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How an Intern Stole NASA's Moon Rocks

Posted May 07, 2009 10:58 AM

From Gizmodo:

In 2002, rogue NASA interns stole millions of dollars in moon rocks. This is the untold story of how they did it. Building 31 North's white halls are empty, because it is the middle of the night. NASA interns Thad Roberts and Tiffany duck inside a bathroom, and tear off their clothing. Then they change into the contents of their duffel bags—2mm thick neoprene bodysuits. Like in a bad movie, the suits will help Thad and Tiffany avoid heat sensors armed to feel out threatening climate changes inside a vault. The adrenaline, their attraction, the smell of rubber suits and the fear of failure is almost overwhelming. After pulling on the thermally shielded gear, Tiffany and Thad step back into the corridor, moving toward the turnstile lock that guards their target: NASA's prized stash of moon rocks. ******** Building 31 North, which sits on the grounds of Houston's Johnson Space Center, is where NASA keeps all 600 pounds of the moon rocks it has secured. They are the sole property of the government, collected over six lunar missions and protected with the dramatic intensity of national treasures. Building 31 North is one of the few buildings on earth constructed under Class 100 standards—it is a structure that can withstand 1000 years of water submersion, among other durability metrics that should not be tested this side of Armageddon. Breaking into it is designed to be impossible for normal people. But not harder than building a shuttle, or figuring out how to put a rover on Mars. The agency hires people with the ability to find solutions for intimidatingly large problems exactly like this one. In this regard, Roberts was your typical NASA intern. The 25-year-old was pursuing multiple degrees in Physics, Geology and Anthropology. But while Thad was school smart, he also has an almost unquencheable adrenaline-seeking side, and was consumed with a strange Excel spreadsheet of personal goals that read like he was trying to prove himself to Evel Knievel and a rocket scientist at the same time: Experience zero gravity, check; experience severe dehydration, check; find dinosaur tracks, no problem. The list was long, and as he checked off one after another, maybe Thad's ego began to believe anything was possible. But Thad wasn't in this alone. He was on his way to a divorce fueled by an affair he was having with fellow intern Tiffany Fowler. Tiffany was equally dynamic—a firecracker and former cheerleader who spoke French in bed and conducted stem cell research on NASA's behalf. Thad wanted her, so when Tiffany begged to hear his idea to liberate the moon rocks, he told her. And when she wanted to follow through with the plan, the romantic and exciting thing was to start hatching a plan as if it were yet another science problem at work. One that would could make them very rich, or ruin their lives. Soon one more curious co-op, the 19-year-old Shae Saur, had joined in on the heist. After months of preparation, they found themselves embarking on their unauthorized mission, driving for Building 31 North after dark with intel on every security device—and plans to get around them.

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#1

Re: How an Intern Stole NASA's Moon Rocks

05/07/2009 4:45 PM

Just...Perfectly...Vile

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#2

Re: How an Intern Stole NASA's Moon Rocks

05/08/2009 12:08 AM

The supposed loss of the 1969 videos and the research notes is more telling, IMO, than the theft of the moon rocks.

There has already been much conspiracy theory centered around the '69 landing and this should probably only add fuel to the fire.

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#3

Re: How an Intern Stole NASA's Moon Rocks

05/08/2009 7:25 AM

According to the article they only stole the tainted rocks. They could have stolen the untainted ones that were easier to get at. Makes you wonder though why the so called tainted ones are in a safe and the untainted ones are in glass cases.Seems like it should be the other way around.

I realized we spent lots of $ to get these rocks but other than that why are they considered so valuable? They haven't disclosed any major discoveries after all these years of different tests they ran on the rocks. So what makes them so valuable?

If they aren't going to use the tainted ones again why don't they distribute them to museums or sell they things to collectors. The minds of our Watchers never cease to amaze me.

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#4

Re: How an Intern Stole NASA's Moon Rocks

05/09/2009 10:29 AM

Another example of a security system based on the incorrect assumptions, the insider always has an advantage and for some reason no one expected that approach???

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#5

Re: How an Intern Stole NASA's Moon Rocks

05/09/2009 9:24 PM

It's true that the rocks were stolen. Most of the rest of the article is nonsense.

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