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- INFORMNT.TXT - "AN MJ-12 INFORMANT"
- ^^^^^^^^^
- - by T. Scott Crain, Jr.
-
- ======================================================================
-
- Note: The following article was submitted to the MUFON Journal for
- copyrighted publication. It was written in October/89.
-
- ======================================================================
-
-
-
- AN MJ-12 INFORMANT
- ------------------
-
-
- by T. Scott Crain, Jr.
-
-
-
- During the past decade or so, evidence has been stacking up
-
- that the U.S. Government has involved itself in retrieving crashed
-
- UFOs and their occupants. A major outlet for these types of cases
-
- were first reported in the summer of 1978, when Ohio researcher
-
- Leonard H. Stringfield, presented 17 abstracts reviewing 'Retrievals
-
- the Third Kind,' cases of alleged UFOs and occupants in military
-
- custody, at the Mutual UFO Network's annual symposium held in Dayton,
-
- Ohio that year. Critic's of Stringfield's paper argued that because
-
- his informants wished to remain anonymous, it was virtually impossible
-
- to verify the claims. He continued his quest for more details on the
-
- UFO crash retrieval question, and published subsequent updates in 1980
-
- and 1982. But spectacular claims require extraordinary evidence, and
-
- Stringfield's anecdotal evidence was insufficient to prove the case.
-
-
- In 1980, noted linguist Charles Berlitz and UFO investigator
-
- William L. Moore released the book, 'The Roswell Incident' that describes
-
- how the military intervened and kept secret from the American public the
-
- recovery of a crashed UFO and occupants outside Roswell, New Mexico in
-
- 1947. The case was recently reexamined on the September 20, 1989
-
- episode of NBC-TV's 'Unsolved Mysteries,' which highlighted several
-
- witnesses to the investigation and one informant. The informant, Sappho
-
- Henderson of West Hills, California, told how her late husband, Captain
-
- Oliver Wendell Henderson, was the pilot who flew the saucer wreckage in
-
- an Air Force plane to a base in Dayton, Ohio. Walter G. Haut, who was
-
- a public-relations officer at Roswell Army Air Force base in July, 1947,
-
- was also on the show, and verified that wreckage from a flying saucer
-
- was recovered by the Air Force.
-
-
- In September, 1989, UFO researcher Jerome Clark indicates that
-
- at least three dozen new informants have been interviewed, and that the
-
- "Roswell incident is surrendering more and more of its secrets, including
-
- the biggest ones." Investigators for the J. Allen Hynek Center for UFO
-
- Studies are making some interesting discoveries, and hopefully a report
-
- of their findings will be released in the near future.
-
-
- Support that a UFO did crash near Roswell was bolstered up again
-
- in 1987, when English writer Timothy Good published for the first time
-
- alleged official U.S. Government documents outlining how twelve men
-
- working for the U.S. Government orchestrated the recovery and evaluation
-
- of a crashed disc that was removed from Roswell, New Mexico, in July,
-
- 1947. A similar release of this so called 'Briefing Document: Operation
-
- Majestic 12' occurred several weeks later in the USA by the research
-
- team of William L. Moore, Jaime H. Shandera and Stanton T. Friedman.
-
-
- According to the documents, MJ-12 was a group of distinguished
-
- scientists, military and intelligence officials, established by President
-
- Harry Truman to control the recovery of UFOs. Newspapers around the
-
- globe reported the allegations that the United States Government covered
-
- up a UFO crash landing, and recovered it's occupants. But no official
-
- spokesman would confirm that any of this was true. How does one prove
-
- MJ-12 exist and the documents are real?
-
-
- Canadian UFO researcher and nuclear physicist Stanton Friedman,
-
- was awarded a $16,000. grant by the Fund for UFO Research to answer
-
- that question, and he has generated a great deal of information to
-
- support the validity of the documents. Unfortunately for Friedman, and
-
- the rest of the research community, all the original designated MJ-12
-
- members are dead, so any confirmation must come from second hand
-
- information or locating other supporting documents to prove the case.
-
- A progress report of his investigation was made at the 1989 Mutual UFO
-
- Network symposium, held in Las Vegas, Nevada. Friedman reported there
-
- is "...no indication that the documents are fradulent and a host of small
-
- details which tend towards legitimacy for MJ-12."
-
-
- Working on the assumption that the Majestic-12 documents are
-
- possibly authentic, Canadian UFO researcher Grant Cameron and I found an
-
- anchor in which to conduct our own investigation. We decided to pursue
-
- people, not documents. Since the Briefing Document clearly states the
-
- project is a "TOP SECRET Research and Development Intelligence operation..."
-
- responsible to the President of the United States, Cameron and I went
-
- fishing for former members of the R&D Board who were active during the
-
- late 1940's and early 1950's. Someone out there had to have knowledge
-
- of a project of this magnitude.
-
-
- During our hunt, we discovered another researcher who had been
-
- doing a similar check, William Steinman in California. Steinman, author
-
- of the book, 'UFO Crash at Aztec,' had been corresponding with Fred Darwin,
-
- the former Executive Director of the Guided Missile Committee for the
-
- Department of Defense's R & D Board from 1949 to 1954. Steiman asked
-
- Darwin who would be likely candidates for a flying saucer recovery
-
- operation, if there ever were such a project. His reply is extraordinary,
-
- considering he named these people in 1984, three years before the
-
- Majestic-12 documents were made public. Darwin listed the following
-
- names:
-
-
- 1.) Dr. Vannevar Bush
-
- 2.) Dr. Karl T. Compton
-
- 3.) Dr. Lloyd Berkner
-
- 4.) Dr. Robert F. Rinehart
-
- 5.) Dr. Eric A. Walker
-
- 6.) Dr. John Von Neumann
-
-
-
- Bush and Berkner both appeared on the Majestic-12 list in 1987.
-
- One name that came up that we found interesting was Dr. Eric Walker,
-
- former President of the Pennsylvannia State University.
-
-
- The fact that Walker may be involved originated with American
-
- physicist Dr. Robert I. Sarbacher. In the 1950s, Sarbacher was serving
-
- as a consultant for the military's R & D Board and was a member of the
-
- Guidance & Control panel.
-
-
- In a September 15, 1950, interview with Canadian scientist
-
- Wilbert B. Smith, Sarbacher told Smith flying saucers exist, we have
-
- not been able to duplicate their performance, and the subject of flying
-
- saucers is classified two points higher than the H-bomb. When the
-
- contents of this 1950 interview was made public through one of Leonard
-
- Stringfield's monographs, 'UFO CRASH/RETRIEVAL: AMASSING THE EVIDENCE-
-
- STATUS REPORT III' in 1982, Steinman managed to find Sarbacher in Palm
-
- Beach, Florida, and wrote him for more information.
-
-
- In a letter to Steinman dated November 23, 1983, Sarbacher
-
- confirmed he was "...invited to participate in several discussions
-
- associated with the reported recoveries..." (of UFOs) but that he was
-
- unable to attend the meetings. Sarbacher stated that U.S. laboratories
-
- analyzed that material that reportedly came from these flying saucer
-
- crashes and that the hardware was "...extrememly light and very tough."
-
- Sarbacher described the beings that controlled the flying saucer to
-
- Steinman. He states:
-
-
- "There were reports that instruments or people
- operating these machines were also of very
- light weight, sufficient to withstand the
- tremendous deceleration and acceleration
- associated with their machinery. I remember
- in talking with some of the people at the
- office that I got the impression these "aliens"
- were constructed like certain insects we have
- observed on earth, wherein because of the mass
- the inertial forces involved in operation of
- these instruments would be quite low."
-
-
- In an October 1985 issue of the Flying Saucer Review, editor
-
- Gordon Creighton gave further details about Sarbacher's involvement
-
- in his article 'TOP U.S. SCIENTIST ADMITS CRASHED UFOs.' Creighton
-
- writes that although Sarbacher didn't attend, the meetings about the
-
- recoveries were held at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton,
-
- Ohio, where officials were to report their findings to scientists
-
- connected to the Defence Department's Joint Research and Development
-
- Board.
-
-
- During a telephone interview between researcher Stanton Friedman
-
- and Robert Sarbacher, he asked Sarbacher if he could recall anyone who
-
- attended those meetings. Although he could not recall his name, he
-
- named enough clues to Friedman, that when William Steinman reviewed the
-
- conversation, all the evidence led to Dr. Eric A. Walker. In the early
-
- 1950's, Walker was serving as Executive Secretary of the Research and
-
- Development Board, and would have been a logical candidate to be asked
-
- to attend UFO retrieval meetings, if they were held. In a letter to
-
- Grant Cameron, Steinman said that when he made the discovery, he
-
- telephoned Sarbacher and asked him if Dr. Eric Walker was the individual
-
- he was trying to remember. Sarbacher's response, according to Steinman,
-
- was Walker was the man who attended all those meetings at Wright-Patterson
-
- Air Force Base.
-
-
- If the evidence we have gathered is true, we now have identified a
-
- scientist who was in a position to confirm or deny the U.S. Government's
-
- crash retrieval program. Steinman states he telephoned Walker on August
-
- 30, 1987. According to Steinman's "word for word" telephone transcript
-
- of the interview, Dr. Eric A. Walker confirmed attending these meetings
-
- at Wright-Patterson AFB regarding the "military recovery of flying
-
- saucers, and the bodies of the occupants." According to Steinman,
-
- Walker acknowledged that he knew of MJ-12 and was familiar with them
-
- since 1947. In the interview, Walker tells Steinman to "leave it alone,"
-
- that he is "delving into a area that you do absolutely nothing about."
-
- Steinman responds that the people have the right to know the truth,
-
- and that he is "...not going to drop it."
-
-
- Steinman has been investigating Walker since 1984, and received
-
- several letters from Walker, one of which discusses a downed saucer.
-
- Crain and Cameron teamed up in the fall of 1987, to learn as much as
-
- we could about Walker's involvement, before releasing his name to
-
- the public.
-
-
- Although Dr. Walker is being less responsive these days regarding
-
- inquiries into his past involvement with UFOs, Cameron and I believe we
-
- have gathered enough background material on Dr. Walker to show he was
-
- in the right place at the right time to know if the United States has
-
- a crashed UFO in military custody. A report of our findings have been
-
- assembled in a book, 'UFOs, MJ-12 AND THE GOVERNMENT,' which we hope to
-
- release in the near future.
-
-
-
-
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