Zorg

J.J. Lazar

From Infictive


Born John Jacobs Lazar in a rural Virginia community, Lazar later moved to Dallas - Fort Worth, electing to live some six blocks away from the Dallas County Administration Building (formerly the Texas School Book Depository). He was an active participant in William Cooper's "Citizen's Intelligence Agency," financing investigations and reports for the group by selling futuro-primitive Real Estate with heavy emphasis on Geometric innovation to the shape and Geomantic innovation to selection of locale, leyline dowsing reading being considered before design and building of any project.

Lazar is supposed to have authored an unpublished conspiracy manuscript entitled "The Hand of Madness," though questions about the authenticity of circulating photocopies of this work have started all sorts of rumors of COINTELPRO attempts to discredit the him as a theorist. Critiques of this supposed-work seem to suggest a sort of half conspiracy text, half hypersigil dealing with a Cabal battle. In it the Hand of Madness refers to a new Group of vigilant Anakim battling traditional authoritarian power centers via advanced technological means. It is largely considered a work of fiction with fact-seeds indiscriminately interspersed with the rest of the text. His works are supposedly the first time the phrase "The Hand of Madness" has been used in this fashion.

In 2004, at the age of 47, Lazar's run came to an early end during a mugging while visiting Detroit on investigation. There are suspicious circumstances regarding the investigation into his death which have caused some to question the legitimacy of his demise. No bullets were found despite his cause of death being listed as hemorrhaging from a gun-inflicted wound. The only remaining authenticated body of work from J.J. is his album, A Narrative in American Paranoia.

Despite this, rumors abound that J.J. has in fact faked his death. A member of the C.I.A. (the goodguys one) whom brought J.J. works to the attention of Bobby Crump, head of Infictive County records, has told Bobby that he and others are working to recover the rest of J.J.'s work from the harddrive found in the rubble of his bulldozed home. Some interpret this as part of J.J.'s plan for a comeback.