Actually it would be just about impossible to completely wipe out the paper trail of someone with an advanced degree from a university like MIT. A student generates a lot of paperwork when going to a university or at a big corporate employer. It's not like its just a matter of pulling a folder in some archive at the university or having the IRS purge his records and its all gone.
Class rosters, yearbooks, grade records, housing records. Back when I was at UW-Madison, they put out a directory of the students with everyone's name in it. Imagine having to track every copy down of something like that. Not only would they have to locate all this stuff and destroy it, but probably come up with new versions to take their place with Lazar deleted from them. Something would be bound to slip through. Also, Lazar himself doesn't have anything to show that he was at the places he claimed. Guess he's not one for keeping records. He doesn't even have his MIT diploma.
Oh, he also hasn't named any old classmates or coworkers, either, who could confirm he was at one of these places. No one who looks into him has been able to find anyone at these places when he said he was there who remembers him. Did they wipe everyone's memory like the Men in Black do in those movies?
Records do exist that tell us a lot about Lazard, though. He finished near the bottom third of his class in High School. Not exactly MIT material. Went bankrupt in the 80s and there he wrote that his job was film processor. A guy who was an elite physicists recruited to work on alien technology for the government ended up doing that? I've never heard him say anything in an interview that would make me think he has that kind of training in science, either. His descriptions of the technology are usually really vague, like you'd get in a science fiction novel.
I had to look up some of the details because its been a while since I looked into the guy, but my original opinion hasn't changed at all.
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