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Writer's pictureJames Geis

9 alternative energy inventors who died mysteriously

Updated: Sep 22

I mentioned four of them in a previous post, but a quick search found several more. I was getting a little tired of people saying that Stan Meyer died of a brain aneurysm because that's what the coroner said, when his last words were saying that he had been poisoned. When you look at this in the context of at least eight other people dying under mysterious circumstances because their inventions are a threat to Big Oil, it seems likely to me that the coroner was wrong.


1) Rudolf Diesel

The man for which for the Diesel engine and Diesel fuel are named, Rudolf Diesel, experimented with different fuels, but his engine was shown to run on peanut oil and other plant oils at the 1900 World's Fair in Paris. He had the misfortune of "falling" off a ship and drowning in the English Channel in 1913 at age 55, after which "Diesel fuel" became petroleum-based.


2) Jean Chambrin

Jean Chambrin was converting cars to run on 50/50 and 60/40 blends of water and ethanol in Brazil from 1974 to 1978 as demonstrated in this video. He died of a heart attack in 1978 at age 54. One of Jean Chambrin's patents says that the water is disassociated into hydrogen and oxygen by an "electrical effect" of burning the ethanol. I believe this is similar to what Paul Pantone was doing later on by running the water fuel line through the center of the exhaust pipe. I think Jean Chambrin was doing something similar. The electrical effect from this apparently can disassociate the hydrogen and oxygen in water and/or turn the water into plasma. Stan Meyer was using a different type of electrical effect to disassociate water using radio waves, similar to what John Kanzius demonstrated on his local TV news station before he died of cancer in 2009. I don't think anything nefarious happened to John Kanzius because his invention and discovery of a frequency that ignites water came after his cancer diagnosis. He was trying to use this invention to cure himself of cancer using the research of Royal Rife, who said that every organism, parasite, etc. in the body has a frequency that can be used to destroy it.


3) Stanley Meyer

Stan Meyer converted a dune buggy to run on water, something that is said to be impossible because burning hydrogen produces water, and you can't get more energy output from this than the energy input you need to disassociate the hydrogen and oxygen in the water in order to burn the hydrogen. I don't think he spent 20 years of his life trying to fool people only to die in a meeting with Belgian investors after claiming that he had been poisoned. That seems unlikely. I think there are poorly-understood phenomena with water becoming plasma, which can be used as fuel, like what appears to happen from the shockwave of a pistol shrimp snapping its claw, or the "star in a jar" phenomenon created by sound waves. There is also an invention called a Griggs hydrosonic cavitation pump that flows pressurized water over a rotating drum with holes in it to create shock waves that heat the water with more energy output in heat than mechanical energy input, which is said to violate the laws of thermodynamics, but it's an invention that has been replicated by several people with the same results.


4) Paul Pantone

It's difficult to find information on the death of Paul Pantone, but he was imprisoned for 3.5 years near the end of his life at the Utah State Hospital and died at age 65, so I am including him here because he was clearly targeted and died too soon in my opinion. This video explains his invention. I do not believe that he was just another con artist who devoted his life to fooling people, like the media would have you believe.


5) Arie De Geus

Arie De Geus invented a silicon wafer that functioned as a self-charging battery, but it's hard to find information on him. One article says that he died at age 77 in 2007 in the parking lot of the Charlotte airport where he was found slumped over the wheel of his car. Wikipedia, however, says that he died at age 89 in 2019. Ariedegeus.com also says he died in 2019, but doesn't mention where he died or list any talks or publications from him after 2006. Geni.com says that he died on November 11, 2007 in Charlotte, NC, but says that he was born in 1940 and not 1930. Findagrave.com also says that he died on November 11, 2007 in Charlotte, NC at age 67, and is buried in Columbia, SC.


6) Stefan Marinov

"Stefan Marinov was the leader of the European Free Energy movement. In 1997, he made tremendous strides in the technology. Before he could develop his first prototype, he fell out of a window." (video)




7) Dimitri Petronov

Dimitri Petronov invented a plasma battery the size of a shoebox that powered his two bedroom house for 14 months without being recharged. In 2010 he went to a coffee/pastry shop and was never seen again.



8) Zachary Warfield

Former CIA agent, Zachary Warfield, left the CIA to co-found a defense technology company called Omnis in McLean, VA. He also invented a plasma battery. He visited Dimitri Petronov in 2010 to exchange ideas and died in 2011 while watching fireworks in Washington, D.C. on the 4th of July. He was standing in a boat when he slipped and fell, hit his head, and drowned in the Potomac River.



9) Aaron Salter

Retired police officer, Aaron Salter, converted his truck to run on hydrogen (video). In May, 2022, he was gunned down in a mass shooting at a grocery store in Buffalo, NY where he worked part time as a security guard. The 18 year old shooter, Peyton Gendron, drove over 200 miles to the grocery store where Salter worked, allegedly in order to commit a "hate crime" against black people. According to this CNN article, Gendron has previously scoped out the store and posted on social media, “I’m going to have to kill that security guard at Tops I hope he doesn’t kill me or even hurt me instantly.”

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1 Comment


Art Damage
Art Damage
Aug 07, 2023

If I'm not mistaken, Stanley Meyer had his final meal at the Cracker Barrel in Grove City, Ohio -it's to the immediate right of southbound I-71, first exit after crossing I-271. I happened to drive by there today and thought of him... There ought to be a plaque of commemoration -but I guess Cracker Barrel wouldn't appreciate his last words: "They poisoned me!"

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