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- From: Don.Allen@paranet.FIDONET.ORG (Don Allen)
- Newsgroups: alt.paranet.ufo
- Subject: Jones article
- Date: 5 Sep 93 17:23:13 GMT
- Organization: Paranet Information Service, Denver, CO (303) 431-8797
-
- Courtesy of HUFON REPORT, the newsletter of the Houston UFO Network (12 month
- subscription available for $25 from HUFON, PO Box 942, Bellaire TX 77402-0942).
- For more information call (713) 850-1352.
-
- ========================================================================
-
- Will the Real Scott Jones Please Stand Up?
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- A profile on the most ubiquitous character in ufology and parapsychology
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- by Robert J. Durant
-
- The purpose of this monograph is to sing the praises of the Renaissance Man of
- the Paranormal, Cecil B. Scott Jones, Ph.D.
-
- If your field is ufology, you know Scott as a mover, shaker, organizer and
- confidante of some of the central figures in UFO research. And if you are a
- parapsychologist, you recognize the same face from countless symposia, boards
- of directors, and the like. Ufologists and parapsychologists seldom
- communicate, and even more rarely do they attend each other's meetings. So it
- comes as a shock to each group to learn that Scott has a foot so firmly planted
- in the "other" arena.
-
- His interest in these fields appears to have been triggered by personal
- experience. Scott describes his UFO sighting, which took place when he was a
- Navy fighter pilot in the Korean War, thus: "As I rolled into a split-S to
- descend to low altitude from around 30,000 feet, I saw a silver disc directly
- overhead" ("Advanced Aerial Devices Reported During The Korean War", R. F.
- Haines, LDA Press, Los Altos, CA, 1990, Page 54).
-
- He also had a "parapsychological" experience, which he describes in these vague
- terms: "When I retired from the Navy, as a result of something that happened to
- me, in the Navy, which was parapsychological in nature, I decided that there
- would be interest and there might be a commercial application, if what I was
- calling then 'applied psychic phenomena' was understood, and could be used in
- certain circumstances" (Lecture, Society for Psychical Research, England, 2
- November 1990).
-
- UFOlogy
-
- Scott's "clout" in ufology can perhaps be illustrated by a brief summary of his
- activities at the TREAT II conference in January, 1990, at the Blacksburg,
- Virginia campus of Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University (Virginia
- Tech).
-
- For you parapsychologists, TREAT stands for Treatment and Research of
- Experienced Anomalous Trauma. And that is crypto for UFO abduction research.
-
- About 70 investigators, including many research psychologists, clinicians, MDs,
- physicists and assorted intellectuals who take the abduction phenomenon very
- seriously met for five days to share ideas. This was by invitation only -- no
- publicity desired or allowed. Scott chaired a panel, conferred with the
- university sponsors, acted as liaison with the Prince of Liechtenstein (who was
- the major benefactor of the conference), and conferred on strategic
- organizational issues with Walter Andrus, the leader of the Mutual UFO Network
- (MUFON), and John Schuessler, Andrus' close ufological associate and second-
- in-command.
-
- TREAT was organized by Rima Laibow, MD, a psychiatrist determined to get
- mainstream attention for the abduction puzzle. She is the obvious and very
- visible leader, but Scott is never far.
-
- Laibow is a very energetic person and the center of violent controversy in
- abduction research circles. Previously a close associate of Budd Hopkins,
- Laibow is reported to be an abductee. She is also very well connected and has
- an exceptional "network" extending into Europe and the Soviet Union. If you can
- get close to Laibow, you are close to the state-of-the-art in abduction
- research. Scott stays close.
-
- In the fall of 1990, they lectured together in England. As late as the summer
- of 1991, Jones and Laibow were planning a yachting excursion together with Col.
- John Alexander (retired from the U.S. Army) to investigate anomalies in the
- Bahamas.
-
- Similarly, Jones was very familiar with Andrus and Schuessler prior to TREAT,
- and presumably remains on the closest terms with them. Andrus is retired and
- devotes all his time to running MUFON. Thus Jones is on the inside with respect
- to data collected by MUFON. In 1989, MUFON appointed Jones as a Special
- Consultant in International Relations, formalizing the relationship.
-
- A cynic might ask if Scott's activitles could suggest something other than a
- very active interest in the UFO mystery. The cynic could point out that he has
- insinuated himself into the inner sanctums of UFO research, has the ear of
- policy makers, and is in a position to monitor developments in all critical
- areas of study. A breakthrough in civilian ufology, such as the unambiguous
- identification of an alien artifact, would come to his attention almost at
- once. A policy decision concerning the disposition of the hypothetical artifact
- would probably not be taken before consulting with Scott.
-
- It is interesting to note that Scott is a cipher to the average UFO researcher
- or enthusiast. That is, the perhaps three or four thousand people who follow
- the subject with some dilligence over a protracted period of time, can easily
- recognize the names of probably 50 or so individuals who have made
- contributions to ufology or are "important" people in the field. But they would
- be puzzled if asked to identify C. B. Scott Jones.
-
- Scott rarely puts anything on paper, preferring instead to work behind the
- scenes, keeping in touch via telephone or personal visit. He attends most
- conferences of note, and goes to great lengths, in the literal geographical
- sense, to meet not only researchers but important witnesses. He has shown
- particular interest in spending time with abductees in recent years. But unlike
- so many others in ufology who rush to the typewriter to broadcast their
- opinions, Scott keeps his own quiet counsel. Thus, he provides us all with an
- uplifting example of humility.
-
- In a departure from his usual rule against publishing, Scott presented a paper
- at the 1991 conference of the Mutual UFO Network. The title was "Government UFO
- Connections." Those who were advised in advance of the title, and who knew
- something of Scott's background, thought the paper would contain a spectacular
- revelation.
-
- In a sense, it did, but more on that later.
-
- Parapsychology
-
- Scott Jones has been a fixture at parapsychology symposia ranging from the most
- august academic gatherings to New Age meetings and those of the human potential
- movement at least since the mid-1970s, when he organized a parapsychology
- conference in Casper, Wyoming.
-
- Among the conferences he has attended are those of the Parapsychological
- Association, the American Society for Psychical Research, the Society for
- Scientitic Exploration, the Southeastern Regional Parapsychological
- Association, the Association for Research and Enlightenment, the Society for
- Psychical Research, the International Forum on New Science, and the Archaeus
- Congress, to name a few.
-
- In 1983, a firm called Kaman Tempo, specializing in "think tank" intelligence
- analysis for the U.S. Government, organized a seminar on parapsychological
- applications. The seminar was attended by a number of federal employees. A
- formal proceedings of the seminar was published, with Jones as editor. In his
- sparse remarks, Jones made clear his very wide network of federal contacts, and
- intimated that he was the organizer of the seminar. This was certainly an
- auspicious start for someone who was just beginning to be noticed by insiders
- in parapsychology.
-
- Scott has been on the Board of Trustees of the American Society for Psychical
- Research (ASPR) since 1985, and now serves as its President. The ASPR was
- founded more than a century ago, and is the oldest organization in the U.S. to
- publish a refereed scientific journal in parapsychology. Complaints have been
- aired about his stewardship of the ASPR. These include charges that he is
- attempting to remove professional researchers from the Board of Trustees,
- replacing them with individuals who are more pliant to Jones' personal agenda
- for the organization.
-
- As in the field of ufology, one searches in vain for significant published
- material from the hand of Scott Jones. It appears that his only contribution to
- a parapsychological journal is a review of John White's "Psychic Warfare Fact
- or Fiction?" for the June 1989 issue of the "Journal of Parapsychology."
-
- Biographical Notes
-
- Scott Jones was born in 1928, and lived at least part of his childhood between
- Gulfport and Biloxi, Mississippi.
-
- He joined the U.S. Navy in about 1946. Following flight training in the
- Aviation Midshipman Program, he was commissioned in 1950. He was a career
- officer in the U.S. Navy, serving during the Korean War as a fighter pilot,
- which included two combat tours in VF-191, flying the F9F-2 Panther from the
- USS Princeton.
-
- He served in Naval Intelligence for approximately 15 years, including
- assignments with Carrier Division 14, and as Assistant Naval Attache, New
- Delhi, India, and Kathmandu, Nepal in the 1960s. He collected intelligence and
- provided intelligence support throughout Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and
- North Africa.
-
- Jones has briefed the President's Scientific Advisory Committee, and has
- testified before House and Senate committees on intelligence matters.
-
- He retired from Naval Intelligence around 1976.
-
- Jones received an A.B. in Government from George Washington University in 1961,
- an M.A. in Government and Politics from the University of Maryland in 1963, and
- a Ph.D. in International Studies from American University in 1975, with a
- dissertation entitled "How The Indian Lok Sabha Handles Defense Matters: An
- Institutional Study." He taught political science for three years at Casper
- College, Casper, Wyoming, and the University of Wyoming at Laramie, Wyoming.
-
- He has stated that he worked during the period following his Navy career for
- "several" companies, including R. F. Cross Associates, Ltd., of Alexandria,
- Virginia, and Kaman Tempo, "A Division of Kaman Sciences Corporation," in
- Alexandria, Virginia.
-
- His MUFON biographical sketch states that in his post-Navy career, he "worked
- in the private sector research and development community involved in the U.S.
- Government sponsored projects for the Defense Nuclear Agency, Defense
- Intelligence Agency (DIA), and U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command"
- (INSCOM).
-
- In 1985, Scott came in from the cold in a big way. Senator Claiborne Pell of
- Rhode Island, Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and one of the
- most senior politicians on Capitol Hill, appointed him to a position as Special
- Assistant. From this very prestigious vantage, Scott continued to do exactiy
- what he had been doing before, which is to say making the rounds of ufological
- and parapsychological meetings. He was always available, either at the Senate
- office he used in Washington thanks to the Senator's largesse, or on the road.
- It is not clear whether Jones ever did ordinary "aide" work. Rather, it seems
- that he devoted himself entirely to the field of paranormal inquiry.
-
- It is quite an exceptional situation that Jones found, and one that most of us
- in anomalies research would envy. The taxpayers of Rhode Island seem not to
- have noticed, and the December 5, 1988, issue of "U.S. News & World Report,"
- which devoted a great deal of space to New Age belief in the halls of Congress,
- mentioned Pell and his protege Jones, but failed to note that Jones was on the
- government payroll primarily as a psychic/UFO facilitator.
-
- In March of 1991, there came a parting of the ways, and Scott left the employ
- of Senator Pell, but not the field of the paranormal. He is now at his new
- organization, the Human Potential Foundation. With his assistant Menelika
- McCarthy, Scott continues to do that which he has done so well for the last
- decade. His foundation is ensconced in the resplendent offices of Sandground
- Barondess and West, P.C., at what is perhaps the most prestigious address in an
- area of fine office buidings on the Washington beltway. Clark Sandground and
- Claiborne Pell serve on the board of the foundation, which is reportedly funded
- by Laurance Rockefeller.
-
- Organizations
-
- Among the organizations with which Scott has been affiliated at one time or
- another, and of which there is some kind of public record, are these:
-
- Center For Applied Anomalous Phenomena - 6435 Shady Lane, Falls Church, VA
- 22042-2335. Telephone: (703) 534-2423. Scott Jones, Founder. Jones states that
- his work is supported by the Center.
-
- Human Potential Foundation - 8000 Towers Crescent Drive, Suite 600., Vienna VA
- 22182. Telephone: (703) 761-4281;fax:(703) 761-4249. Scott Jones, President.
- Established in 1989. Support comes from Claiborne Pell and Laurance
- Rockefeller.
-
- American Society for Psychical Research - 5 West 73rd Street, New York, NY
- 10023. Telephone: (212) 799-5050. Jones has been on the Board of Trustees since
- 1985; he now serves as President.
-
- Parapsychological Association P.0. Box 12236, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709.
- Telephone: (919) 688-8241. This is the professional association of
- parapsychologists. Jones has been an associate member since 1984.
-
- Mutual UFO Network (MUFON). 103 Oldtowne Road, Seguin, TX 78155-4099.
- Telephone: (512) 379-9216. Jones was appointed Consultant in International
- Relations in 1989.
-
- Mid-Point - P.0. Box 246, 128 Main Street, So., Bridgewater, CT 06752.
- Telephone: (203) 354-5948. This is a small organization whose purpose is to do
- research with dolphins and apply the findings to other areas of endeavor. Jones
- serves on the Board of Advisors.
-
- R. F. Cross Associates, Ltd. - Alexandria, VA. [Directory assistance now has no
- listing for that organization]. Jones served as research director.
-
- Kaman Tempo - 2560 Huntington Avenue, Suite 500, Alexandria, VA 22303.
- [Directory assistance now has no listing for this organization, but lists a
- Kaman Sciences company in Alexandria, VA.]. Jones served as a research
- scientist.
-
- Atlantic University - 67th Street and Atlantic Avenue, P.0. Box 595, Virginia
- Beach, VA 23451. Telephone: (804) 428-3588. This unaccredited university is
- affiliated with the Edgar Cayce Foundation. Jones serves on the Board of
- Directors.
-
- Quest Institute - P.0. Box 3265, Charlottesville, VA 22903. Telephone: (804)
- 295-3377. This institute sponsors educational programs in New Age areas. Jones
- serves on the Board of Directors.
-
-
- Travels
-
- Few scientists or academicians have the ability to travel the way Scott does.
- There is literally no significant conference in ufology or parapsychology in
- any part of the world that seems beyond the means of Scott Jones to visit. In
- addition to trips throughout the United States, Jones has gone to China, the
- U.S.S.R., the U.K., Continental and Eastern Europe, and South America, all in
- connection with paranormal research.
-
- It would probably be rude to inquire about the source of funds for all this
- globe trotting (and what Scott's "funders" expect to gain).
-
- Connections
-
- Scott's unique position on the staff of one of the ranking members of the U.S.
- Senate (Claiborne Pell) has been discussed above. The official connection alone
- is enough to guarantee easy access to the widest range of government agencies
- and private organizations at the executive level. Beyond that, Senator Pell's
- personal network, firmly based on his credentials as an Eastern Establishment
- aristocrat, was at the disposal of Jones. It is difficult to imagine any door
- that could not be opened by this awesome combination.
-
- Scott often escorted Prince Hans-Adam of Liechtenstein, a very wealthy European
- with a long-standing interest in the paranormal. Together, they visited
- parapsychological laboratories and UFO conferences. According to the "Sunday
- Times of India" for August 4, 1991, "Hans-Adam controls 97% of the voting
- rights and 85% of the share capital of the Bank of Liechtenstein, which in turn
- controls the $3.3 billion GT Management of London. The personality magazine
- "Special Report" (November 1990-January 1991) described the Prince as "Heir to
- the last remnant of the Holy Roman Empire."
-
- Recently, in a bizarre turn of events that was reported in several outlets
- including "Harpers Magazine" (January 1991, page 25), a personal letter from
- Scott to "Dear Dick" Cheney, the Secretary of Defense, was published. That
- Jones should be in a position to write a letter to the Secretary and address
- him as "Dick" is illuminating.
-
- One would suppose that all this "clout" would result in a tangible flow of
- money into the accounts of laboratories and individuals engaged in paranormal
- research. Oddly, this does not seem to be the case. In the last three years,
- two major para-psychological laboratories have closed due to lack of funds.
- Scott was well familiar with their work and their plight, but was unable to
- help.
-
- Scott enjoys considerable support, even luxury, in his own pursuit of
- paranormal inquiry. Yet the ASPR, of which he is president, is widely known to
- be in dire financial straits. The flow of information and money appears to be
- to Scott, not from him.
-
- Rumors
-
- A number of intriguing rumors have been circulated by Scott watchers:
-
- * That Jones has approached professional parapsychological researchers and
- questioned them about how best to recruit and utilize psychics for military
- intelligence gathering.
-
- * That Jones has visited an enormous number of psychics for "readings."
-
- * That Jones has taken a number of psychic development courses.
-
- * That for many years Jones has been involved with classified research on
- electronic mind control.
-
- * In the fall of 1988 a television documentary entitled "UFO Coverup? - Live"
- was shown throughout the U.S. The program featured "revelations" from alleged
- intelligence agents about aliens enjoying the hospitality of the government at
- an unnamed Air Force base. This program is considered to be a classic instance
- of UFO disinformation. Rumor has it that, two years prior to this, Jones had
- approached media representatives about doing a show about UFOs, and that he had
- offered to provide secret information from the government for the program.
-
- * Among some of the New Agers who have been in Scott's company, he has acquired
- a reputation for having an extraordinary memory. It is said that he can
- uncannily repeat, word for word, conversations that took place long before.
- This is done without the benefit of notes or a tape recorder, and is said to
- occur in instances where witnesses to the conversation thought he wasn't even
- paying attention. This gift must have been useful to Scott in his intelligence
- career.
-
-
- Dolphins
-
- Jones has conducted his own dolphin telepathy studies along with Colonel John
- Alexander and Theodore Rockwell, a prominent (Who's Who) nuclear engineer who
- has worked on naval nuclear propulsion systems and who also serves as vice
- president of the U.S. Psychotronics Association.
-
- Although Scott has been rather shy when it comes to committing his ideas to
- paper, he has, on a few occasions, made informal presentations at
- parapsychology conferences. The most notable of these was his description of
- his dolphin telepathy experiments, which he describes as "interspecies
- communication."
-
- The reception from the general audience was warm, but some professionals were
- appalled by what they perceived as the lack of scientific basis for Scott's
- claims.
-
- Scott displayed marvelous creativity when he enthusiastically urged that
- dolphins be channeled in order to locate the remains of crashed flying saucers.
- In one bold stroke he thereupon melded the previously disparate disciplines of
- ufology and parapsychology.
-
- 'Government UFO Connections'
-
- This is the title of the paper delivered by Scott Jones to the seven hundred
- ufologists assembled at the 1991 MUFON symposium in Chicago. It should also,
- perhaps, be the sign on the various doors of Scott Jones' various offices
- during the past ten years. Just a bit more paint would tell the whole story:
- "Government UFO/Psi Connections -- Walk In."
-
- The MUFON paper trudges through Poly Sci 101, outlining the tensions that exist
- between the legislative and the executive branches of our government. We read
- every word, waiting for the bombshell. Scott goes to China, with full Senate
- portfolio, and asks about UFO reports. Somehow, the Chinese think he is there
- to share information!
-
- As Jones tells the story in his 1991 Omega Conference speech, "They could not
- believe that someone who was truly a Special Assistant to a very senior U.S.
- Senator would ask for an appointment to talk about UFOs and then pretend not to
- know what his government was doing in the field."
-
- When it becomes obvious that Scott is not forthcoming about what the U.S.
- Government knows about UFOs, the Chinese respond in kind and give him pieces of
- metal that, they assert (in veiled Oriental fashion), may, or may not, come
- from a crashed disc.
-
- Next, Scott walks us through a detailed metallurgical analysis that proves the
- metal to be the entirely terrestrlal debris from an electrical power
- transmission tower. Perhaps Scott's presentation could be construed as a subtle
- advertisement for his access to high-tech analysis capabilities (Message:
- contact Scott at once if you have suspected alien material for analysis).
-
- Worried, but still anticipating, we come to the bottom line: Scott has to
- confess to ufologists, Chinese, American or whatever, that he "...honestly did
- not know of any activity of the U.S. Government" in the field of UFOs (page
- 176).
-
- This statement should be received with amusement by ufologists.
-
- Two credible books have been written about the massive documentation that has
- been uncovered, through the Freedom of Informatlon Act (FOIA) and other
- sources, detailing covert federal interest in UFO reports and the activities of
- UFO researchers and organizations ("Clear Intent", Fawcett & Greenwood,
- Prentice-Hall, 1984, and "Revelations", Jacques Vallee, Ballantine, 1991).
-
- There is overwhelming evidence that personnel from the Air Force Office of
- Special Investigations (AFOSI), a counter-intelligence organization, have for
- years been involved in disinformation activities in the UFO field.
-
- The following are a few well known examples of "activity of the U.S.
- Government" in the field of UFOs. Despite his repeated claims of ignorance,
- Jones' name has surfaced in some of these cases.
-
- William L. Moore
-
- Another ubiquitous character in this continuing saga is one William L. Moore, a
- former Minnesota school teacher and co-author of "The Philadelphia Experiment"
- (Berlitz and Moore, 1979) and "The Roswell Incident" (Berlitz and Moore, 1980).
- In fact it was Moore who sparked the intense interest in the now celebrated
- Roswell Incident. Moore's name is also well known in relation to Richard Doty,
- Jaime Shandera, MJ-12, Paul Bennewitz, and Lee Graham, and reports also link
- him to our favorite "know-nothing" for some years.
-
- In the June, 1989, issue of the MUFON UFO Journal, Robert Hastings published a
- blistering attack on the credibility of William Moore. A few months later, in a
- speech delivered to an astonished audience at the 1989 MUFON Symposium, Moore
- admitted to a long career as a "controlled informant" to the U.S. Government.
- Further, in the same amazing talk, Moore admitted to having deceived a number
- of people. The ensuing uproar has yet to subside, and in a recent interview,
- Moore admitted to still being a controlled informant ("UFO", 1992 Vol. 7,
- No.1).
-
-
- In his 1991 Omega Conference talk, Jones echoed some of the themes of Moore's
- 1989 MUFON spectacle. Jones spoke discouragingly of the use of the Freedom of
- Information Act, and in one of his parenthetical remarks, he spoke of Moore
- with approbation. In fact, only two other ufologists, Professor Michael Swords
- and conference organizer John White, were mentioned in the entire speech.
- Shortly after his remarks about Moore, Jones again proclaimed that he "quite
- honestly... didn't have the vaguest idea of what the government was doing" in
- the field of UFOs.
-
- Sergeant Richard Doty
-
- One of Moore's long-time buddies is Sergeant Richard Doty, with whom he is now
- advertising a co-authored forthcoming book. Doty was formerly a special agent
- with the Air Force Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI) assigned to
- Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerque.
-
- Hastings' 1989 paper makes a strong case that Doty was involved in fabricating
- a UFO report delivered to the civilian Aerial Phenomena Research Organization
- (APRO) in 1980.
-
- Linda M. Howe, a television journalist known for her work on cattle
- mutilations, was invited to Kirtland AFB in 1983 by Doty. At the time, she was
- working on a documentary on UFOs. During her visit, Doty showed her what he
- claimed were briefing documents prepared for the president of the United States
- and which discussed crashed saucers and recovered bodies of ETs ("UFO Universe"
- July, 1988). Doty promised movie footage would be provided later. But the
- footage never arrived, and Howe's documentary was cancelled, which Howe now
- suspects was the intended purpose of offering her the "bait."
-
- Howe produced a sworn statement describing her meeting with Doty. He later
- denied the incident, but in an apparently unrelated matter, Doty's honesty was
- questioned by the military and he flunked a lie detector test, thus casting
- further doubt on Doty's integrity ("Skeptics UFO Newsletter", January 1991).
- There is every reason to believe Howe's account.
-
- Jacques Vallee ("Revelations") reports that Moore now claims that Doty worked
- for an Officer Hennessey, based at the Bolling AFB, Headquarters of AFOSI (the
- name "Hennessey" also arises in the case of Lee Graham, described below).
-
- Captain Robert Collins
-
- But Richard Doty is not the only person on Kirtland AFB to take part in these
- shenanigans. In November, 1987, Captain Collins arranged a meeting with Linda
- Howe, which was also attended by John Lear, a former employee of a CIA front
- called Air America, the son of the famous inventor Bill Lear (the car radio,
- the Lear jet), and a candidate for the State Legislature in Nevada. Lear has
- also been a primary source for stories claiming that there are vast underground
- bases in the Southwest populated by aliens carrying out grotesque biological
- experiments using humans, all with the approval and connivance of the U.S.
- Government.
-
- At the meeting, Collins presented Howe and Lear with documents concerning MJ-12
- and an alien held captive by the government. According to Howe's affidavit,
- Collins spoke of having worked "behind the scenes" for many years with William
- Moore.
-
- This is quite extraordinary activity on the part of Doty and Collins, and much
- of it took place on government property over a period of years. Some skeptics
- have suggested that the Doty-Collins activities were simply the private hobby
- of a couple of renegades. If so, Jones should certainly be In a position to
- clear the air on this.
-
- Indeed, even Philip Klass has uncovered government information on Doty. But
- despite Jones' "honest" ignorance of the "activity of the U.S. Government," he
- met with Moore and Doty while In the employ of Senator Pell ("UFO", 1992, Vol.
- 101. No. 7). But he has refused to discuss the matter with credible
- investigators. Whatever the ultimate reason for the Doty-Collins activities,
- the effect has been to waste an immense amount of the time, energy and money of
- UFO researchers. Lear has often stated that he obtains his data about
- underground bases, etc., from "intelligence sources" ("The MJ-12 Affair: Facts,
- Questions, Comments," by Robert Hastings, MUFON UFO Journal, No. 254, June
- 1989).
-
- Jaime Shandera and MJ-12
-
- Moore's colleague, Jaime Shandera, a television producer, claims to have
- received a roll of undeveloped film in the mail in mid-December, 1984. And
- Shandera promptly alerted his colleague. Development showed a document
- purporting to describe a crashed saucer recovered by the U.S. Government in
- 1947. The material also suggested that alien bodies were recovered and that a
- top-secret panel of 12 scientists, military leaders, and intelligence officials
- (MJ-12) were commissioned to supervise the investigation.
-
- Study of the MJ-12 documents has absorbed an immense amount of effort which the
- impoverished UFO research community can ill afford. It is most unfortunate that
- Scott Jones, in his search for UFO-related activity of the U.S. Government, did
- not use the power of his position to establish the provenance of the MJ-12
- papers or the motives of the various government employees engaged in their
- disseminatlon.
-
- In October, 1990, Shandera contacted "R" saying that his "contact" had told him
- that a high authority (perhaps in the Pentagon) had determined that Shandera
- should establish and maintain a relationship with "R." Shandera also let it be
- known that he was in contact with a scientist in the military involved with
- remote viewing. "R" began having apparently precognitive dreams involving
- Saddam Hussein and Iraq, and he reported them to Shandera. Shandera told "R"
- that he passed these along to "authorities." "R" later learned that Shandera
- and Moore were in contact with Scott Jones, and "R" called Jones. Jones
- expressed familiarity with the reported dreams and went on to say that he was
- familiar with Psi Tech but gave little further information.
-
- Paul Bennewitz
-
- Paul Bennewitz, a physicist and manufacturer of temperature and humidity
- measuring devices sold to the military, claimed to have discovered alien
- devices and communications at Kirtland AFB. The military apparently took
- Bennewitz seriously, and he was invited to Kirtland to present his material.
-
- Bennewitz eventually was hospitalized for psychiatric care and has dropped out
- of UFO research. It appears that Bennewitz was the object of a program of
- psychological destabilization originated by AFOSI at Kirtland. Documents
- concerning Bennewitz were signed by Special Agent Doty.
-
- In his published MUFON speech, Moore claimed that he had no hand in the "dirty
- tricks," but in fact tried to protect Bennewitz, although he knew Bennewitz was
- being disinformed and becoming progressively more unbalanced. This is one of
- the most ominous chapters in the Moore-Doty-AFOSI litany, and it cries out for
- investigation by the legislative branch of the U.S. Government. Unfortunately,
- Jones, in his Diogenes-like search for "activity of the U.S. Government" has
- missed this one.
-
- Lee Graham
-
- Before the appearance of the MJ-12 papers, UFO researcher Lee Graham, a
- technician with a secret clearance working for Aerojet Electrosystems, Azusa,
- California, was contacted by Willlam Moore. Graham had never met Moore, but had
- written to him after the publication of the Moore-Berlitz book on Roswell.
- During the next few months Moore gave to the perplexed Graham a series of
- documents, all exhibiting security classification markings. These papers
- included the alleged Eisenhower briefing document and other material relating
- to UFOs and government involvement with aliens or alien technology.
-
- Graham, whose livelihood depends on maintaining his security clearance,
- eventually took the documents to the Aerojet official in charge of security,
- and asked that both the documents and Moore be investigated by the Defense
- Investigation Service (DIS). Ultimately, the documents were back in Graham's
- hands, marked "unclassified."
-
- Graham, however, became the object of intense scrutiny by the DIS. He
- repeatedly demanded that Moore be investigated for distributing documents that
- appeared to be extremely sensitive, and for exhibiting an identification card
- indistinguishable from those used by the many DIS agents that Graham had
- encountered. But to the best of Graham's knowledge, Moore has never been
- interviewed by DIS or any other agency concerning these serious charges.
-
- It would be a simple matter for Pell's office to request an investigation of
- Moore on the basis of Graham's charges.
-
- In 1987, Graham was paid an intimidating visit at his workplace by FBI Special
- Agent William Hurley, accompanied by a man in civilian clothes who did not
- identify himself, but who was later identified as no less than Major General
- Michael Kerby, USAF, at that time the Director of the Air Force Legislative
- Liaison office.
-
- Kerby's military career differs from that of most of the uniformed players in
- this drama, in that he seems to have had no intelligence background. Prior to
- the assignment with congressional liaison, Kerby appears to have been in
- command of the operational aspects of the "stealth" fighter aircraft, as well
- as other very sensitive aviation activities at Nellis AFB.
-
- During the interview with Hurley and his companlon, Graham was shown a document
- identifying the then Top Secret designation of the F-117 "Stealth" fighter, a
- piece of information Graham had tirelessly pursued through Freedom of
- Information Act requests. He was also given a form to sign, certifying that he
- had been given information "for which you have no need to know." This very
- unusual action was followed by a lengthy "pep talk" in which Hurley and Kerby
- praised Graham for his work in disseminating the MJ-12 documents! Graham says
- that the bulk of the one-hour interview concerned the MJ-12 papers.
-
- The news that the man accompanying FBI Agent Hurley was a two-star general came
- to Graham from an unexpected and extraordinary source: C. B. Scott Jones.
-
- Graham had never met Jones, nor did the name mean anything to him when Jones
- called and opened the conversation by saying that he and Graham "had a mutual
- acquaintance." Jones was referring to the mystery man who accompanied Special
- Agent Hurley on the interview with Graham. During the course of the
- conversation, Jones promised to send information that would help Graham
- identify the mysterious interviewer.
-
- Shortly thereafter, Graham received a note from Jones, on U.S. Senate
- letterhead, together with the official Air Force biography of Kerby, including
- his photograph. Graham recognized the face at once as that of the man who
- accompanied the FBl agent, and who spoke so enthusiastically about the MJ-12
- papers.
-
- Jones was asked to explain this strange episode, and gave the following
- account. Jones was in his office at Pell's Senate suite. Kerby, in the normal
- course of his liaison duties, was paying a courtesy call on Senator Pell. Kerby
- spotted Jones, and they had a chat.
-
- Apparently they had met before, and chatted at some length, because Jones says,
- "Kerby knew of my interest in these matters," meaning UFOs.
-
- Obviously, Kerby had some time on his hands, and for reasons Jones refuses to
- elaborate, Kerby told Jones about his visit to Graham, incognito. Jones has
- been pressed about all this with understandable vigor by Graham and by
- journalist Don Ecker, but to no avail.
-
- Jones, I must remind the weary reader, is the man who "honestly" does "not know
- of any activity of the U.S. Government" in the field of UFOs. (See "UFO", Vol.
- 6, No. 6, 1991, page 12; also multiple personal communications with Don Ecker,
- November and December 1991; multiple personal communications with Lee Graham,
- November and December 1991).
-
- During his FOIA requests, Graham asked for files compiled on himself. When he
- received them, he learned that a Colonel Barry Hennessey was involved in
- monitoring Graham's activities. Richard Doty is said to have reported to an
- "Officer Hennesey" in the AFOSI chain of command.
-
- Roswell
-
- The hottest topic in ufology today is the account of an apparent crashed UFO
- recovery operation near Roswell, New Mexico in 1947. The principal recent
- investigators, Randle and Schmitt, report that they have a dozen retired
- military and intelligence officials who are willing to give testimony on the
- retrieval, but only if they are relieved from the strictures of the Espionage
- Act. This is a very reasonable request.
-
- Immunity from prosecution under various statutes is now routinely granted by
- the Congress, and it would be a simple matter for Jones, through Pell, to make
- the necessary arrangements in the case of these pivotal, but reluctant, Roswell
- witnesses.
-
- Dr. Jones, who focuses his attentions on minutiae such as the identity of Lee
- Graham's mysterious visitor, has not bothered to contact Randle and Schmitt, or
- Jerome Clark of the J. Allen Hynek Center for UFO Studies to offer his good
- offices in this specific matter, nor in any other way to unlock what is
- universally acknowledged to be a U.S. Government stranglehold (surely a form of
- "activity") on Roswell information (personal communication, Jerome Clark, 14
- January 1992; personal communication, Kevin Randle to Vincent Ellis, 11 January
- 1992).
-
- Strange Priorities
-
- It is important to note that these instances of "Government - UFO connections"
- are exceptionally well known in ufological circles, having been discussed at
- great length in a variety of journals and newsletters.
-
- So it is indeed odd that Jones has had a long-standing relationship with a
- "ufologist" who claims to be a government "controlled informant," who has
- admitted to deceit in the past, but who claims that his goal is simply to learn
- the truth about government-UFO activities. The anomaly is that Jones seems to
- avoid similarly close links to credible researchers studying federal
- involvement with the UFO problem. Of course, Scott's services would be of
- little use to them because he "honestly does not know of any activity of the
- U.S. Government" in the field of UFOs.
-
- The Fund for UFO Research has concluded that breaking the federal secrecy about
- UFOs can only be accomplished through the legislative branch of the U.S.
- Government. To this end, the Fund has placed top priority on preparing video
- and written briefings for members of Congress and their aides. A meeting was
- held in the fall of 1991 to gather principal UFO researchers and staff from
- relevant congressional committees in order to assess the state of UFO research.
-
- Jones was invited, and one would suppose that the man who travels so easily to
- China and the U.S.S.R. would have no problem attending a meeting of such
- critical importance held almost literally in his own back yard. He did not
- attend. Nor did the other congressional staff members who were invited.
- (Personal communication, Fred Whiting, Secretary of the Fund, 26 December
- 1991).
-
-
- Government UFO
- Connections II
-
- In their book "Clear Intent", Fawcett and Greenwood discuss the infiltration of
- the National Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena (NICAP), a major
- civilian UFO organization. They begin their discussion by reciting the
- activities of some of the earliest NICAP members such as Nicholas de Rochefort,
- employed by the Psychological Warfare Staff of the CIA, Bernard J. O. Carvalho,
- who was involved In various secretly owned CIA business enterprises, and Vice
- Admiral Roscoe Hillenkoetter, the first Director of the CIA.
-
- Fawcett and Greenwood go on to say: "Further evidence of CIA influence in NICAP
- developed during the period immediately before NICAP's decline. On December 3,
- 1969, Donald Keyhoe was ousted as NICAP's director during a board meeting. Who
- led the effort to remove Keyhoe? The Chairman of the Board, Col. Joseph Bryan,
- former chief of the CIA's Psychological Warfare Staff (1947-1959). And who
- replaced Keyhoe? John Acuff, who was the head of the Society of Photographic
- Scientists and Engineers (SPSE), a frequent target of Russian spying attempts
- and a group that had many members involved in Defense Department intelligence
- units, including the CIA.
-
- His management of NICAP was financially "tight" (in the cheap sense) and
- totally inept in a research sense. Criticism of government UFO policy was gone,
- and NICAP merely served as a sighting collection center. Acuff's management
- drove loyal members away and ultimately led to Acuff's downfall in 1978.
-
- Who replaced Acuff? None other than Alan Hall, a retired CIA employee, who
- accepted the position after a number of other CIA employees were offered the
- job. Support for Hall came from Charles Lombard, an aide to Senator Barry
- Goldwater and a former CIA covert employee. NICAP eventually became so
- ineffective that it was disolved (page 207).
-
- Are there parallels between the demise of NICAP and Jones' activities at the
- ASPR?
-
- The Colonel
-
- Scott's friend, Colonel John Alexander, has an intriguing background. Besides
- being Jones' fellow researcher on anomalies in the Bahamas, he has displayed a
- long term interest in the paranormal. In 1980, he published an article in
- "Military Review" subtitled "Beam Me Up, Spock." Alexander has actively
- promoted psychic metal bending among government personnel using the techniques
- pioneered by Jack Houck of McDonnell Douglas. Alexander is a former president
- of the International Association for Near-Death Studies, and he worked with
- Elisabeth Kubler-Ross.
-
- Alexander also served as the military liaison to the National Research
- Council's panel evaluating parapsychological applications. Reportedly, he had
- access to classified government material on parapsychology.
-
- Alexander had a 32-year career in the Army, including a stint as director of
- the Advanced Systems Concept Office, U.S. Army Laboratory Command. Alexander
- also was chief of the Advanced Human Technology Office of the Intelligence and
- Security Command (INSCOM).
-
- His colleague, General Albert Stubblebine, was head of INSCOM. In his MUFON
- paper, Scott Jones acknowledged working on a project for INSCOM. According to
- the January/February 1990 issue of "International UFO Reporter", Alexander is
- manager of anti-material technology in the Defense Initiative Office at Los
- Alamos National Laboratory. Thus he is located in an area of intense activity
- -- New Mexico, the Land of Enchantment.
-
- Alexander recently co-authored a book entitled "The Warrior's Edge" (Morrow,
- New York, 1990) with Major Richard Groller and Janet Morris. Groller served on
- the staff of the Directorate of Intelligence, U.S. Forces Command, the U.S.
- Army Intelligence School, and the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA). Groller
- has published an article in "Military Intelligence" titled "Soviet
- Psychotronics - A State of Mind." Morris is affiliated with the National
- Intelligence Study Center and worked as long as 19 years ago on the effect of
- mind on probability in computer systems.
-
- The Generals
-
- One wonders about a two-star General (Kerby) showing up incognito to interview
- a "UFO buff," (Graham) and who also spends some of his time with a
- congressional aide who specializes in paranormal and New Age topics. But
- stealth specialist Kerby is not the only general officer who seems to be on
- friendly terms with Scott Jones.
-
- While Kerby seems to devote his energies to the UFO problem, Major General
- Albert Stubblebine focuses on parapsychology. I will quote from Howard Blum's
- book "Out There" (Simon & Schuster, 1990), which is devoted to an account of
- U.S. Government activities in the fields of ufology and parapsychology. Nearly
- every review of this book has pointed out the extraordinary number of factual
- errors it contains, but the information on Stubblebine appears to be correct:
-
- "In the early 198Os, Army Intelligence was an inventive, why-not-give-it-a-try
- sort of organization. It was spending millions on parapsychological
- experiments. It had contracted with the Monroe Institute in Faber, Virginia,
- for studies to relieve stress through 'advanced states of consciousness.'It had
- spent research dollars on 'hemisphere synchronization,' a process that uses
- patterns of sound waves to intensify consciousness by 'uniting' both
- hemispheres of the brain. Marksmen were being taught to concentrate through
- paranormal methods (a project so intense that several officers later claimed
- they suffered recurring mental problems as a result.)
-
- And the Commander of INSCOM, as the Army's Intelligence and Security Command
- was known, was Major General Albert Stubblebine, a man nicknamed 'Spoon bender'
- because of his rumored belief in psychic powers" (page 58).
-
- Since he has left the Army, Stubblebine has been quite involved in paranormal
- areas. Stubblebine, formerly Vice President for "Intelligence Systems" of BDM
- of McClean, Virginia, is now Chairman of Psi Tech, a group that aspires to
- provide psychic advice to Fortune 500 companies. Reportedly, most members of
- Psi Tech are ex-military personnel who were trained in a multi-million dollar
- parapsychological applications program developed at SRI International.
-
- A few years ago, Psi Tech received national publicity for attempting to "remote
- view" hidden biological weapons in Iraq. Recently, Psi Tech personnel have told
- a number of people that they believe they have found a colony of invisible
- aliens in New Mexico.
-
- Onward
-
- Laibow, Stubblebine and ufologist Victoria Lacas (with Jones in the shadows)
- toured Europe and the Soviet Union, where they have established a prodigious
- UFO/Psi network. It subsumes both fields of inquiry (parapsychology and
- ufology), and is international in composition and scope. Scott's goals were
- stated thus in his Omega Conference speech:
-
- "I assume that the effective stonewalling position of the U.S. Government may
- not be the norm in all countries. The question is, can we identify countries
- that may be more open on the subject than the United States, who would be
- willing to share with researchers credible evidence of extraterrestrial
- activities, and the knowledge that they have also shared this evidence with
- other governments? The second avenue of activity would be to act as a public
- broker between countries in this area."
-
- An organization called the International Association for New Science, of Fort
- Collins, Colorado, sponsored an "International Symposium on UFO Research" held
- in Denver on May 22 through May 25, 1992. The first two days consisted of a
- "retreat" for "prominent researchers" and would not be open to the public.
- Among the goals of the new organization are "the formulation of synergistic and
- cooperative future UFO research strategies."
-
- General Albert Stubblebine, in what appears to be his debut as a public figure
- in ufology, spoke on (pun probably not intended) "General UFO phenomena."
-
- Doubtless the General was in the audience, nodding in profound agreement, when
- another scheduled speaker, C. B. Scott Jones, shared his accumulated wisdom on
- the topic of "Abductors/abductees and government involvement/ cover-up."
-
- ** End **
-
- Mr. Durant is an airline pilot and MUFON's Section Director for Mercer Co., New
- Jersey. This article was written in 1992.
-
- --
- Don Allen - via ParaNet node 1:104/422
- UUCP: !scicom!paranet!User_Name
- INTERNET: Don.Allen@paranet.FIDONET.ORG
-
-