
Dr. Robert I. (Irving) Sarbacher, circa 1946.
Having raised the question—after my earlier post on Whitley Strieber—about how Dr. Sarbacher actually died, and whether Whitley’s account of his death was accurate, I pursued the answer with single-minded determination. I soon found out that the only claim in the public record about Sarbacher’s death appears to be the one given by Whitley Strieber in his book Breakthrough, hardback edition, Page 248:

Furthermore, Whitley thinks that by contacting Sarbacher he somehow caused Sarbacher’s death. On his website, in response to questions rising among his own fans that started after my initial post of the apparent contradiction I found between Communion and Breakthrough, Whitley wrote:

(I was unable to link directly to the above post. To find it you have to go here: http://www.unknowncountry.com/board/index.phtml?winmain=main. And from there you must click: Whitley’s Books > Difference Between Communion and Breakthrough, and then scroll down to find it.)
Dr. Robert I. Sarbacher was born on 6 September, 1907, and died on 26 July, 1986, at 78 years old. It should be noted that Whitley gave an accurate date for Sarbacher’s death. He suffered no "confusion" about that date.
Dr. Sarbacher lived in Palm Beach, Florida, at the time of his death, and although Florida will release a death certificate to anyone who orders one, the state by law can only release a cause of death on a Florida death certificate to family members, which made finding someone who actually knew Dr. Sarbacher at the time of his death even more crucial to solve the mystery.
I don’t know how long I spent on this off and on. A week? Every promising beginning to a new clue had a disappointing end. I discovered Sarbacher had a daughter and a son. The daughter had changed her name while in her 30’s, which only made things more mysterious. After a series of dead ends I had an idea which led to a clue, which led to more clues, which I followed to the online profile of another Robert Sarbacher whom the information I found suggested was Dr. Sarbacher’s son.

Dr. Sarbacher’s son, Robert.
I emailed Robert. It took him a while, but he finally answered me, and I was right. He was Dr. Robert I. Sarbacher’s son, and he didn’t mind answering some questions. I asked Robert about how his father died.
Confirming a detail of Dr. Sarbacher’s health that Stanton Friedman had given to me in an email—that Sarbacher had emphysema when Stanton interviewed him in the 80’s—Dr. Robert Irving Sarbacher did not drown to death after falling off a yacht.
As Robert makes clear, his father died in a hospital, in his sleep, from a weakened heart caused by emphysema:

And how long had Dr. Sarbacher been hospitalized?

Whitley Strieber can now rest knowing that he was in no way responsible for Dr. Sarbacher’s death. But while he is off one hook, he is on another.
Whitley Strieber was wrong about and utterly failed to confirm how Dr. Sarbacher died, which did not stop him from publishing and propagating—to this day—a false story about it anyway, along with his own unsubstantiated belief that Sarbacher died because he spoke to Whitley Strieber. Whitley can claim that he believed his own tale, but that is a poor excuse to spread an untrue story which could have been confirmed or corrected before it was published with some effort equal to his own will to know. Being the author of the false story, Whitley has been singularly responsible for his own salesmanship of it to a fan base who trusts whatever he says without question, and he has used the false story to enrich the mythos that has developed around him.
Have facts become so unimportant that unsupported beliefs now count as their equal? Certainly, if people will believe you without them, why bother with exerting yourself to get them straight?
But though there was nothing remotely sinister about Dr. Sarbacher’s death, I did learn something interesting from Robert that it appears had not been known before, except maybe to Dr. Sarbacher’s immediate family.
Robert had a sense of his dad’s work and of it’s secrecy:

But what his dad could talk about, he did talk about at dinner parties, and to his son he gave a little something extra:

This story about Dr. Sarbacher’s work building missiles specifically to chase UFOs was something I had not heard before. I emailed Stanton Friedman about it, and he hadn’t heard it before either. So I naturally asked Robert to confirm that detail—that the missile project his father worked on was specifically tasked to track UFOs.

I asked Robert another question, as per a query from Stanton Friedman, but Robert had no idea either of the time frame when his father worked on this missile project, or of the kinds of rockets the project used to chase UFOs.
So. One mystery goes away—another one takes its place.
Then I got down to Roswell. Whitley Strieber mentions Roswell in the now dubiously held conversation he alleges he had with Dr. Sarbacher, still on Page 248 of the hardback edition of Breakthrough:

But while Robert could not confirm any of the Strieber story details from what his father told him, and indeed provides details that seem to differ from what Whitley Strieber has the doctor saying he did in Breakthrough, Dr. Sarbacher may still have had some encounter with the famed Roswell crash material.

















Congratulations on some diligent work! This is great stuff.
wow…great job…..please keep doing research like this…
I agree, good work.
I’d like to ask a few things about your post:
How old is Sarbacher’s son? His writing style seems like that of a younger person.
Have you been able to check up on some of the things that he claimed, such as the record of he yacht sale and his identity?
A “genius” I.Q. is considered 144, and above 200 is classified as “unmeasurable.” How did Sarbacher Jr. come up with a figure of “230?”
This line of research you have opened up is intriguing, and I’d like to find out more as you continue.
Best,
Greg B.
Thanks Greg.
Robert is in his early 40’s (I’m going from memory as I write this because I can’t find my notes at the moment), so say 40-41. And his style of speaking is very conversational‚Äî‚Äîwhat he thinks, as he thinks it…not very planned.
I have looked one place for the yacht sale but did not find any records, but there were also incomplete records of other things that should have been there too. Maybe the US Coast Guard would be the best bet for confirmation.
As for his identity, I’m very sure it was him. He knew both of his sister’s names without me mentioning it when I asked about her name change, and that wasn’t easy information to find. You can’t just Google it.
As for the IQ, he said he asked his dad once and his dad said it was somewhere around 230. That struck me as high, too. But Marilyn Vos Savant gives hers as 228, and there was no question of Dr. Sarbacher’s brilliance so if it is possible to say that about anyone, Dr. Sarbacher was in that class of people about whom it might not be so far fetched at all.
Let’s just be out with it: Whitley Strieber is apparently, IMO, not
reliable as a source of any real phenomenon. Why is he taken seriously
by ANYONE? How many inconsistancies does it take before someone is called
out as simply a charlatan, and a liar? He’s the type of person that give
UFOlogy a bad name. Please continue with your research, but enough is
enough from this guy. He’s pathalogical.
Michael,
What inconsistencies are you refering to?
I don’t see how this contradicts Strieber’s claim that he spoke to someone over the phone. And the UPS guy’s statement was not a statement of fact. He did not know what he was talking about. You can hardly blame Stieber for getting the facts wrong. He simply restated something he was told. It is a bit irrelevant, how the doctor died. The point was that the UPS driver could not deliver the package. That’s all.
I found your site on technorati and read a few of your other posts. Keep up the good work. I just added your RSS feed to my Google News Reader. Looking forward to reading more from you down the road!
Wow. Not sure where to begin! So I come across this article and as I read it, I recall a good friend of mine, whom I met in 1986 in Dallas - Robbie Sarbacher. Robbie went to Highland Park HS, along with several other friends of mine. I thought it was interesting that the article talked about a Dr. Sarbacher, since the last name is sort of unique (at least to me). As I scrolled down the article, I was surprised/shocked to see Robbie’s photo!
I recall Robbie living with his mom in Highland Park, but his dad was some professor in some school in the northeast? We didn’t really discuss his dad, as Robbie was sort of quiet about that topic. I might add that Robbie was very intelligent - just a solid good kid. Judging from this article, I can now see why he didn’t discuss much about his dad.
I’ve not spoken to Robbie since the late 80’s - we just lost touch, but i’m going to search the net and see if i can find some contact for him - i’d like to rekindle our friendship!
Manny