301 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
301 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
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SUBJECT: FLYING SAUCERS AND MILITARY COVER-UPS FILE: UFO2763
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From the "Shepherd Express" , Milwaukee, WI - June 17-24, 1993
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Roswell's Legacy
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Flying Saucers and military cover-ups
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by Gillian Sender
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If Don Schmitt has his way, by the end of 1994, Roswell, New Mexico
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will be a location known to most people. Back in 1947 a UFO allegedly
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crashed in Roswell. Schmitt, author and UFO investigator, has spent
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the last five years trying to prove the military recovered the bodies
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of extraterrestrial beings from the crash and covered up the evidence.
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As the special investigator for the J. Allen Hynek Center for UFO
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Studies (CUFOS), Schmitt said he is dedicated to continuing the work
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that Dr. Hynek began. Until his death in 1986, Hynek was considered
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the pre-eminent authority on UFO phenomena. A physics professor, Hynek
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became involved with UFOs as a scientific consultant to the Air Force
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Blue Book Project. He coined the phrase "close encounters of the third
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kind," and worked as a technical advisor on the movie of the same
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name. Schmitt spent eight years working and training with Hynek. A
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good UFO investigator, explained Schmitt, is judged according to the
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amount of solved and explained cases, not by the number investigated.
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Schmitt said he solves more than 90 percent of the UFO cases he
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investigates.
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Schmitt said prior to investigating the Roswell case five years ago,
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he often would publicly express his skepticism concerning crash
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recoveries. He and author Kevin Randle "thought we could go down to
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Roswell and prove once and for all that [a cover-up] didn't exist. The
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government couldn't keep something of this magnitude a secret. And
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they haven't. The Roswell case has been leaking for years."
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Schmitt and Randle recorded 500 interviews with retired generals,
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colonels, captains, military police, intelligence and other military
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officials, and civilians.
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"We have six generals telling us that it is true - Roswell happened.
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We have eight living witnesses describing the recovered bodies, and we
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have two dozen witnesses describing the material [the unfamiliar
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material retrieved at the crash site]," Schmitt said.
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In the 1991 book "UFO Crash At Roswell", Schmitt and Randle document
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the July 1947 events. Research suggests there were two crash sites:
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debris was retrieved at one site; extraterrestrial bodies at the
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other. A few months ago, Schmitt secured a deathbed statement from a
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military official. "That's the eighth deathbed statement just on the
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bodies alone," he said.
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Schmitt said there have been several cases where families discover
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just prior to the death of a loved one that the person had been
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involved in the Roswell events. For example, in the last two days of
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one MP's life, "all he could talk about was Roswell." The family is
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bitter because the MP lived with his fear for all these years; they
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feel robbed because the last few precious days of this man's life were
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spent talking about Roswell, Schmitt said.
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In 1941, the 509th Bomb Group based in Roswell was the only atomic
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bomber group in the entire world. Typically, the 509th shared very
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little with their families. The United States, although fresh from a
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World War II victory, felt threatened about developments in
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communist Russia--Roswell. Army Air Field was a top secret, extremely
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sensitive military base.
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On Sunday, July 6, 1947, rancher Mac Brazel carried some strange
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debris into the Roswell Sheriff's office. The military was immediately
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notified, and Colonel William Blanchard and Major Jesse A. Marcel ar-
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rived at the scene to examine the material.
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Numerous witnesses describe the material as "thin as newsprint and
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light as a feather. It was slightly flexible but very strong. The
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material would not bend; nor would it burn or be dented with a
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sledgehammer. The material was lighter and stronger and more fire
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resistant than anyone had ever seen, and 'heaven help us if the
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Russians had that type of material at this time.' "
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Early the next morning, Brazel took the military officers to the crash
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site. Marcel said in a 1978 interview that the material was "nothing
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from the Earth." He described the debris area as "three-quarters of a
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mile long and 200 to 300 feet across, with a gouge at the top end of
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it that was about 500 feet long and 10 feet wide."
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On the way back to the base later that night, Marcel stopped at his
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home to show the debris to his family. Although Marcel has since
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passed away, Schmitt interviewed Marcel's son, Jesse Jr. In a hypnotic
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session, Jesse Jr, described the material to Schmitt and John Watkins,
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a psychologist, professor, researcher and hypnotist. Under hypnosis
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Jesse related that his father said "the debris was from a flying
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saucer."
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On July 8; 1947, Walter Haut, the 509th Public Information Officer,
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released a press release that stated in part, "The many rumors
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regarding the flying disc became a reality yesterday...The flying
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object landed on a ranch near Roswell sometime last week." Later that
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day, the military retracted that press release and said the debris was
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identified as a weather balloon.
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The Air Force invited a newspaper photographer to take pictures of
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military personnel posing with a weather balloon. All the hoopla
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surrounding the recaptured flying saucer died down and remained
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dormant until Marcel began speaking to the press nearly 30 years after
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the incident. Schmitt said if Marcel were the only one talking he
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would not be working on the case, but Marcel is not the only one who
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talked. Over time, witnesses-albeit reluctantly-gave matching
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testimony.
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"The military has done a damn good job of discrediting the subject,"
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Schmitt said. "You name it; they did it: pressure on the press,
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editors, reporters."
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Several journalists working on the case told Schmitt and Randle that
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military personnel searched their offices and removed recorded
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interviews, papers and notes regarding the Roswell incident. After
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Roswell, the military moved in to stop all reports. "Project Blue Book
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is a master plan of manipulating the press," Schmitt said.
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Project Blue Book was the Air Force's official UFO investigation
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program. All the Air Force's UFO investigative cases are declassified
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and supposed to be in Project Blue Book. In 1948, the Air Force
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investigated UFOs under the name Project Sign. Later the program's
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name was changed to Project Grudge, and in 1953 it became Project Blue
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Book.
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"Project BlueBook's objectives were two-fold," said Mark Ridley,
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librarian at the Modern Military Reference Branch. "The first was to
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determine whether UFOs posed a threat to United States security. The
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second was to determine whether UFOs exhibited any unique scientific
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information and advanced technology that could contribute to
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scientific or technical research."
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On Dec. 17, 1969, the Blue Book Program was terminated. An official
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Air Force press release stated in part, "The decision to dis-continue
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UFO investigations was based on a number of factors... No UFO
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reported, investigated and evaluated by the Air Force has ever given
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any indication of a threat our national security... Between 1948 and
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to 1969 the Air Force investigated 12,618 reported UFO sightings. Of
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these, 11,917 found to have been caused by material objects such as
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balloons, satellites, and aircraft; immaterial objects such as
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lightning, reflective and other natural phenomena; astronomical
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objects such as stars, planets, the sun, and the moon; weather
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conditions; and hoaxes. Only 701 reported sightings remain
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unexplained.
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Project Blue Book was eventually declassified and transferred to the
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Modern Military Reference Branch and National Archives in Washington,
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D.C.
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Schmitt's mentor, J. Allen Hynek, was hired by the Air Force in 1952
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as a scientific consultant for Project Blue Book, but after
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discovering that some of the more dramatic unexplained sightings were
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transferred elsewhere, he started CUFOS. Brad Radcliffe, Schmitt's
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assistant at CUFOS, explained, "Hynek felt Project Blue Book was
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merely a public relations front. Reports of lights in the sky were
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forwarded to Project Blue Book. But the ones with police officers
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chasing [the UFOs], or people reporting alien beings, or the Air Force
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encountering UFOs, were reported to Langely Air Force Base in Wash-
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ington, D.C., Wright Patterson in Ohio, and the Pentagon."
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Schmitt said Hynek told him several times in private conversations
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that "UFOs threatened national security so they were not part of the
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Blue Book system. It was part of another investigation."
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Schmitt said one of his Pentagon sources, a colonel, told him, "There
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is a top-secret investigation that continues today. There is a
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top-secret organization on top of Blue Book, and that is where your
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Roswell case is."
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There is no mention of the Roswell Case in Project Blue Book. Edward
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Reese of the Military Reference Branch of the National Archives said
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he has been dealing with Project Blue Book since 1973. He made
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extensive searches among the released documents under the subjects
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MJ-12, majestic, unidentified flying objects, UFO, flying saucers,
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extraterrestrial biological entities and Aquarius, and "these searches
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were all negative."
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Reese admitted he finds it "strange" that there is no mention of
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Roswell, even though there is an official military answer. "Although
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the Air Force listed a balloon as an explanation for the Roswell case,
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the balloon is not listed in Blue Book."
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If a weather balloon is not the reason for the Roswell incident, then
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the case should not be classified. Several weather balloons were
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recovered in the 1940's and '50's but none of these cases was
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classified and the finders were often given permission to keep the
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balloon.
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The Roswell case is still guarded by intense security. The retired
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officers are often reluctant to speak: "They are still under military
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regulations that make any disclosure sensitive to UFO material
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punishable by a forfeiture of any pension and benefits, plus a
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$10,000 fine and/or prison," Schmitt said.
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Schmitt said several top military officials say they are "sworn to
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secrecy and couldn't talk to us. Why after all these years are
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military men telling us they are sworn to secrecy for a weather
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balloon?"
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Schmitt said when initially contacted, many officers at first deny
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their involvement with Roswell. In Schmitt's book, "UFO Crash At
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Roswell," a plainclothed senior counter intelligence agent; a member
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of the predecessor to the current CIA, is quoted throughout but never
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mentioned by name.
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"At first he would say he wasn't there. Then when we showed him
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documents that place him there, he would say, 'well, nothing was
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recovered.' Then he would tell me he was there; but it was a radio
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sound balloon. But that is the wrong balloon. The official explanation
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is a Rawin target balloon. Why is he telling us that it is the wrong
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balloon?"
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However, in Schmitt's follow-up book to "UFO Crash" - scheduled for
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release in late 1993-the counter-intelligence officer, Sheridan
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Cavitt, is identified. Cavitt leaked crucial information to Schmitt
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and Randle. "We have him on tape saying it could very well have been a
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flying saucer," Schmitt said.
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Critics contend that military officers would be reprimanded for
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speaking out of line. Schmitt disagrees. "Officially they can't talk
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to us. But they talk to us off the record." There is also a Catch-22.
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If the debris are from a weather balloon, then where is the violation?
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"But if it is the real thing, and if there is a reprimand, then they
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are blowing the cover. They are conceding that they did break
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security," Schmitt said.
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For example, Brigadier General Arthur E. Exon, while a lieutenant
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colonel, was at Wright Field in July 1947. In "UFO Crash At Roswell,"
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Schmitt wrote, "He was there when the wreckage from the Roswell crash
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came in and was aware of the recovery in New Mexico. He knew that it
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was brought in and knew where it was sent...He saw the wreckage, and
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learned from his colleagues that the bodies had arrived on the base."
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"Here we have a general officer telling us that Roswell happened and
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that it is true," Schmitt said. He is a general-who is going to
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reprimand him? "And as Exon told me, he could tell the vice president
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where to go," Schmitt added. "This is his testimony. He can't prove
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the physical reality of Roswell, but he can tell us that it
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happenned."
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As the officers reach their declining years, more and more are
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beginning to talk. In addition to the eight deathbed statements
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describing the bodies, the second book will include eight living
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testimonies. All the testimonies described the bodies identically:
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"They are humanoid; approximately 4 feet in height. Slightly
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disproportionate heads; larger eyes; ashen grey skin, and wearing
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aluminum one-piece jump suits," Schmitt said.
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The Air Force vehemently disagreed with Schmitt's conclusions. An Air
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Force press release states in part, "Periodically, it is erroneously
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stated that the remains of extraterrestrial visitors are or have been
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stored at Wright-Patterson AFB. There are not now, nor ever have been,
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any extraterrestrial visitors or equipment on Wright-Patterson Air
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Force Base."
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Before believing the government, Schmitt said people should examine
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the evidence: Government documentation and the testimony of
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collaborative witnesses. Schmitt said six congressional offices are
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convinced there is a cover-up. "The question is, will they push for
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hearings?"
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Congressional hearings could raise subpoena power with many witnesses
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who are still sworn to secrecy. But time is running out; the witnesses
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are getting older.
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Schmitt believes 1994 will be a key year for the Roswell case.
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Documentaries by CBS, CNN, and French and Australian production
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companies are in the works; a well-known movie star will play Major
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Marcel in an upcoming film.
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This publicity could very likely ensure the opening of government
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documents. With the release of part two of "UFO Crash At Roswell," the
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movie, and then numerous documentaries, Schmitt hopes public pressure
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will push the government for a full disclosure.
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"They might not have all the answers but they do know the truth,"
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Schmitt said. The truth being the UFO phenomenon is real. I am
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convinced of this."
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The government's current position is similar to the last scene in
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Steven Spielberg's film, "Raiders of the Lost Ark," where, after the
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government finally receives the mysterious ark, officials place the
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ark in a crate and bury it with thousands of other crates. Hynek, a
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close friend of Spielberg, told Schmitt this was Spielberg's intent.
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After nearly 50 years, the cover-up is beginning to unravel.
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** End **
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**********************************************
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* THE U.F.O. BBS - http://www.ufobbs.com/ufo *
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**********************************************
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