).

  • New Mexico Principal Meridian T. 15 N., R. 22 E. …Containing 400.00 acres (1.6187 km2).

  • In exchange for the land described above, the Church of Spiritual Technology conveyed to the United States the surface estate in the following described land located in San Miguel County, New Mexico.

  • New Mexico Principal Meridian T. 17 N., R. 23 E. …Containing 400.00 acres (1.6187 km2).

  • The values of the Federal public land and the non-Federal land in the exchange were appraised at $28,000.00. The public interest was served through the completion of this exchange.

  • According to a June 1992 Claims Court ruling CST had purchased the original site in 1986 for $250,976, then had invested millions in building an underground vault on the property.

But the Federal Register record says both properties were valued at only $28,000 at the time of the land swap in August 1992.

However footage from KRQE TV shows the presence of a vault built into the mountainside between the runway and the CST logo.

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An aerial photograph showing the base’s enormous Scientology symbols on the ground caused media interest and broke the story in November 2005. According to a Washington Post report, the Church’s first reaction was to attempt to suppress the information:

The church tried to persuade station KRQE not to air its report last week about the aerial signposts marking a Scientology compound that includes a huge vault “built into a mountainside,” the station said on its Web site. Based in Los Angeles, the corporation dispatched an official named Jane McNairn and an attorney to visit the TV station in an effort to squelch the story, KRQE news director Michelle Donaldson said.

The church offered a tour of the underground facility if KRQE would kill the piece, the station said in its newscast. Scientology also called KRQE’s owner, Emmis Communications, and “sought the help of a powerful New Mexican lawmaker” to lobby against airing the piece, the station reported on its Web site.

The huge symbols on the base, distinguishable only from an aerial view ([7] 35°31’28.56″N 104°34’20.20″W), are specifically those of Scientology’s Church of Spiritual Technology. Former members of the Church have said that the symbol marks a “return point” for Scientologists to help find Hubbard’s works when they travel here in the future from other places in the universe.

Reportedly, two similar bases maintained by the Church of Spiritual Technology are located in Petrolia, California (40°23’15.55″N 124°18’19.05″W), and Creston, California (35°27’12.29″N 120°29’59.20″W), both for archiving permanent backups of Hubbard’s every written and spoken word. Internal Revenue Service records show that Scientologists spent $13 million in 1992 to preserve Hubbard’s fiction and non-fiction writings on 1.8 million stainless steel discs, and recorded his lectures on 187,000 nickel records. The Church of Spiritual Technology symbol also appears at the Petrolia location and in the middle of a track at the ranch in Creston, California where L. Ron Hubbard died.

Ron L. Hubbard,

Born in Tilden, Nebraska, in 1911, Hubbard spent much of his childhood in Helena, Montana. After his father was posted to the U.S. naval base on Guam, Hubbard traveled to Asia and the South Pacific in the late 1920s. In 1930, Hubbard enrolled at George Washington University to study civil engineering but dropped out in his second year.

Hubbard was an officer in the Navy during World War II, where he briefly commanded two ships but was removed from command both times. The last few months of his active service were spent in a hospital, being treated for a variety of complaints.

During the late 1960s and early 1970s, he spent much of his time at sea on his personal fleet of ships as "Commodore" of the Sea Organization, an elite paramilitary group of Scientologists. Some ex-members and scholars have described the Sea Org as a totalitarian organization marked by intensive surveillance and a lack of freedom.

Hubbard returned to the United States in 1975 and went into seclusion in the California desert. In 1978, Hubbard was convicted of fraud after he was tried in absentia by France. In August 1978, 11 high-ranking members of Scientology were indicted on 28 charges for their role in the Church's Operation Snow White, one of the largest infiltrations of the United States government in history, with up to 5,000 covert agents. One of the indicted was Hubbard's wife Mary Sue Hubbard. L. Ron Hubbard was named an unindicted co-conspirator.

Operation Snow White

Operation Snow White was a criminal conspiracy by the Church of Scientology during the 1970s to purge unfavorable records about Scientology and its founder, L. Ron Hubbard. This project included a series of infiltrations into and thefts from 136 government agencies, foreign embassies and consulates, as well as private organizations critical of Scientology, carried out by Church members in more than 30 countries.

Operation Freakout

Operation Freakout, also known as Operation PC Freakout, was a Church of Scientology covert plan intended to have the U.S. author and journalist Paulette Cooper imprisoned or committed to a psychiatric hospital. The plan, undertaken in 1976 following years of church-initiated lawsuits and covert harassment, was meant to eliminate the perceived threat that Cooper posed to the church and obtain revenge for her publication in 1971 of a highly critical book, The Scandal of Scientology.

The Church of Scientology sued Cooper for an article she wrote.
Cooper expanded her article into a full-length book, The Scandal of Scientology (subtitled "A chilling examination of the nature, beliefs and practices of the "now religion'"). It was published by Tower Publications, Inc. of New York in the summer of 1971.

Hubbard spent the remaining years of his life in a luxury motorhome on his California property, attended to by a small group of Scientology officials including his physician. In 1986, L. Ron Hubbard died at age 74.

Following Hubbard's death, Scientology leaders announced that his body had become an impediment to his work and that he had decided to "drop his body" to continue his research on another planet. Though many of Hubbard's autobiographical statements have been found to be fictitious, The Church of Scientology describes Hubbard in hagiographic terms and rejects any suggestion that its account of Hubbard's life is not historical fact.

We find this stuff for elitists all the time. . .their claims to fame aren't so Famous after all. A lot of blowing hot air and boasting sadly.

Academically, Hubbard did poorly: his transcripts show he failed many courses including atomic physics, though later in life he would claim to have been a nuclear physicist. In September 1931 he was placed on probation due to grades, and again on April 23, 1932 he was issued a warning due to his grades.

During what would become Hubbard's final semester at GWU, he organized an ill-fated trip to the Caribbean for June 1932 to explore and film the pirate "strongholds and bivouacs of the Spanish Main" and to "collect whatever one collects for exhibits in museums". Amid multiple misfortunes and running low on funds, the ship's owners ordered it to return to Baltimore. Hubbard failed to return to University the following year.

Interesting the tie in's to Pedogate when you consider,
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Epstein's Zorro Ranch in Stanley, NM and distance to Tremintina, NM

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Think about what happened in the summer of 2018 and all we learned about Isaac Kappy.

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Isaac Kappy RIP based in New Mexico, remember the Sunspot Observatory and training camp

Isaac Kappy the real story see a connection to a celebrity tweet, Fiona Barnett & Isaac's stay

Tom Hanks on Ellen, Kappy, Rachel Chandler background, her connections, her part in pg

Remember Isaac Kappy was born and based in Albuquerque, NM. Interesting how Ellen had Ton Hanks on right in the same time period Isaac went underground. Does her set remind you of anything? See evidence and connectors for this at about 37:00 mark in this video here

Thank God I archived this from YT onto Bitchute as they just deleted my Entire Channel.
LIVESTREATOM HANKS ON ELLEN, KAPPY, RACHEL CHANDLER BACKGROUND, HER CONNECTIONS, PEDOGATE LIVESTREAM

https://www.bitchute.com/video/aeIasfuFAwHY/

TREMENTINA, NM UNDERGROUND VAULT VERIFIED CLOSE TO EPSTEIN RANCH. GOV PURCHASE, FOOTAGE LOCAL NEWS
https://www.bitchute.com/video/tOgUGJhr5EUe/

ZORRO RANCH AND TREMENTINA BASE AND THE MAN WHO BUILT THE VAULT OTHER KNOWN VAULTS, TUNNELS
https://www.bitchute.com/video/ndoiRd4zxo6k/

Sources,

This done back in 2008
Hidden Scientology Compound - 1/3

Gallegos toured the vault around 1996 and said it was at that time about 300 ft. deep.

Done in 2014 by 60 minutes Australia
SCIENTOLOGY: Inside the SECRET compound

Bruce and Alice King, Dem Heroes and the acres land Epstein was allowed to lease from them. Good friends with the Clintons, Bill got advice from Bruce. Their son was AG when Epstein wasn't required to register as a sex offender. Alice child advocate!

https://steemit.com/bruceking/@artistiquejewels/bruce-and-alice-king-dem-heroes-and-the-acres-land-epstein-was-allowed-to-lease-from-them-good-friends-with-the-clintons-bill

https://www.villagevoice.com/2012/02/06/scientologys-secret-vaults-a-rare-interview-with-a-former-member-of-hush-hush-cst/

https://usahitman.com/ssvaus/

Verification other underground facilities are in existence,

The World's Deepest Buildings (That We Know About) | The B1M

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