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- Message #799 - INFO.PARANET
- Date : 25-Jan-91 14:00
- From : Michael Corbin
- To : All
- Subject : EBE #1
- Recently, Jerry Clark published the first of three volumes titled "UFOs in the
- 1980s," an invaluable research tool containing a host of information on the
- who, where and what of UFOlogy. With his kind permission and the kind
- permission of Apogee Publishing Company, we are reprinting an article taken
- from that book -- Extraterrestrial Biological Entity. In this article, Jerry
- culls all of the past history and controversy surrounding the MJ-12
- controversy and other related material that has spewed forth from the extreme
- side of UFOlogy representing the ETH such as Lear, Cooper and others. Although
- this might be considered by some to be "old news," Jerry's chronology of
- events shed a different light on the players that have made up this compendium
- of scenarios -- aliens eating humans, genetic experimentation and the gamut of
- sensationalistic information that drove Paul Bennewitz to an NBD at the kind
- hands of admitted-disinformant, William L. Moore.
-
- This article is being presented here in its entirety contained in 18 messages
- including this one. The entire body of these messages are copyrighted (C)
- 1990 by Apogee Books with license to ParaNet(sm) Information Service for
- reproduction on this forum. No further reposting or copying is allowed
- without express written permission of the publisher.
-
- This file was provided by ParaNet(sm) Information Service
- and its network of international affiliates.
- ParaNet has received exclusive permission to reprint this
- article by the copyright holder.
- ============================================================
- For further information on ParaNet(sm), contact:
- Michael Corbin
- ParaNet Information Service
- P.O. Box 928
- Wheatridge, CO 80034-0928
- ============================================================
- UFOs in the 1980s
- (C) 1990 by Apogee Books and Jerome Clark
- Pages 85 - 109
- ============================================================
- EXTRATERRESTRIAL BIOLOGICAL ENTITIES
-
- Perhaps the strangest and most convoluted UFO story of the 1980s
- concerns allegations from various sources, some of them
- individuals connected with military and intelligence agencies,
- that the U.S. government not only has communicated with but has
- an ongoing relationship with what are known officially as
- "extraterrestrial biological entities," or EBEs.
-
- The Emenegger/Sandler Saga: The story begins in 1973, when Robert
- Emenegger and Alan Sandler, two well-connected Los Angeles
- businessmen, were invited to Norton Air Force Base in California
- to discuss a possible documentary film on advanced research
- projects. Two military officials, one the base's head of the Air
- Force Office of Special Investigations, the other, the audio-
- visual director Paul Shartle, discussed a number of projects. One
- of them involved UFOs. This one sounded the most interesting and
- plans were launched to go ahead with a film on the subject.
-
- Emenegger and Sandler were told of a film taken at Holloman AFB,
- New Mexico, in May 1971. In October 1988, in a national
- television broadcast, Shartle would declare that he had seen the
- 16mm film showing "three disc-shaped craft. One of the craft
- landed and two of them went away." A door opened on the landed
- vehicle and three beings emerged. Shartle said, "They were human-
- size. They had an odd, gray complexion and a pronounced nose.
- They wore tightfitting jump suits, [and] thin headdresses that
- appeared to be communication devices, and in their hands they
- held a 'translator.' A Holloman base commander and other Air
- Force officers went out to meet them" (Howe, 1989).
-
- Emenegger was led to believe he would be given the film for use
- in his documentary. He was even taken to Norton and shown the
- landing site and the building in which the spaceship had been
- stored and others (Buildings 383 and 1382) in which meetings
- between Air Force personnel and the aliens had been conducted
- over the next several days. According to his sources, the landing
- had taken place at 6 a.m. The extraterrestrials were "doctors,
- professional types." Their eyes had vertical slits like a cat's
- and their mouths were thin and slitlike, with no chins." All that
- Emenegger was told of what occurred in the meetings was a single
- stray "fact": that the military people said they were monitoring
- signals from an alien group with which they were unfamiliar, and
- did their ET guests know anything about them? The ETs said no.
-
- Emenegger's military sources said he would be given 3200 feet of
- film taken of the landing. At the last minute, however,
- permission was withdrawn, although Emenegger and Sandler were
- encouraged to describe the Holloman episode as something
- hypothetical, something that could happen or might happen in the
- future. Emenegger went to Wright-Patterson AFB, where Project
- Blue Book had been located until its closing in 1969, to ask Col.
- George Weinbrenner one of his military contacts, what had
- happened. According to Emenegger's account, the exchange took
- place in Weinbrenner's office. The colonel stood up, walked to a
- chalkboard and complained in a loud voice, "That damn MIG 25!
- Here we're so public with everything we have. But the Soviets
- have all kinds of things we don't know about. We need to know
- more about the MIG 25!" Moving to a bookshelf and continuing his
- monologue about the Russian jet fighter, he handed Emenegger a
- copy of J. Allen Hynek's The UFO Experience (1972), with the
- author's signature and dedication to Weinbrenner. "It was like a
- scene from a Kafka play," Emenegger would recall , inferring from
- the colonel's odd behavior that he was confirming the reality of
- the film while making sure that no one overhearing the
- conversation realized that was what he was doing.
-
- The documentary film UFO's Past, Present & Future (Sandler
- Institutional Films, Inc.) was released in 1974 along with a
- paperback book of the same title. The Holloman incident is
- recounted in three pages (127-29) of the book's "Future" section.
- Elsewhere, in a section of photos and illustrations, is an
- artist's conception of what one of the Holloman entities looked
- like, though it, along with other alien figures, is described
- only as being "based on eyewitness descriptions" (Emenegger,
- 1974). Emenegger's association with the military and intelligence
- he had met while doing the film would continue for years. At one
- point in the late 1980s his sources told him that He was about to
- be invited to film an interview with a live extraterrestrial in a
- Southwestern state, he says, but nothing came of it.
-
- The Suffern Story: On October 7, 1975, a 27-year old carpenter,
- Robert Suffern, of Bracebridge, Ontario, got a call from his
- sister who had seen a "fiery glow" near his barn and concluded it
- was on fire. Suffern drove to the spot and, after determining
- that there was no problem, got back on the road. There, he would
- testify, he encountered a large disc-shaped object resting in his
- path. "I was scared," he said. "It was right there in front of me
- with no lights and no sign of life." But even before his car
- could come to a complete stop, the object abruptly ascended out
- of sight. Suffern turned his car around and decided to head home
- rather than to his sister's place, his original intended
- destination. At that point a small figure wearing a helmet and a
- silver-gray suit stepped in front of the car, causing Suffern to
- hit the brakes and skid to a stop. The figure ran into a field.
- Then, according to Suffern, "when he got to the fence, he put his
- hands on a post and went over it with no effort at all. It was
- like he was weightless" (UFOIL, n.d.).
-
- Within two days Suffern's report was on the wire services, and
- Suffern was besieged by UFO investigators, journalists,
- curiosity-seekers, and others. Suffern, who made no effort to
- exploit his story and gave every appearance of believing what he
- was saying, soon tired of discussing it. A year later, however,
- Suffern and his wife told a Canadian investigator that a month
- after the encounter, they were informed that some high-ranking
- officials wished to speak with them. Around this time, so they
- claimed, they were given thorough examinations by military
- doctors. After that an appointment was set up for December 12 and
- on that day an Ontario Provincial Police cruiser arrived with
- three military officers, one Canadian, two American. They were
- carrying books and other documents. In the long conversation that
- followed, the officers apologized for the UFO landing, claiming
- it was a "mistake" caused by the malfunctioning of an
- extraterrestrial spaceship.
-
- The officers produced close-up pictures of UFOs, claiming that
- the U.S. and Canadian governments had had intimate knowledge of
- aliens since 1943 and were cooperating with them. The officers
- even knew the exact dates and times of two previous but
- unreported UFO sightings on the Suffern property. The Sufferns
- said the officers had answered all their questions fully and
- frankly, but they would not elaborate on what they were told.
- Reinterviewed about the matter some months later, the couple
- stuck by their story but added few further details.
-
- The investigator, Harry Tokarz, would remark, "Robert Suffern
- strikes one as an individual who carefully measures his thoughts.
- His sincerity comes through clearly as he slowly relates his
- concepts and ideas. His wife, a home-bred country girl, is quick
- to air her views and state unequivocally what she believes to be
- fact" (CUFORN, 1983).
-
- EBEs in South Dakota: On February 9, 1978, a curious document--an
- apparent carbon copy of an official U.S. Air Force incident
- report-arrived at the office of the National Enquirer in Lantana,
- Florida. Accompanying the document was an unsigned letter dated
- "29 Jan." It read: "The incident stated in the attached report
- actually occurred. The Air Force appointed a special team of
- individuals to investigate the incident. I was one of those
- individuals. I am still on active duty and so I cannot state my
- name at this time. It is not that I do not trust the Enquirer (I
- sure [sic] you would treat my name with [sic] confidence but I do
- not trust others.) The incident which occurred on 16 Nov. 77, was
- classified top secret on 2 Dec 77. At that time I obtained a copy
- of the original report. I thought at that time that the Air Force
- would probably hush the whole thing up, and they did. The Air
- Force ordered the silence on 1 Dec 77, after which, the report
- was classified. There were 16 pictures taken at the scene. I do
- not have access to the pictures at this time" (Pratt, 1984).
-
- The report, stamped FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY, purported to be from
- the commander of the 44th Missile Security Squadron at Ellsworth
- AFB near Rapid City, South Dakota. The incident was described as
- a "Helping Hand (security violation)/Covered Wagon (security
- violation) at Lima 9 (68th SMSq Area), 7 miles SW of Nisland, SD,
- at 2100 hours on 16 Nov. 77." The recipient of the report was
- identified as "Paul D. Hinzman, SSgt, USAF, Comm/Plotter, Wing
- Security Control." Two security men, Airmen 1st Class Kenneth
- Jenkins and Wayne E. Raeke, experienced and reported the
- incident, which was investigated by Capt. Larry D. Stokes and
- TSgt. Robert E. Stewart.
-
- The document told an incredible story. At 10:59 on the evening
- of November 16 an alarm sounded from the Lima Nine missile site.
- Jenkins and Raeke, at tHe Lima Launch Control Facility 35 miles
- away, were dispatched to the scene. On their arrival Raeke set
- out to check the rear fence line. There he spotted a helmeted
- figure in a glowing green metallic suit. The figure pointed a
- weapon at Raeke's rifle and caused it to disintegrate, burning
- Raeke's hands and arms in the process. Raeke summoned Jenkins,
- who carried his companion back to their Security Alert Team
- vehicle. When Jenkins went to the rear fence line, he saw two
- similarly-garbed figures. He ordered them to halt, but when they
- ignored his command, he opened fire. His bullets struck one in
- the shoulder and the other in the helmet. The figures ran over a
- hill and were briefly lost to view. Jenkins pursued them and when
- he next saw them, they were entering a 20-foot-in-diameter
- saucer-shaped object, which shot away over the Horizon.
-
- As Raeke was air-evacuated from the scene, investigators
- discovered that the missile's nuclear components had been stolen.
-
- Enquirer reporters suspected a hoax but when they called Rapid
- City and Ellsworth to check on the names, they were surprised to
- learn that such persons did exist. Moreover, all were on active
- duty. The Enquirer launched an investigation, sending several
- reporters to Rapid City. Over the course of the next few days
- they found that although the individuals were real, the document
- inaccurately listed their job titles, the geography of the
- alleged incident was wrong (there was no nearby hill over which
- intruders could have run), Raeke had suffered no injuries, he and
- Jenkins did not even know each other, and no one (including Rapid
- City civilian residents and area ranchers) had heard anything
- about such an encounter. As one of the reporters, Bob Pratt,
- wrote in a subsequent account, "We found more than 20
- discrepancies or errors in the report -wrong names, numbers,
- occupations, physical layouts and so on. Had the Security Option
- alert mentioned in the report taken place, it would have involved
- all security personnel at the base and everyone at the base and
- in Rapid City (Population 45,000 plus) would have known about
- it."
-
- The Bennewitz Affair: In the late 1970s Paul Bennewitz, an
- Albuquerque businessman trained as a physicist, became convinced
- that he was monitoring electromagnetic signals which
- extraterrestrials were using to control persons they had
- abducted. Bennewitz tried to decode these signals and believed he
- was succeeding. At the same time he began to see what he thought
- were UFOs maneuvering around the Manzano Nuclear Weapons Storage
- Facility and the Coyote Canyon test area, located near Kirtland
- AFB, and he filmed them.
-
- Bennewitz reported all this to the Tucson-based Aerial Phenomena
- Research Organization (APRO), whose directors were unimpressed,
- judging Bennewitz to be deluded. But at Kirtland, Bennewitz's
- claims, or at least some of them, were being taken more
- seriously. On October 24, 1980, Bennewitz contacted Air Force
- Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI) agent Sgt. Richard Doty
- (whose previous tour of duty had been at Ellsworth) after being
- referred to him by Maj. Ernest Edwards, head of base security,
- and related that he had evidence that something potentially
- threatening was going on in the Manzano Weapons Storage Area. A
- "Multipurpose Internal OSI Form," signed by Maj. Thomas A. Cseh
- (Commander of the Base Investigative Detachment), dated October
- 28, 1980, and subsequently released under the Freedom of
- Information Act, states:
-
- "On 26 Oct 80, SA [Special Agent] Doty, with the assistance of
- JERRY MILLER, GS-15, Chief, Scientific Advisor for Air Force Test
- and Evaluation Center, KAFB , interviewed Dr. BENNEWITZ at his
- home in the Four Hills section of Albuquerque, which is adjacent
- to the northern boundary of Manzano Base. (NOTE: MILLER is a
- former Project Blue Book USAF Investigator who was assigned to
- Wright-Patterson AFB (W-PAFB), OH, with FTD [Foreign Technology
- Division]. Mr. MILLER is one of the most knowledgeable and
- impartial investigators of Aerial Objects in the southwest.) Dr.
- BENNEWITZ has been conducting independent research into Aerial
- Phenomena for the last 15 months. Dr. BENNEWITZ also produced
- several electronic recording tapes, allegedly showing high
- periods of electrical magnetism being emitted from Manzano/Coyote
- Canyon area. Dr. BENNEWITZ also produced several photographs of
- flying objects taken over the general Albuquerque area. He has
- several pieces of electronic surveillance equipment pointed at
- Manzano and is attempting to record high frequency electrical
- beam pulses. Dr. BENNEWITZ claims these Aerial Objects produce
- these pulses. . . . After analyzing the data collected by Dr.
- BENNEWITZ, Mr MILLER related the evidence clearly shows that some
- type of unidentified aerial objects were caught on film; however,
- no conclusions could be made whether these objects pose a threat
- to Manzano/Coyote Canyon areas. Mr MILLER felt the electronical
- [sic] recording tapes were inconclusive and could have been
- gathered from several conventional sources. No sightings, other
- than these, have been reported in the area."
-
- On November 10 Bennewitz was invited to the base to present his
- findings to a small group of officers and scientists. Exactly one
- week later Doty informed Bennewitz that AFOSI had decided against
- further consideration of the matter. Subsequently Doty reported
- receiving a call from then-New Mexico Sen. Harrison Schmitt, who
- wanted to know what AFOSI was planning to do about Bennewitz's
- allegations. When informed that no investigation was planned,
- Schmitt spoke with Brig. Gen. William Brooksher of base security.
- The following July New Mexico's other senator, Pete Domenici,
- looked into the matter, meeting briefly with Doty before dashing
- off to talk with Bennewitz personally. Domenici subsequently lost
- interest and dropped the issue.
-
- Bennewitz was also aware of supposed cattle mutilations being
- reported in the western United States. At one point he met a
- young mother who told him that one evening in May 1980, after she
- and her six-year-old son saw several UFOs in a field and one
- approached them, they suffered confusion and disorientation, then
- a period of amnesia which lasted as long as four hours. Bennewitz
- brought the two to University of Wyoming psychologist R. Leo
- Sprinkle, who hypnotized them and got a detailed abduction story
- from the mother and a sketchy one from the little boy. Early in
- the course of the abduction they observed aliens take a calf
- aboard the UFO and mutilate it while it was still alive, removing
- the animal's genitals. At one point during the alleged
- experience, the mother said, they were taken via UFO into an
- underground area which she believed was in New Mexico. She
- briefly escaped her captors and fled into an area where there
- were tanks of water. She looked into one of them and saw body
- parts such as tongues, hearts and internal organs, apparently
- from cattle. But she also observed a human arm with a hand
- attached. There was also the "top of a bald head," apparently
- from one of the hairless aliens, but before she could find out
- for sure, she was dragged away. The objects in the tank, she
- said, "horrified me and made me sick and frightened me to death"
- (Howe, 1989). Later she wondered about the other tanks and about
- their contents.
-
- The William Moore/MJ-12 Maze: Late in the summer of 1979 William
- L. Moore had left a teaching job in a small Minnesota town to
- relocate in Arizona, where he hoped to pursue a writing career.
- Moore was deeply involved in the investigation of an apparent UFO
- crash in New Mexico in July 1947, a case he and Charles Berlitz
- would recount in their The Roswell Incident the following year.
- After his move to the Southwest Moore became close to Coral and
- James Lorenzen of the Aerial Phenomena Research Organization
- (APRO) and in due course Moore was asked to join the APRO board.
- The Lorenzens told him about Bennewitz's claims. Bennewitz, Jim
- Lorenzen thought, was "prone to make great leaps of logic on the
- basis of incomplete data" (Moore, 1989a).
-
- The Roswell Incident was published in the summer of 1980 and in
- September a debate on UFOs at the Smithsonian Institution was
- scheduled to take place. Moore set off from his Arizona home to
- Washington, D.C., to attend the debate and along the way promoted
- his new book on radio and television shows. According to an
- account he would give seven years later, an extraordinary series
- of events began while he was on this trip.
-
- He had done a radio show in Omaha and was in the station lobby,
- suitcase in hand, on his way to catch a plane which was to leave
- within the hour when a receptionist asked if he was Mr. Moore. He
- had a phone call. The caller was a man who claimed to be a
- colonel at nearby Offutt AFB, He said, "We think you're the only
- one we've heard who seems to know what he's talking about." He
- asked if he and Moore could meet and discuss matters further.
- Moore said that since he was leaving town in the next few
- minutes, that would not be possible, though he wrote down the
- man's phone number.
-
- Moore went on to Washington. On September 8, on his way back, he
- did a radio show in Albuquerque. On the way out of the studio the
- receptionist told him he had a phone call. The caller, who
- identified himself as an individual from nearby Kirtland AFB,
- said, "We think you're the only one we've heard about who seems
- to know what he's talking about." Moore said, "Where have I heard
- that before?"
-
- Soon afterwards Moore and the individual he would call "Falcon"
- met at a local restaurant. Falcon, later alleged (though denied
- by Moore) to be U.S. Air Force Sgt. Richard Doty, said he would
- be wearing a red tie. This first meeting would initiate a long-
- running relationship between Moore (and, beginning in 1982,
- partner Jaime Shandera) and 10 members of a shadowy group said to
- be connected with military intelligence and to be opposed to the
- continuation of the UFO cover-up. The story that emerged from
- this interaction goes like this:
-
- The first UFO crash, involving bodies of small, gray-skinned
- humanoids, occurred near Corona, New Mexico, in 1947 (the
- "Roswell incident"). Two years later a humanoid was found alive
- and it was housed at Los Alamos until its death in the early
- 1950s. It was called EBE, after "extraterrestrial biological
- entity," and it was the first of three the U.S. government would
- have in its custody between then and now. An Air Force captain,
- now a retired colonel, was EBE-1's constant companion. At first
- communication with it was almost impossible; then a speech device
- which enabled the being to speak a sort of English was implanted
- in its throat. It turned out that EBE-1, the equivalent of a
- mechanic on a spaceship, related what it knew of the nature and
- purpose of the visitation.
-
- In response to the Roswell incident, MJ-12-the MJ stands for
- "Majestic"--as set up by executive order of President Harry
- Truman on September 24, 1947. MJ-12 operates as a policy-making
- body. Project Aquarius is an umbrella group in which all the
- various compartments dealing with ET-related issues perform their
- various functions. Project Sigma conducts electronic
- communication with the extraterrestrials, part of an ongoing
- contact project run through the National Security Agency since
- 1964, following a landing at Holloman AFB in late April of that
- year.
-
- Nine extraterrestrial races are visiting the earth. One of these
- races, little gray-skinned people from the third planet
- surrounding Zeta Reticuli, have been here for 25,000 years and
- influenced the direction of human evolution. They also help in
- the shaping of our religious beliefs. Some important individuals
- within the cover-up want it to end and are preparing the American
- people for the reality of the alien presence through the vehicle
- of popular entertainment, including the films Close Encounters of
- the Third Kind, whose climax is a thinly-disguised version of the
- Holloman landing, and ET.
-
- At CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia, there is a thick book
- called "The Bible," a compilation of all the various project
- reports.
-
- According to his own account, which he would not relate until
- 1989, Moore cooperated with his AFOSI sources-including,
- prominently, Richard Doty-and provided them with information.
- They informed him that there was considerable interest in
- Bennewitz. Moore was made to understand that as his part of the
- bargain he was to spy on Bennewitz and also on APRO as well as,
- in Moore's words, "to a lesser extent, several other individuals"
- (Moore, 1989a). He learned that several government agencies were
- interested in Bennewitz's activities and they wanted to inundate
- him with false information-disinformation, in intelligence
- parlance-to confuse him. Moore says he was not one of those
- providing the disinformation, but he knew some of those of who
- were, such as Doty.
-
- Bennewitz on his own had already begun to devise a paranoid
- interpretation of what he thought he was seeing and hearing, and
- the disinformation passed on to him built on that foundation. His
- sources told him that the U.S. government and malevolent aliens
- are in an uneasy alliance to control the planet, that the aliens
- are killing and mutilating not only cattle but human beings,
- whose organs they need to lengthen their lives, and that they are
- even eating human flesh. In underground bases at government
- installations in Nevada and New Mexico human and alien scientists
- work together on ghastly experiments, including the creation of
- soulless androids out of human and animal body parts. Aliens are
- abducting as many as one American in 40 and implanting devices
- which control human behavior. ClA brainwashing and other control
- techniques are doing the same, turning life on earth into a
- nightmare of violence and irrationality. It was, as Moore
- remarks, "the wildest science fiction scenario anyone could
- possibly imagine."
-
- But Bennewitz believed it. He grew ever more obsessed and tried
- to alert prominent persons to the imminent threat, showing
- photographs which he held showed human-alien activity in the
- Kirtland area but which dispassionate observers thought depicted
- natural rock formations and other mundane phenomena. Eventually
- Bennewitz was hospitalized, but on his release resumed his
- activities, which continue to this day. Soon the ghoulish
- scenario would spread into the larger UFO community and beyond
- and command a small but committed band of believers. But that
- would not happen until the late 1980s and it would not be
- Bennewitz who would be responsible for it.
-
- In 1981 the Lorenzens received an anonymous letter from someone
- identifying himself as a "USAF Airman assigned to the 1550th
- Aircrew Training and Testing Wing at Kirtland AFB." The "airman"
- said, "On July 16, 1980, at between 10:30-10:45 A.M., Craig R.
- Weitzel. .. a Civil Air Patrol Cadet from Dobbins AFB, Ga.,
- visiting Kirtland AFB, NM, observed a dull metallic colored UFO
- flying from South to North near Pecos New Mexico. Pecos has a
- secret training site for the 1550th Aircrew Training and Testing
- Wing, Kirtland AFB, NM. WEITZEL was with ten other individuals,
- including USAF active duty airmen, and all witnessed the
- sighting. WEITZEL took some pictures of the object. WEITZEL went
- closer to the UFO and observed the UFO land in a clearing
- approximately 250 yds, NNW of the training area. WEITZEL observed
- an individual dressed in a metallic suit depart the craft and
- walk a few feet away. The individual was outside the craft for
- just a few minutes. When the individual returned the craft took
- off towards the NW." The letter writer said he had been with
- Weitzel when the UFO flew overhead, but he had not been with him
- to observe the landing.
-
- The letter went on to say that late on the evening of the next
- day a tall, dark-featured, black-suited man wearing sunglasses
- called on Weitzel at Kirtland. The stranger claimed to be "Mr.
- Huck" from Sandia Laboratories, a classified Department of Energy
- contractor on the base. Mr. Huck told Weitzel he had seen
- something he should not have seen, a secret aircraft from Los
- Alamos, and he demanded all of the photographs. Weitzel replied
- that he hadn't taken any, that the photographer was an airman
- whose name he did not know. "The individual warned Weitzel not to
- mention the sighting to anyone or Weitzel would be in serious
- trouble," the writer went on. "After the individual left
- Weitzel[']s room, Weitzel wondered how the individual knew of the
- sighting because Weitzel didn't report the sighting to anyone.
- Weitzel became scared after thinking of the threat the individual
- made. Weitzel call [sic] the Kirtland AFB Security Police and
- reported the incident to them. They referred the incident to the
- Air Force Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI), which
- investigates these matters according to the security police. A
- Mr. Dody [sic], a special agent with OSI, spoke with Weitzel and
- took a report. Mr. Dody [sic] also obtained all the photographs
- of the UFO. Dody [sic] told Weitzel he would look into the
- matter. That was the last anyone heard of the incident."
-
- But that was not all the correspondent had to say. He added, "I
- have every reason to beleive [sic] the USAF is covering up
- something. I spent a lot of time looking into this matter and I
- know there is more to it than the USAF will say. I have heard
- rumors, but serious rumors here at Kirtland that the USAF has a
- crashed UFO stored in the Manzano Storage area, which is located
- in a remote area of Kirtland AFB. This area is heavily guarded by
- USAF Security. I have spoke [sic] with two employees of Sandia
- Laboratories, who also store classified objects in Manzano, and
- they told me that Sandia has examined several UFO's during the
- last 20 years. One that crashed near Roswell NM in the late 50's
- was examined by Sandia scientists. That craft is still being
- store [sic] in Manzano.
-
- "I have reason to beleive [sic] OSI is conducting a very secret
- investigation into UFO sightings. OSI took over when Project Blue
- Book was closed. I was told this by my commander, COL Bruce
- Purvine. COL Purvine also told me that the investigation was so
- secret that most employees of OSI doesn't [sic] even know it. But
- COL Purvine told me that Kirtland AFB, AFOSI District 17 has a
- special secret detachment that investigates sightings around this
- area. They have also investigated the cattle mutilations in New
- Mexico."
-
- In 1985 investigator Benton Jamison located Craig Weitzel, who
- confirmed that he had indeed seen a UFO in 1980 and reported it
- to Sgt. Doty. But his sighting, while interesting, was rather
- less dramatic than the CE3 reported in the letter; Weitzel saw a
- silver-colored object some 10,000 to 15,000 feet overhead. After
- maneuvering for a few minutes, he told Jamison, it "accelerated
- like you never saw anything accelerate before" (Hastings, 1985).
- He also said he knew nothing of a meeting with anyone identified
- as "Mr. Huck."
-
- In December 1982, in response to a Freedom of Information
- request from Barry Greenwood of Citizens Against UFO Secrecy
- (CAUS), Air Force Office of Special Investigations released a
- two page OSI Complaint Form stamped "For Official Use Only."
- Dated September 8, 1980, it was titled "Kirtland AFB, NM, 8 Aug-3
- Sept 80, Alleged Sightings of Unidentified Aerial Lights in
- Restricted Test Range." The document described several sightings
- of UFOs in the Manzano Weapons Storage Area, at the Coyote Canyon
- section of the Department of Defense Restricted Test Range. One
- of the reports cited was a New Mexico State Patrolman's August 10
- observation of a UFO landing. (A later check with state police
- sources by Larry Fawcett, a Connecticut police officer and UFO
- investigator, uncovered no record of such a report. The sources
- asserted that the absence of a report could only mean that no
- such incident had ever happened.) This intriguing document is
- signed by then OSI Special Agent Richard C. Doty.
-
- In 1987, after comparing three documents (the anonymous letter
- to APRO, the September 8, 1980, AFOSI Complaint Form, and a
- purported AFOSI document dated August 14, 1980, and claiming
- "frequency jamming" by UFOs in the Kirtland area), researcher
- Brad Sparks concluded that Doty had written all three. In 1989
- Moore confirmed that Doty had written the letter to APRO.
- "Essentially it was 'bait,'" he says. "AFOSI knew that Bennewitz
- had close ties with APRO at the time, and they were interested in
- recruiting someone within . . . APRO . . . who would be in a
- position to provide them with feedback on Bennewitz'[s]
- activities and communications. Since I was the APRO Board member
- in charge of Special Investigations in 1980, the Weitzel letter
- was passed to me for action shortly after it had been received."
- According to Bruce Maccabee, Doty admitted privately that he had
- written the Ellsworth AFB document, basing it on a real incident
- which he wanted to bring to public attention. Doty has made no
- public comment on any of these allegations. Moore says Doty "was
- almost certainly a part of [the Ellsworth report], but not in a
- capacity where he would have been responsible for creating the
- documents involved" (Moore, 1989a).
-
- Doty was also the source of an alleged AFOSI communication dated
- November 17, 1980, and destined to become known as the "Aquarius
- document." Allegedly sent from AFOSI headquarters at Bolling AFB
- in Washington, D.C., to the AFOSI District 17 office at Kirtland,
- it mentions, in brief and cryptic form, analyses of negatives
- from a UFO film apparently taken the previous month. The version
- that circulated through the UFO community states in its
- penultimate paragraph: "USAF NO LONGER PUBLICLY ACTIVE IN UFO
- RESEARCH, HOWEVER USAF STILL HAS INTEREST IN ALL UFO SIGHTINGS
- OVER USAF INSTALLATION/TEST RANGES. SEVERAL OTHER GOVERNMENT
- AGENCIES, LED BY NASA, ACTIVELY INVESTIGATES [sic] LEGITIMATE
- SIGHTINGS THROUGH COVERT COVER.... ONE SUCH COVER IS UFO
- REPORTING CENTER, US COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY, ROCKVILLE, MD
- 20852, NASA FILTERS RESULTS OF SIGHTINGS TO APPROPRIATE MILITARY
- DEPARTMENTS WITH INTEREST IN THAT PARTICULAR SIGHTING. THE
- OFFICIAL US GOVERNMENT POLICY AND RESULTS OF PROJECT AQUARIUS IS
- [sic] STILL CLASSIFIED TOP SECRET WITH NO DISEMINATION [sic]
- OUTSIDE OFFICIAL INTELLIGENCE CHANNELS AND WITH RESTRICTED ACCESS
- TO 'MJ TWELVE'."
-
- This is the first mention of "MJ-12" in an allegedly official
- government document. Moore describes it as an "example of some of
- the disinformation produced in connection with the Bennewitz
- case. The document is a retyped version of a real AFOSI message
- with a few spurious additions." Among the most significant
- additions, by Moore's account, are the bogus references to the
- U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey and to NASA, which he says was NSA
- (National Security Agency) in the original.
-
- According to Moore, Doty got the document "right off the
- teletype" (Moore, 1990) and showed it to Moore almost
- immediately. Later Doty came by with what purported to be a copy
- of it, but Moore noticed that it was not exactly the same;
- material had been added to it. Doty said he wanted Moore to give
- the doctored copy to Bennewitz. Reluctant to involve himself in
- the passing of this dubious document, Moore sat on it for a
- while, then finally worried that the sources he was developing,
- the ones who were telling him about the U.S. government's alleged
- interactions with EBEs, would dry up if he did not cooperate. So
- eventually he gave the document to Bennewitz but urged him not to
- publicize it. Bennewitz agreed and kept his promise.
-
- As of September 1982 Moore knew of three copies of the document:
- the one Bennewitz had, one Moore had in safekeeping, and one he
- had in his briefcase during a trip he made that month to meet
- someone in San Francisco. He met the man in the morning and that
- afternoon someone broke into his car and stole his briefcase.
- Four months later a copy of the document showed up in the hands
- of a New York lawyer interested in UFOs, and soon the document
- was circulating widely. Moore himself had little to say on the
- subject until he delivered a controversial and explosive speech
- to the annual conference of the Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) in Las
- Vegas in 1989.
-
- In late 1982, "during," he says, "one of the many friendly
- conversations I had with Richard Doty," Moore mentioned that he
- was looking into the old (and seemingly discredited) story that a
- UFO had crashed in Aztec, New Mexico, in 1948. This tale was the
- subject of Frank Scully's 1950 book Behind the Flying Saucers.
- (Moore's long account of his investigation into the affair, which
- he found to be an elaborate hoax, would appear in the 1985 MUFON
- symposium proceedings.) Doty said he had never heard the story
- and asked for details, taking notes as Moore spoke.
-
- On January 10 and 11, 1983, attorney Peter Gersten, director of
- CAUS, met with Doty in New Mexico. There were two meetings, the
- first of them also attended by Moore and San Francisco television
- producer Ron Lakis, the second by Gersten alone. During the first
- meeting Doty was guarded in his remarks. But at the second he
- spoke openly about what ostensibly were extraordinary secrets. He
- said the Ellsworth case was the subject of an investigation by
- AFOSI and the FBI; nuclear weapons were involved. The National
- Enquirer investigation, which had concluded the story was bogus,
- was "amateurish." At least two civilians, a farmer and a deputy
- sheriff, had been involved, but were warned not to talk. The
- government knows why UFOs appear in certain places, Doty said,
- but he would not elaborate. He added, however, that "beyond a
- shadow of a doubt they're extraterrestrial" (Greenwood, 1988) and
- from 50 light years from the earth. He knew of at least three UFO
- crashes, the Roswell incident and two others, one from the 1950s,
- the other from the 196Os. Bodies had been recovered. A
- spectacular incident, much like the one depicted in the ending of
- the film Close Encounters of the Third Kind, took place in 1966
- The NSA was involved in communications with extraterrestrials;
- the effort is called Project Aquarius. Inside the UFO
- organizations government moles are collecting information and
- spreading disinformation. Doty discussed the Aquarius document
- and said the really important documents are impossible to get out
- of the appropriate files. Some are protected in such a way that
- they will disintegrate within five seconds' exposure to air.
- These documents tell of agreements between the U.S. government
- and extraterrestrials under which the latter are free to conduct
- animal mutilations (especially of cattle) and to land at a
- certain base, in exchange for information about advanced UFO
- technology. Doty also claimed that via popular entertainment the
- American people are being prepared to accept the reality of
- visitation by benevolent beings from other worlds.
-
- At one point in the conversation Doty asked Gersten, "How do you
- know that I'm not here to either give you misinformation or to
- give you information which is part of the programming, knowing
- you are going to go out and spread it around?" (Howe, 1989).
-
- In the 1970s, as director of special projects for the Denver
- CBS-TV affiliate, Linda Moulton Howe had produced 12
- documentaries, most of them dealing with scientific,
- environmental and health issues. But the one that attracted the
- most attention was Strange Harvest, which dealt with the then-
- widespread reports that cattle in Western and Midwestern states
- were being killed and mutilated by persons or forces unknown.
- Most veterinary pathologists said the animals were dying of
- unknown causes. Farmers, ranchers and some law-enforcement
- officers thought the deaths were mysterious. Some even speculated
- that extraterrestrials were responsible. This possibility
- intrigued Howe, who had a lifelong interest in UFOs, and Strange
- Harvest argues for a UFO mutilation link.
-
- In the fall of 1982, as Howe was working on a documentary on an
- unrelated matter, she got a call from Home Box Office (HBO). The
- caller said the HBO people had been impressed with Strange
- Harvest and wanted to know if Howe would do a film on UFOs. In
- March 1983 she went to New York to sign a contract with HBO for a
- show to be titled UFOs-The ET Factor.
-
- The evening before her meeting with the HBO people, Howe had
- dinner with Gersten and science writer Patrick Huyghe. Gersten
- told Howe that he had met with Sgt. Doty, an AFOSI agent at
- Kirtland AFB, and perhaps Doty would be willing to talk on camera
- or in some other helpful capacity about the incident at
- Ellsworth. Gersten would call him and ask if he would be willing
- to meet with Howe.
-
- Subsequently arrangements were made for Howe to fly to
- Albuquerque on April 9. Doty would meet her at the airport. But
- when she arrived that morning, no one was waiting. She called his
- home. A small boy answered and said his father was not there.
- Howe then phoned Jerry Miller, Chief of Reality Weapons Testing
- at Kirtland and a former Blue Book investigator. (He is mentioned
- in the October 28, 1980, "Multipurpose Internal OSI Form"
- reporting on Doty and Miller's meeting with Bennewitz.) She knew
- Miller from an earlier telephone conversation, when she had
- called to ask him about Bennewitz's claims, in which she had a
- considerable interest. Miller asked for a copy of Strange
- Harvest. Later he had given Howe his home phone number and said
- to contact him if she ever found herself in Albuquerque. So she
- called and asked if he would pick her up at the airport.
-
- Miller drove Howe to his house. On the way Howe asked him a
- number of questions but got little in the way of answers. One
- question he did not answer was whether he is the "Miller"
- mentioned in the Aquarius document. When they got to Miller's
- residence, Miller called Doty at his home, and Doty arrived a few
- minutes later, responding aggressively to Howe's question about
- where he had been. He claimed to have been at the airport all
- along; where had she been? "Perhaps," Howe would write, "he had
- decided he didn't want to go through with the meeting, and it was
- acceptable in his world to leave me stranded at the airport-until
- Jerry Miller called his house" (Howe, 1989).
-
- On the way to Kirtland, Howe asked Doty, whose manner remained
- both defiant and nervous, if he knew anything about the Holloman
- landing. Doty said it happened but that Robert Emenegger had the
- date wrong; it was not May 1971 but April 25, 1964-12 Hours after
- a much-publicized CE3 reported by Socorro, New Mexico, policeman
- Lonnie Zamora. (Zamora said he had seen an egg-shaped object on
- the ground. Standing near it were two child-sized beings in white
- suits.) Military and scientific personnel at the base knew a
- landing was coming, but "someone blew the time and coordinates"
- and an "advance military scout ship" had come down at the wrong
- time and place, to be observed by Zamora. When three UFOs
- appeared at Holloman at six o'clock the following morning, one
- landed while the other two hovered overhead. During the meeting
- between the UFO beings and a government party, the preserved
- bodies of dead aliens had been given to the aliens , who in turn
- had returned something unspecified. Five ground and aerial
- cameras recorded this event.
-
- At the Kirtland gate Doty waved to the guard and was let
- through. They went to a small white and gray building. Doty took
- her to what he described as "my - boss' office." Doty seemed
- unwilling to discuss the Ellsworth case, the ostensible reason
- for the interview, but had much to say about other matters. First
- he asked Howe to move from the chair on which she was sitting to
- another in the middle of the room. Howe surmised that this was to
- facilitate the surreptitious recording of their conversation, but
- Doty said only, "Eyes can see through windows."
-
- "My superiors have asked me to show you this," he said. He
- produced a brown envelope he had taken from a drawer in the desk
- at which he was sitting and withdrew several sheets of white
- paper. As he handed them to Howe, he warned her that they could
- not be copied; all she could do was read them in his presence and
- ask questions.
-
- The document gave no indication anywhere as to which government,
- military or scientific agency (if any) had prepared the report,
- titled A Briefing Paper for the President of the United States on
- the Subject of Unidentified Flying Vehicles. The title did not
- specify which President it had in mind, nor did the document list
- a date (so far as Howe recalls today) which would have linked it
- to a particular administration.
-
-
- The first paragraph, written--as was everything that followed--
- in what Howe characterizes as "dry bureaucratese," listed dates
- and locations of crashes and retrievals of UFOs and their
- occupants. The latter were invariably described as 3 1/2 to four
- feet tall, gray-skinned and hairless, with oversized heads, large
- eyes and no noses. It was now known, the document stated on a
- subsequent page, that these beings, from a nearby solar system,
- have been here for many thousands of years. Through genetic
- manipulation they influenced the course of human evolution and in
- a sense created us. They had also helped shape our religious
- beliefs.
-
- The July 1947 Roswell crash was mentioned; so, however, was
- another one at Roswell in 1949. Investigators at the site found
- five bodies and one living alien, who was taken to a safe house
- at the Los Alamos National Laboratory north of Albuquerque. The
- aliens, small gray-skinned humanoids, were known as
- "extraterrestrial biological entities" and the living one was
- called "EBE" (ee-buh). EBE was befriended (if that was the word)
- by an Air Force officer, but the being died of unknown causes on
- June 18, 1952. (EBE's friend, by 1964 a colonel, was among those
- who were there to greet the aliens who landed at Holloman.)
- Subsequently, it would be referred to as EBE-1, since in later
- years another such being, EBE-2, would take up residence in a
- safe house. After that, a third, EBE-3, appeared on the scene and
- was now living in secret at an American base.
-
- The briefing paper said other crashes had occurred one near
- Kingman, Arizona, another just south of Texas in northern Mexico.
- It also mentioned the Aztec crash- The wreckage and bodies had
- been removed to such facilities as Los Alamos laboratory and
- Wright-Patterson AFB. A number of highly classified projects
- dealt with these materials. They included Snowbird (research and
- development from the study of an intact spacecraft left by the
- aliens as a gift) and Aquarius (the umbrella operation under
- which the research and contact efforts were coordinated). Project
- Sigma was the ongoing electronic communications effort. There was
- also a defunct project Garnet, intended to investigate
- extraterrestrial influence on human evolution. According to the
- document, extraterrestrials have appeared at various intervals in
- human history-25,000, 15,000, 5000 and 2500 years ago as well as
- now--to manipulate human and other DNA.
-
- One paragraph stated briefly, "Two thousand years ago
- extraterrestrials created a being" who was placed here to teach
- peace and love. Elsewhere a passing mention was made of another
- group of EBEs, called the "Talls."
-
- The paper said Project Blue Book had existed solely to take heat
- off the Air Force and to draw attention away from the real
- projects. Doty mentioned an "MJ-12," explaining that "MJ" stood
- for "Majority." It was a policy-making body whose membership
- consisted of 12 very high-ranking government scientists, military
- officers and intelligence officials. These were the men who made
- the decisions governing the cover-up and the contacts.
-
- Doty said Howe would be given thousands of feet of film of
- crashed discs, bodies, EBE-1 and the Holloman landing and
- meeting. She could use this material in her documentary to tell
- the story of how U.S. officials learned that the earth is being
- visited and what they have done about it. "We want you to do the
- film," Howe quotes him as saying.
-
- When Howe asked why she, not the New York Times, the Washington
- Post or 60 Minutes, was getting this, the story of the
- millennium, Doty replied bluntly that an individual media person
- is easier to manipulate and discredit than a major organization
- with expensive attorneys. He said that another plan to release
- the information, through Emenegger and Sandler, had been halted
- because political conditions were not right.
-
- Over the next weeks Howe had a number of phone conversations
- with Doty, mostly about technical problems related to converting
- old film to videotape. She spoke on several occasions with three
- other men but did not meet them personally.
-
- Doty suggested that eventually she might be allowed to film an
- interview with EBE-3. But the current film project was to have a
- historical emphasis; it would deal with events between 1949 and
- 1964. If at some point she did meet EBE-3, however, there was no
- way she could prepare herself for the "shock and fear" of meeting
- an alien being.
-
- Howe, of course, had informed her HBO contacts, Jean Abounader
- and her superior Bridgett Potter, of these extraordinary
- developments. Howe urged them to prepare themselves, legally and
- otherwise, for the repercussions that would surely follow the
- release of the film. The HBO people told her she would have to
- secure a letter of intent from the U.S. government with a
- legally-binding commitment to release the promised film footage.
- When Howe called Doty about it, he said, "I'll work on it." He
- said he would mail the letter directly to HBO.
-
- Then HBO told her it would not authorize funds for the film
- production until all the evidence was in hand and, as Potter put
- it, Howe had the "President, Secretary of Defense, Secretary of
- State and Joint Chiefs of Staff to back it up" (Howe, 1989). But
- proceed anyway, Howe was told. Now she was furious at both HBO
- and Doty.
-
-
-
- When she called him at the base, he remarked that he had good
- news and bad news. She and a small crew would soon be able to
- interview the retired colonel (then a captain) who had spent
- three years with EBE-1. The bad news was that it would be three
- months before the thousands of feet of film of EBE-1 and the
- Holloman landing/contact would be available. Meanwhile, before
- she could screen the footage, Howe would have to sign three
- security oaths and undergo a background check. She would also
- have to supply photographs of all the technical assistants who
- would accompany her to the interview.
-
- The interview was repeatedly set up and canceled. Then in June
- Doty called to say he was officially out of the project. This was
- a blow because Doty was the only one she could call. She did not
- know how to get in touch with the others and always had to wait
- for them to contact her.
-
- By October the contacts had decreased. The same month her
- contract with HBO expired. All she had was the name of the
- Washington contact. In March 1984 this individual called her
- office three times, although she was out of town working on a
- non-UFO story at the time. "Upon returning home," she writes, "I
- learned the man was contacting me to explain there would be
- further delays in the film project after the November 1984
- election" (Howe, 1989).
-
- For Howe that was the end of the matter, except for a brief
- sequel. On March 5, 1988, Doty wrote ufologist Larry W. Bryant,
- who had unsuccessfully sought access to Doty's military records
- through the Freedom of Information Act, and denied that he had
- ever discussed government UFO secrets or promised footage of
- crashed discs, bodies and live EBEs. Howe responded by making a
- sworn statement about the meeting an producing copies of her
- correspondence from the period with both Doty and HBO.
-
-
- In 1989 Moore said that "in early 1983 I became aware that Rick
- [Doty] was involved with a team of several others, including one
- fellow from Denver that I knew of and at least one who was
- working out of Washington, D.C., in playing an elaborate
- disinformation scheme against a prominent UfO researcher who, at
- the time, had close connections with a major television film
- company interested in doing a UFO documentary." He was referring
- to Howe, of course. The episode was a counterintelligence sting
- operation, part of the "wall of disinformation" intended to
- "confuse" the Bennewitz issue and to "call his credibility into
- question." Because of Howe's interest in Bennewitz's work,
- according to Moore, "certain elements within the intelligence
- community were concerned that the story of his having intercepted
- low frequency electromagnetic emissions from the Coyote Canyon
- area of the Kirtland/Sandia complex would end up as part of a
- feature film. Since this in turn might influence others (possibly
- even the Russians) to attempt similar experiments, someone in a
- control position apparently felt it had to be stopped before it
- got out of hand." In his observation, Moore said, "the government
- seemed hell bent on severing the ties that existed between [Howe]
- and [HBO]" (Moore, 1989b).
-
- Doty's assertion that Howe had misrepresented their meeting was
- not to be taken seriously, according to Moore, since Doty was
- bound by a security oath and could not discuss the matter freely
- Moore said that the Aztec crash, known beyond reasonable doubt
- never to have occurred, was something Doty had added to the
- document after learning from Moore of his recent investigation of
- the hoax.
-
- In December 1984, in the midst of continuing contact with their
- own sources (Doty and a number of others) who claimed to be
- leaking the secret of the cover-up, Moore's associate Jaime
- Shandera received a roll of 35mm film containing, it turned out
- what purported to be a briefing paper dated November 18, 1952,
- and intended for president-elect Eisenhower. The purported
- author, Adm. Roscoe H. Hillenkoetter, reported that an "Operation
- Majestic-12," consisting of a dozen top scientists, military
- officers and intelligence specialists, had been set up by
- presidential order on September 24, 1947, to study the Roswell
- remains and the four humanoid bodies that had been recovered
- nearby. The document report that the team directed by MJ12 member
- and physiologist Detlev Bronk "has suggested the term 'Extra-
- terrestrial Biological Entities', or 'EBEs', be adopted as the
- standard term of reference for these creatures until such time as
- a more definitive designation can be agreed upon." Brief mention
- is also made of a December 6, 1950, crash along the Texas-Mexico
- border. Nothing is said, however, about live aliens or
- communications with them.
-
- In July 1985 Moore and Shandera, acting on tips from their
- sources, traveled to Washington and spent a few days going
- through recently declassified documents in Record Group 341,
- including Top Secret Air Force intelligence files from USAF
- Headquarters. In the 126th box whose contents they examined, they
- found a brief memo dated July 14, 1954, from Robert Cutler,
- Special Assistant to the President, to Gen. Nathan Twining. It
- says "The president has decided that the MJ-12/SSP [Special
- Studies Project] briefing should take place during the already
- scheduled White House meeting of July 16 rather than following it
- as previously intended. More precise arrangements will be
- explained to you upon your arrival. Your concurrence in the above
- change of arrangements is assumed" (Friedman, 1987).
-
- The Cutler/Twining memo, as it would be called in the
- controversies that erupted after Moore released the MJ-12
- document to the world in the spring of 1987, is the only official
- document-not to be confused with such disputed ones as the
- November 17, 1980, Aquarius document-to mention MJ-12. (Several
- critics of the MJ-12 affair have questioned the memo's
- authenticity as well, but so far without unambiguous success.)
- The memo does not, of course, say what the MJ12 Special Studies
- Project was.
-
- MJ-12 Goes Public: Just prior to Moore's release of the MJ-12
- briefing paper, another copy was leaked to British ufologist
- Timothy Good, who took his copy to the press. The first newspaper
- article on it appeared in the London Observer of May 31, 1987,
- and soon it was the subject of pieces in the New York Times,
- Washington Post and ABC-TV's Nightline. It was also denounced,
- not altogether persuasively, both by professional debunkers and
- by many ufologists. The dispute would rage without resolution
- well into 1989, when critics discovered that President Truman's
- signature on the September 24, 1947, executive order (appended to
- the briefing paper) was exactly like his signature on an
- undisputed, UFO-unrelated October 1, 1947, letter to his science
- adviser (and supposed MJ-12 member) Vannevar Bush. To all
- appearances a forger had appended a real signature to a fake
- letter. The MJ-12 document began to look like another
- disinformation scheme.
-
- Although acutely aware of the mass of disinformation circulating
- throughout the UFO community, Moore remained convinced that at
- least some of the information his own sources were giving him was
- authentic. In 1988 he provided two of his sources, "Falcon" (Sgt.
- Doty according to some) and "Condor" (later claimed to be former
- U.S. Air Force Capt. Robert Collins), to a television production
- company. (Moore and Shandera had given them avian names and
- called the sources collectively "the birds.") UFO Cover-up . . .
- Live, a two-hour program, aired in October 1988, with Falcon and
- Condor, their faces shaded, their voices altered, relating the
- same tales with which they had regaled Moore and Shandera. The
- show, almost universally judged a laughable embarrassment, was
- most remembered for the informants' statements that the aliens
- favored ancient Tibetan music and strawberry ice cream. Critics
- found the latter allegation especially hilarious.
-
-
- Lear's Conspiracy Theory: Events on the UFO scene were taking a
- yet more bizarre turn that same year as even wilder tales began
- to circulate. The first to tell them was John Lear, a pilot with
- a background in the CIA and the estranged son of aviation legend
- William P. Lear. Lear had surfaced two or three years earlier,
- but aside from his famous father there seemed little to
- distinguish him from any of hundreds of other UFO buffs who
- subscribe to the field's publications and show up at its
- conferences. But then he started claiming that unnamed sources
- had told him of extraordinary events which made those told by
- Doty and the birds sound like bland and inconsequential
- anecdotes.
-
- According to Lear, not just a few but dozens of flying saucers
- had crashed over the years. In 1962 the U.S. government started
- Project Redlight to find a way to fly the recovered craft, some
- relatively intact. A similar project exists even now and is run
- out of supersecret military installation; one is Area 51
- (specifically at a facility called S4) at the Nevada Test Site
- and the other is set up near Dulce, New Mexico. These areas,
- unfortunately, may no longer be under the control of the
- government or even of the human race. In the late 1960s an
- official agency so secret that not even the President may know of
- it had made an agreement with the aliens. In exchange for
- extraterrestrial technology the secret government would permit
- (or at least not interfere with) a limited number of abductions
- of human beings; the aliens, however, were to provide a list of
- those they planned to kidnap.
-
- All went relatively well for a few years. Then in 1973 the
- government discovered that thousands of persons who were not on
- the alien's list were being abducted. The resulting tensions led
- to an altercation in 1978 or 1979. The aliens held and then
- killed 44 top scientists as well as a number of Delta force
- troops who had tried to free them. Ever since, frantic efforts,
- of which the Strategic Defense Initiative ("Star Wars") is the
- most visible manifestation, have been made to develop a defense
- against the extraterrestrials, who are busy putting implants into
- abductees (as many as one in 10 Americans) to control their
- behavior. At some time in the near future these people will be
- used for some unknown, apparently sinister, alien purpose. Even
- worse than all this, though, is the aliens' interest in Human
- flesh. Sex and other organs are taken from both human beings and
- cattle and used to create androids in giant vats located in
- underground laboratories at Area 51 and Dulce. The
- extraterrestrials, from an ancient race near the end of its
- evolution, also use materials from human body parts as a method
- of biological rejuvenation. ("In order to sustain themselves," he
- said, "they use an enzyme or hormonal secretion obtained from the
- tissue that they extract from humans and animals. The secretions
- are then mixed with hydrogen peroxide and applied on the skin by
- spreading or dipping parts of their bodies in the solution. The
- body absorbs the solution, then excretes the waste back through
- the skin" [Berk and Renzi, 1988].)
-
- One of Lear's major sources was Bennewitz, who had first heard
- these scary stories from AFOSI personnel at Kirtland in the early
- 1980s. By this time Bennewitz had become something of a guru to a
- small group of UFO enthusiasts, Linda Howe among them, who
- believed extraterrestrials were mutilating cattle and had no
- trouble believing they might do the same thing to people. Also
- Lear, whose political views are far to the right of center, was
- linking his UFO beliefs with conspiracy theories about a
- malevolent secret American government which was attempting to use
- the aliens for its own purposes, including enslavement of the
- world's people through drug addiction. A considerable body of
- rightwing conspiracy literature, some with barely-concealed anti-
- Semitic overtones, was making similar charges. Lear himself was
- not anti-Semitic, but he did share conspiracy beliefs with those
- who were.
-
- Another of his claimed sources was an unnamed physicist who,
- Lear claimed, had actually worked at S4. To the many ufologists
- who rejected Lear's stories as paranoid, lunatic or fabricated
- (though not by the patently-sincere Lear), there was widespread
- skepticism about this physicist's existence. It turned out that
- he did indeed exist. His name is Robert Lazar, who, according to
- a story broken by reporter George Knapp on KLAS-TV, the ABC
- affiliate in Las Vegas, on November 11 and 13, 1989, claims to
- have worked on alien technology projects at Area 51. Lazar, whose
- story is being investigated by both ufologists and mainstream
- journalists, has not endorsed Lear's claims about human-alien
- treaties, man-eating ETs or any of the rest and has distanced
- himself from Lear and his associates. His claims, while fantastic
- by most standards, are modest next to Lears.
-
- Cooper's Conspiracy Theory: Soon Lear was joined by someone with
- an even bigger supply of fabulous yarns: one Milton William
- Cooper. Cooper surfaced on December 18, 1988, when his account of
- the fantastic secrets he learned while a Naval petty officer
- appeared on a computer network subscribed to by ufologists and
- others interested in anomalous phenomena. Cooper said that while
- working as a quartermaster with an intelligence team for Adm.
-
-
- Bernard Clarey, Commander in Chief of the Pacific Meet, in the
- early 1970s he saw two documents, Project Grudge Special Report
- 13 and a Majority briefing. (In conventional UFO history, Grudge
- was the second public Air Force UFO project, superseding the
- original Sign, in early 1949 and lasting until late 1951, when it
- was renamed Blue Book. Whereas Sign investigators at one time
- concluded UFOs were of extraterrestrial origin--a conclusion the
- Air force leadership found unacceptable--Grudge, as its name
- suggests coincidentally or otherwise, was known for its hostility
- to the idea of UFOs and for its eagerness to assign conventional
- explanations, warranted or otherwise, to the sighting reports
- that came its way.) Cooper's account of what was in these reports
- is much like the by-now familiar story of crashes, bodies,
- contacts and projects, with some elaborations. Moreover, he said
- the aliens were called "ALFs" (which as any television viewer
- knows, stands for Alien Life forms) and the "M" in MJ-12 is for
- Majority not Majestic. Later he would say he had seen photographs
- of aliens, including a type he called the "big-nosed grays"-like
- those that supposedly landed at Holloman in 1964 or 1971. The
- U.S. government was in contact with them and alien-technology
- projects were going on at Area 51.
-
- If this sounded like a rehash of Moore and Lear, that was only
- because Cooper had yet to pull out all the stops. On May 23,
- 1989, Cooper produced a 25-page document titled The Secret
- Government: The Origin, Identity And Purpose of MJ-12. He
- presented it as a lecture in Las Vegas a few weeks later. In
- Cooper's version of the evolving legend, the "secret government,"
- an unscrupulous group of covert CIA and other intelligence
- operatives who keep many of their activities sealed from even the
- President's knowledge, runs the country. One of its first acts
- was to murder one-time Secretary of Defense (and alleged early
- MJ-12 member) James Forrestal the death was made to look like
- suicide-because he threatened to expose the UFO cover-up.
- Nonetheless, President Truman, fearing an invasion from outer
- space, kept other nations, including the Soviet Union, abreast of
- developments. But keeping all this secret was a real problem, so
- an international secret society known as the Bilderbergers,
- headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland, was formed. Soon it became
- a secret world government and "now controls everything," Cooper
- said.
-
- All the while flying saucers were dropping like flies out of the
- heavens. In 1953 there were 10 crashes in the United States
- alone. Also that year, astronomers observed huge spaceships
- heading toward the earth and in time entering into orbit around
- the equator. Project Plato was established to effect
- communication with these new aliens. One of the ships landed and
- a face-to-face meeting took place, and plans for diplomatic
- relations were laid. Meanwhile a race of human-looking aliens
- warned the U.S. government that the new visitors were not to be
- trusted and that if the government got rid of its nuclear
- weapons, the human aliens would help us in our spiritual
- development, which would keep us from destroying ourselves
- through wars and environmental pollution. The government rejected
- these overtures.
-
- The big-nosed grays, the ones who had been orbiting the equator,
- landed again, this time at Holloman AFB, in 1954 and reached an
- agreement with the U.S. government. These beings stated that they
- were from a dying planet that orbits Betelguese. At some point in
- the not too distant future, they said, they would have to leave
- there for good. A second meeting took place not long afterwards
- at Edwards AFB in California. This time President Eisenhower was
- there to sign a formal treaty and to meet the first alien
- ambassador, "His Omnipotent Highness Krlll," pronounced Krill.
- He, in common with his fellow space travelers, wore a trilateral
- insignia on his uniform; the same design appears on all
- Betelguese spacecraft.
-
- According to Cooper's account, the treaty's provisions were
- these: Neither side would interfere in the affairs of the other.
- The aliens would abduct humans from time to time and would return
- them unharmed, with no memory of the event. It would provide a
- list of names of those it was going to take. The U.S. government
- would keep the aliens' presence a secret and it would receive
- advanced technology from them. The two sides would exchange 16
- individuals each for the purpose of learning from and teaching
- each other. The aliens would stay on earth and the humans would
- go to the other planet, then return after a specified period of
- time. The two sides would jointly occupy huge underground bases
- which would be constructed at hidden locations in the Southwest.
-
- (It should be noted that the people listed as members of MJ-12
- are largely from the Council on Foreign Relations and the
- Trilateral Commission. These organizations play a prominent role
- in conspiracy theories of the far right. In a book on the subject
- George Johnson writes, "After the Holocaust of World War II,
- anti-Semitic conspiracy theories became repugnant to all but the
- fringe of the American right. Populist fears of the power of the
- rich became focused instead on organizations that promote
- international capitalism, such as the Trilateral Commission, the
- Council on Foreign Relations, and the Bilderbergers, a group of
- world leaders and businesspeople who held one of their early
- conferences on international relations at the Bilderberg Hotel in
- the Netherlands" [Johnson, 1983]. According to Cooper, the
- trilateral emblem is taken directly from the alien flag. He adds
- that under Presidents Nixon, Ford and Carter MJ-12 became known
- as the 50 Committee. Under Reagan it was renamed the PI-40
- Committee.)
-
-
- By 1955, during the Eisenhower years, Cooper charged, officials
- learned for certain what they had already begun to suspect a year
- earlier: that the aliens had broken the treaty before the ink on
- it had time to dry. They were killing and mutilating both human
- beings and animals, failing to supply a complete list of
- abductees, and not returning some of those they had taken. On top
- of that, they were conspiring with the Soviets, manipulating
- society through occultism, witchcraft, religion and secret
- organizations. Eisenhower prepared a secret executive memo, NSC
- 5411, ordering a study group of 35 top members (the "Jason
- Society") associated with the Council on Foreign Relations to
- "examine aIl the facts, evidence, lies, and deception and
- discover the truth of the alien question" (Cooper, 1989). Because
- the resulting meetings were held at Quantico Marine Base, they
- were called the Quantico meetings. Those participating included
- Edward Teller, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Henry Kissinger and Nelson
- Rockefeller.
-
- The group decided that the danger to established social,
- economic, religious and political institutions was so grave that
- no one must know about the aliens, not even Congress. That meant
- that alternative sources of funding would have to be found. It
- also concluded that the aliens were using human organs and tissue
- to replenish their deteriorating genetic structure.
-
- Further, according to Cooper, overtures were made to the Soviet
- Union and other nations so that all the earth could join together
- to deal with the alien menace. Research into sophisticated new
- weapons systems commenced. Intelligence sources penetrated the
- Vatican hoping to learn the Fatima prophecy which had been kept
- secret ever since 1917. It was suspected that the Fatima,
- Portugal, "miracle" was an episode of alien manipulation. As it
- turned out, the prophecy stated that in 1992 a child would unite
- the world under the banner of a false religion. By 1995 people
- would figure out that he was the Anti-Christ. That same year
- World War III would begin when an alliance of Arab nations
- invaded Israel. This would lead to nuclear war in 1999. The next
- four years would see horrible death and suffering all over the
- planet. Christ would return in 2011.
-
- When confronted about this, claimed Cooper, the aliens candidly
- acknowledged it was true. They knew it because they had traveled
- into the future via time machine and observed it with their own
- eyes. They added that they created us through genetic
- manipulation. Later the Americans and the Soviets also developed
- time travel and confirmed the Fatima/ET vision of the future.
-
- In 1957 the Jason group met again, by order of Eisenhower, to
- decide what to do. It came up with three alternatives: (l) Use
- nuclear bombs to blow holes in the stratosphere so that pollution
- could escape into space. (2) Build a huge network of tunnels
- under the earth and save enough human beings of varying cultures,
- occupations and talents so that the race could reemerge after the
- nuclear and environmental catastrophes to come. Everybody else-
- i.e., the rest of humanity--would be left on the surface
- presumably to die. (3) Employ alien and terrestrial technology to
- leave earth and colonize the moon (code name "Adam") and Mars
- ("Eve"). The first alternative was deemed impractical, so the
- Americans and the Soviets started working on the other two.
- Meanwhile they decided that the population would have to be
- controlled, which could be done most easily by killing off as
- many "undesirables" as possible. Thus AIDS and other deadly
- diseases were introduced into the population. Another idea to
- raise needed funds was quickly acted on: sell drugs on a massive
- scale. An ambitious young member of the Council on Foreign
- Relations, a Texas oil-company president named George Bush, was
- put in charge of the project, with the aid of the CIA. "The plan
- worked better than anyone had thought " CooPer said. "The CIA now
- controls all the worlds [sic] illegal drug markets" (Cooper,
- 1989).
-
- Unknown to just about everybody, a secret American/Soviet/alien
- space base existed on the dark side of the moon. By the early
- 1960s human colonies were thriving on the surface of Mars. All
- the while the naive people of the earth were led to believe the
- Soviets and the Americans were something other than the closest
- allies. But Cooper's story got even more bizarre and byzantine.
-
- He claimed that in 1963, when President Kennedy found out some
- of what was going on, he gave an ultimatum to MJ-12: get out of
- the drug business. He also declared that in 1964 he would tell
- the American people about the alien visitation. Agents of MJ-12
- ordered his assassination. Kennedy was murdered in full view of
- many hundreds of onlookers, none of whom apparently noticed, by
- the Secret Service agent driving the President's car in the
- motorcade.
-
- In 1969, reported Cooper, a confrontation between human
- scientists and aliens at the Dulce laboratory resulted in the
- former's being taken hostage by the latter. Soldiers who tried to
- free the scientists were killed, unable to overcome the superior
- alien weapons. The incident led to a two-year rupture in
- relations. The alliance was resumed in 1971 and continues to this
- day, even as a vast invisible financial empire run by the CIA,
- the NSA and the Council on Foreign Relations runs drugs, launders
- money and encourages massive street crime so that Americans will
- be susceptible to gun-control legislation. The CIA has gone so
- far as to employ drugs and hypnosis to cause mentally-unstable
- individuals to commit mass murder of schoolchildren and other
- innocents, the point being to encourage anti-gun hysteria. All of
- this is part of the plot, aided and abetted by the mass media
- (also under the secret government's control), to so scare
- Americans that they will soon accept the declaration of martial
- law when that happens, people will be rounded up and put in
- concentration camps already in place. From there they will be
- flown to the moon and Mars to work as slave labor in the space
- colonies.
-
-
- The conspirators already run the world. As Cooper put it, "Even
- a cursory investigation by the most inexperienced researcher will
- show that the members of the Council on Foreign Relations and the
- Trilateral commission control the major foundations, all of the
- major media and publishing interests, the largest banks, all the
- major corporations, the - upper echelons of the government, and
- many other vital interests."
-
- Reaction to Lear and Cooper: Whereas Lear had felt some
- obligation to name a source or two, or at least to mutter
- something about "unnamed sources," Cooper told his lurid and
- outlandish tale as if it were so self-evidently true that sources
- or supporting data were irrelevant. And to the enthusiastic
- audiences flocking to Cooper's lectures, no evidence was
- necessary. By the fall of the year Cooper was telling his
- stories--whose sources were, in fact, flying-saucer folklore,
- AFOSI disinformation unleashed during the Bennewitz episode,
- conspiracy literature, and outright fiction--to large crowds of
- Californians willing to pay $l0 or $15 apiece for the thrill of
- being scared silly.
-
- Lear and Cooper soon were joined by two other tellers of tales
- of UFO horrors and Trilateral conspiracies, William English and
- John Grace (who goes under the pseudonym "Val Valarian" and heads
- the Nevada Aerial Research Group in Las Vegas).
-
- Few if any mainstream ufologists took these stories seriously
- and at first treated them as something of a bad joke. But when it
- became clear that Lear, Cooper and company were commanding
- significant media attention and finding a following among the
- larger public interested in ufology's fringes, where a claim's
- inherent improbability had never been seen as an obstacle to
- believe in it, the leaders of the UFO community grew ever more
- alarmed.
-
- One leader who was not immediately alarmed was Walter H. Andrus,
- Jr., director of the Mutual UFO Network (MUFON), one of the two
- largest UFO organizations in the United States (the other being
- the J. Allen Hynek Center for UFO Studies [CUFOS]). In 1987,
- before Lear had proposed what some wags would call the Dark Side
- Hypothesis, he had offered to host the 1989 MUFON conference in
- Las Vegas. Andrus agreed. But as Lear's true beliefs became
- known, leading figures within MUFON expressed concern about
- Lear's role in the conference. When Andrus failed to respond
- quickly, MUFON officials were infuriated.
-
- Facing a possible palace revolt, Andrus informed Lear that
- Cooper, whom Lear had invited to speak at the conference, was not
- an acceptable choice. But to the critics on the MUFON board and
- elsewhere in the organization, this was hardly enough. One of
- them, longtime ufologist Richard Hall, said this was "like
- putting a Band-Aid on a hemorrhage" (Hall, 1989). In a heated
- telephone exchange Andrus called Hall's objections to Lear "just
- one man's opinion" and claimed support, which turned out not to
- exist, from other MUFON notables. In a widely-distributed open
- letter to Andrus, Hall wrote, "Having Lear run the symposium and
- be a major speaker at it is comparable to NICAP in the 1960's
- having George Adamski run a NICAP conference! " (NICAP, the
- National Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena, of which
- Hall was executive secretary in the late 1950s and much of the
- 1960s, was a conservative UFO-research organization which
- attacked as fraudulent the claims of Adamski, who wrote books
- about his meetings with Venusians and distributed photographs of
- what he said were their spaceships.) Hall went on, "You seem to
- be going for the colorful and the spectacular rather than for the
- critical-minded approach of science; you even expressed the view-
- in effect-that having a panel to question Lear critically would
- be good show biz and the 'highlight' of the symposium. Maybe so,
- but it obviously would dominate the entire program, grab off all
- major news media attention, and put UFO research in the worst
- possible light." Hall declared, "I am hereby resigning from the
- MUFON Board and I request that my name be removed from all MUFON
- publications or papers that indicate me to be a Board Member."
-
- Fearing more resignations, Andrus moved to make Lear barely more
- than a guest at his own conference. He was not to lecture there,
- as previously planned, and hosting duties would be handled, for
- the most part, by others. Lear ended up arranging an "alternative
- conference" at which he, Cooper, English and Don Ecker presented
- the latest elaborations on the Dark Side Hypothesis.
- Meanwhile another storm was brewing. On March 1, 1989, an
- Albuquerque ufologist, Robert Hastings, issued a 13-page
- statement, with 37 pages of appended documents, and mailed it to
- many of ufology's most prominent individuals. Hastings opened
- with these remarks:
-
- "First, it has been established that 'Falcon,' one of the
- principle [sic] sources of the MJ-12 material, is Richard C.
- Doty, formerly attached to District 17 Air Force Office of
- Special Investigations (AFOSI) at Kirtland Air Force Base,
- Albuquerque, New Mexico. Sgt. Doty retired from the U.S. Air
- Force on October 1, 1988.
-
-
- "How do I know that Doty is 'Falcon?' During a recent telephone
- conversation, Linda Moulton Howe told me that when Sgt. Doty
- invited her to his office at Kirtland AFB in early April 1983,
- and showed her a purportedly authentic U.S. government document
- on UFOs, he identified himself as code-name 'Falcon' and stated
- that it was Bill Moore who had given him that name.
-
- "Also, in early December 1988, a ranking member of the
- production team responsible for the 'UFO Cover Up?-Live'
- television documentary confirmed that Doty is 'Falcon.' This same
- individual also identified the second MJ-12 source who appeared
- on the program, 'Condor' as Robert Collins who was, until
- recently, a Captain in the U.S. Air Force. Like Doty, he was
- stationed at KAFB when he left the service late last year."
- (Collins, a scientist, was assigned to the plasma physics group
- at Sandia National Laboratories on the Kirtland Air Force Base.
- Following his retirement he moved to Indiana and remains actively
- interested in UFOs.)
-
- Hastings reviewed evidence of Doty's involvement in the
- concoction of various questionable documents and stories,
- including the Ellsworth tale and the Weitzel affair. He also
- noted important discrepancies between the paper Howe saw and the
- MJ-12 briefing document. For example, while the first mentioned
- the alleged Aztec crash, the second said nothing about it at all.
- Hastings wondered, "[I]f the briefing paper that Sgt. Doty showed
- to Linda Howe was genuine, what does that say about the accuracy
- (and authenticity) of the Eisenhower document? If, on the other
- hand, the former was bogus and was meant to mislead Howe for some
- reason, what does that say about Richard 'Falcon' Doty's
- reliability as a source for MJ-12 material as a whole?"
- (Hastings, 1989). Hastings also had much critical to say about
- Moore, especially about an incident in which Moore had flashed a
- badge in front of ufologist/cover-up investigator Lee Graham and
- indicated he was working with the government on a project to
- release UFO information. (Moore would characterize this as a
- misguided practical joke.)
-
- Both Moore and Doty denied that the latter was Falcon. They
- claimed Doty had been given that pseudonym long after the 1983
- meeting with Howe. Howe, however, stuck by her account. Moore and
- Doty said the real Falcon, an older man than Doty had been in the
- studio audience as the video of his interview was being broadcast
- on UFO Cover-up. . . Live. Doty himself was in New Mexico
- training with the state police.
-
- Moore's Confession: By mid-1989 the two most controversial
- figures in ufology were Moore and Lear. Moore's MUFON lecture on
- July 1 did nothing to quiet his legion of critics. On his arrival
- in Las Vegas, Moore checked into a different hotel from the one
- at which the conference was being held. He already had refused to
- submit his paper for publication in the symposium proceedings, so
- no one knew what he would say. He had also stipulated that he
- would accept no questions from the floor.
-
- Moore's speech stunned and angered much of the audience. At one
- point the shouts and jeers of Lear's partisans brought
- proceedings to a halt until order was restored. Moore finished
- and exited immediately. He left Las Vegas not long afterwards.
-
- In his lecture Moore spoke candidly, for the first time, of his
- part in the counterintelligence operation against Bennewitz. "My
- role in the affair," he said, "was largely that of a freelancer
- providing information on Paul's current thinking and activities."
- Doty, "faithfully carrying out orders which he personally found
- distasteful," was one of those involved in the effort to confuse
- and discredit Bennewitz. Because of his success at this effort,
- Moore suggested, Doty was chosen by the real "Falcon" as "liaison
- person, although I really don't know. Frankly, I don't believe
- that Doty does either. In my opinion he was simply a pawn in a
- much larger game, just as I was."
-
- From disinformation passed on by AFOSI sources, and his own
- observations and guesses, according to Moore, "by mid-1982"
- Bennewitz had put together a story that "contained virtually all
- of the elements found in the current crop of rumors being
- circulated around the UFO community." Moore was referring to the
- outlandish tales Lear and Cooper were telling. Moore said that
- "when I first ran into the disinformation operation . . . being
- run on Bennewitz . . . [i)t seemed to me . . . I was in a rather
- unique position. There I was with my foot . . . in the door of a
- secret counterintelligence game that gave every appearance of
- being somehow directly connected to a high-level government UFO
- project, and, judging by the positions of the people I knew to be
- directly involved with it, definitely had something to do with
- national security! There was no way I was going to allow the
- opportunity to pass me by without learning at least something
- about what was going on. . . . I would play the disinformation
- game, get my hands dirty just often enough to lead those
- directing the process into believing that I was doing exactly
- what they wanted me to do, and all the while continue to burrow
- my way into the matrix so as to learn as much as possible about
- who was directing it and why." Some of the same people who were
- passing alleged UFO secrets on to Moore were also involved in the
- operation against Bennewitz. Moore knew that some of the material
- he was getting--essentially a mild version of the Bennewitz
- scenario, without the horror, paranoia and conspiracy--was false,
- but he (along with Jaime Shandera and Stanton Friedman, to whom
- he confided the cover-up story in June 1982; Friedman, however,
- would not learn of Moore's role in the Bennewitz episode until
- seven years later) felt that some of it was probably true, since
- an invariable characteristic of disinformation is that it
- contains some facts. Moore also said that Linda Howe had been the
- victim of one of Doty's disinformation operations.
-
- Before he stopped cooperating with such schemes in 1984, Moore
- said, he had given "routine information" to AFOSI about certain
- other individuals in the UFO community. Subsequently he claimed
- that during this period this emphasis) "three other members of
- the UFO community . . . were actively doing the same thing. I
- have since learned of a fourth. . . . All four are prominent
- individuals whose identities, if disclosed, would cause
- considerable controversy in the UFO community and bring serious
- embarrassment to two of its major organizations. To the best of
- my knowledge, at least two of these people are still actively
- involved" (Moore, 1989b).
-
- Although he would not reveal the identities of the government
- informants within ufology, Moore gave the names of several
- persons "who were the subject of intelligence community interest
- between 1980 and 1984." They were:
-
- (1) Len Stringfield, a ufologist known for his interest in
- crashed-disc stories; in 1980 he had been set up by a
- counterintelligence operative who gave him phony pictures of what
- purported to be humanoids in cold storage.
-
- (2) The late Pete Mazzola, whose knowledge of film footage from
- a never-publicized Florida UFO case was of great interest to
- counterintelligence types. Moore was directed to urge Mazzola to
- send the footage to ufologist Kal Korff (who knew nothing of the
- scheme) for analysis; then Moore would make a copy and pass it on
- to Doty. But Mazzola never got the film, despite promises, and
- the incident came to nothing. "I was left with the impression,"
- Moore wrote, "that the file had been intercepted and the
- witnesses somehow persuaded to cease communication with Mazzola."
-
- (3) Peter Gersten, legal counsel for Citizens Against UFO
- Secrecy (CAUS), who had spearheaded a (largely unsuccessful)
- legal suit against the NSA seeking UFO information.
-
- (4) Larry Fawcett, an official of CAUS and coauthor of a book on
- the cover-up, Clear Intent (1984).
-
- (5) James and Coral Lorenzen, the directors of the Aerial
- Phenomena Research Organization (APRO) periodically "subjects of
- on-again, off again interest . . . mostly passive monitoring
- rather than active meddling," according to Moore. Between 1980
- and 1982 APRO employed a "cooperative" secretary who passed on
- confidential material to counterintelligence personnel.
-
- (6) Larry W. Bryant, who was battling without success in the
- courts to have UFO secrets revealed. Moore said, "His name came
- up often in discussions but I never had any direct involvement in
- whatever activities revolved around him."
-
- These revelations sent shock waves through the UFO community. In
- September CAUS devoted virtually all of an issue of its magazine
- Just Cause to a harshly critical review of Moore's activities.
- Barry Greenwood declared that the "outrageousness" of Moore's
- conduct "cannot be described. Moore, one of the major critics of
- government secrecy on UFOs, had covertly informed on people who
- thought he was their friend and colleague. Knowing full well that
- the government people with whom he was dealing were active
- disinformants, Moore pursued a relationship with them and
- observed the deterioration of Paul Bennewitz'[s] physical and
- mental health. . . . Moore reported the effects of the false
- information regularly to some of the very same people who were
- 'doing it' to Paul. And Moore boasted in his speech as to how
- effective it was" (Greenwood, 1989). Greenwood complained further
- about Moore's admission that on the disastrous Cover-up . . .
- Live show Falcon and Condor had said things that they knew were
- untrue. "In the rare situation where two hours of prime time
- television are given over to a favorable presentation of UFOs,
- here we have a fair portion of the last hour wasted in presenting
- what Moore admits to be false data. . . . Yet he saw fit to go
- ahead and carry on a charade, making UFO research look ridiculous
- in the process. Remarks by Falcon and Condor about the aliens'
- lifestyle and preference for Tibetan music and strawberry ice
- cream were laughable." So far as Greenwood and CAUS, skeptical of
- the MJ-12 briefing document from the first, were concerned, "July
- 1, 1989, may well be remembered in the history of UFO research as
- the day when the 'Majestic 12' story came crashing to Earth in a
- heap of rubble. Cause of death: Suicide!"
-
- Nonetheless it seemed unlikely that MJ-12, EBEs, and other
- cover-up matters would pass away soon. The Dark Siders appeared
- well on their way to starting a new occult movement in America
- and elsewhere. Among movie conservative ufologists many
- legitimate questions about conceivably more substantive matters
- remained to be answered. A reinvestigation of the Roswell
- incident by Don Schmitt and Kevin D. Randle of CUFOS produced
- what appeared to be solid new evidence of a UFO crash and cover
- up. The emergence of Robert Lazar, who even a mainstream
- journalist such as television reporter George Knapp concluded is
- telling the truth as he knows it possibly suggested a degree of
- substance to recurrent rumors about developments in Area 51 and
- S4. Even Moore's critics were puzzled by the extraordinary
- interest of intelligence operatives in ufologists and the UFO
- phenomenon, going back in time long before Bennewitz's
- interception of low-frequency signals at Kirtland and ahead to
- the present. Why go to all this trouble and expense, with so many
- persons over such a period of time, if there are no real UFO
- secrets to protect?
-
- Moore says he is still working with the "birds," who are as
- active as ever. The birds tell him, he says, that disinformation
- is used not only against ufologists but even against those
- insiders like themselves who are privy to the cover-up. Those in
- charge are "going to great lengths to mislead their own people."
- At one point the birds were told that there is no substance to
- abduction reports, only to learn later, by accident, that a major
- high-level study had been done. "Even people with a need to know
- didn't know about it," he says. "The abduction mess caused a lot
- of trouble. There may have been an official admission of the
- cover-up by now if the abductions had not come into prominence in
- the 1980s."
-
- As for the stories of ongoing contact between the U.S.
- government and extraterrestrial biological entities, he says
- there is, in his observation, a "pretty good possibility, better
- than three to one," that such a thing is happening. "But I don't
- think we can communicate with them. Perhaps we only intercept
- their communications. Or maybe they communicate with us."
-
- He thinks he has found MJ-12. "It's not in a place anybody
- looked," he says. "Not an agency one would have expected. But
- when you think about it, it fits there" (Moore, 1990).
-
- Doty, now a New Mexico State Police officer, was decertified as
- an AFOSI agent on July 15, 1986, for "misconduct" related to an
- incident (not concerned with UFOs) that occurred while he was
- stationed in West Germany. In August Doty requested a discharge
- from the Air Force and was sent to New Jersey to be separated
- from the service. But then, Doty says, the Senior Enlisted
- Advisor for AFOSI made a trip to the Military Personnel Center at
- Randolph AFB, Texas, and asked that Doty be reassigned to
- Kirtland, where his son lived. In September Col. Richard Law,
- Commander of AFOSI District 70, rescinded Doty's decertification
- and assigned him to Kirtland as a services career specialist
- (i.e., an Air Force recruiter). When he left the Air Force in
- October 1988, he was superintendent of the 1606 Services
- Squadron. Doty remains close to Moore and uncommunicative with
- nearly everyone else. All he will say is that one day a book will
- tell his side of the story and back it up with "Official
- Government Documents" (Doty, 1989).
-
- Sources:
-
- Berk, Lynn, and David Renzi. "Former CIA
-
- Pilot, Others Say Aliens Are Among Us." Las Vegas Sun (May 22,
- 1988).
-
- Cannon, Martin. "Earth Versus the Flying Saucers: THe Amazing
- Story of John Lear." UFO Universe 9 (MarcH 1990): 8-12.
-
- Clark, Jerome. "Editorial: Flying Saucer Fascism." International
- UFO Reporter 14, 4 (July/August 1989): 3, 22-23.
-
- Cooper, Milton William. The Secret Government: The Origin,
- Identity, and Purpose of MJ-12. Fullerton, CA: The Author, May
- 23, 1989.
-
- Doty, RicHard. Letter to Philip J. Klass (May 24, 1989).
-
- Emenegger, Robert. UFO's Past, Present and Future. New York:
- Ballantine Books, 1974.
-
- Friedman, Stanton T. "MJ-12: THe Evidence So Far." International
- UFO Reporter 12, 5 (September/October 1987): 13-20.
-
- Govt. -Alien Liaison? Top-Secret Documents. New Brunswick, NJ:
- UFO Investigators League, D.d.
-
- Greenwood, Barry. "A Majestic Deception." Just Cause 20
- (September 1989): 1-14.
-
- Greenwood, Barry. "Notes on Peter Gersten's Meeting witH SA
- RicHard Doty, 1/83." Just Cause 16 (June 1988): 7.
-
- Hall, RicHard H. Letter to Walter H. Andrus, Jr. (MarcH 18,
- 1989).
-
- Hastings, Robert. The MJ-12 Affair: Facts, Questions, Comments.
- Albuquerque: THe Author, March 1, 1989.
-
- Howe, Linda Moulton. An Alien Harvest: Further Evidence Linking
- Animal Mutilations and Human Abductions to Alien Life Forms.
- Littleton, CO: Linda Moulton Howe Productions, 1989.
-
- Information Originally Intended for Those in the Intelligence
- Community Who Have a "Need to Know" Clearance Status. Canadian
- U.F.O. Research Network: Toronto, n.d.
-
- Johnson, George. Architects of Fear: Conspiracy Theories and
- Paranoia in American Politics. Los Angeles: Jeremy P. Tarcher,
- Inc., 1983.
-
- Maccabee, Bruce, ed. Documents and Supporting Information
- Related to Crashed Flying Saucers and Operation Majestic Twelve.
- Mount Rainer, MD: Fund for UFO Research, 1987.
-
- Moore, William L. "Crashed Saucers: Evidence in Search of
- Proof." In Walter H. Andrus, Jr., and Richard H. Hall, eds. MUFON
- 1985 UFO Symposium Proceedings, 130-79. Seguin, TX: Mutual UfO
- Network, Inc., 1985. Rept.: Burbank: The Author, 1985.
-
- Moore, William L. Interview with Jerome Clark (January 5, 1990).
-
- Moore, William L. The Roswell Investigation: Update and
- Conclusions 1981. Prescott, AZ: The Author, 1981. Rev. ed.: The
- Roswell Investigation: New Evidence in the Search for a crashed
- UFO. Prescott, AZ: The Author, 1982.
-
- Moore, William L. "UfOs and the U S Government, Part 1." Focus
- 4, 4-5-6 (June 30
- 1989a): 1-18. '
-
- Moore, William L. "UfOs and the U S Government, part 11." Focus
- 4, 7-8-9 (September 30, 1989b): 1-3.
-
- Pratt, Bob. "The Truth About the 'Ellsworth Case.'" MUFON UFO
- Journal 191 (January 1984) 6-9. '
-
- Scully, Frank. Behind the Flying Saucers. New York: Henry Holt,
- 1950,
-
- Scully, Frank. "What I've Learned Since Writing 'Behind the
- Flying Saucers.'" Pageant 6 (February 1951): 76-81.
-
- Steinman, William S., with Wendelle C. Stevens. UFO Crash at
- Aztec: A Well Kept Secret. Tucson, AZ: UFO Photo Archives, 1986.
-
- Stringfield, Leonard H. "Status Report on Alleged Alien Cadaver
- Photos." MUFON UFO Journal 154 (December 1980): 11-16.
-
- Todd, Robert G. "MJ-12 Rebuttal." MUFON UFO Journal 261 (January
- 1990): 17-20.
-
-
- END
- FILE NAME: EBE.DOC
-
- --- FD 1.99c
- * Origin: ParaNet Information Service -- Leading UFO Research Network
- (1:310/9
-
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- ----- EOF -----
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