• EBE #1

    From Eddie Wilson@RICKSBBS to All on Mon Jun 15 05:55:03 2026
    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.

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    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

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