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- AUTHOR IN BIRDSLL1.UFO RESPONDS
-
- ParaNet Alpha 06/29 -- Phil Imbrogno, author of NIGHT SIEGE: THE HUDSON
- VALLEY UFO, has responded to charges levelled in the ParaNet file
- BIRDSLL1.UFO. The file, submitted to ParaNet by its author, a former NSA
- employee named Jerry Birdsall, consisted of a statement in which Birdsall
- levelled charges tantamount to libel at Imbrogno. While he didn't name
- Imbrogno or the book in his ParaNet release, Birdsall, referred to in
- NIGHT SIEGE as "James Madison," told us in a face to face encounter that
- Imbrogno had misinterpreted his actions, misquoted him, and otherwise dis-
- torted the truth in his accounts of their interactions.
-
- In a conversation today, Imbrogno was at first reticent to admit that
- Birdsall was the James Madison referred to, for obvious reasons. When
- assured of our purposes, Imbrogno freely discussed his dealings with the
- former NSA SIGnals INTelligence specialist. He said that Birdsall first
- came to the UFO researcher due to his interest in the Hudson Valley
- sightings, which were in full swing at the time. According to Imbrogno,
- Birdsall told him of his NSA employment "in a way that sounded like it was
- designed to impress me somehow," but told him that his interest was to
- obtain funding for Imbrogno's investigation from the Fund for UFO Re-
- search, of which Birdsall claimed to be a member. "He said he was a good
- friend of [FUFOR Chairman] Bruce Maccabee, and that he could use his in-
- fluence to get me funded." But it turned out that Maccabee and other Fund
- members "barely knew" Birdsall, says Imbrogno, and FUFOR turned him down
- for funding.
-
- While not specifically referred to in the file, a central point seems to
- be a quote in NIGHT SIEGE, attributed to "James Madison": "The government
- has been known to dispose of people for less" (referring to UFO research
- that might compromise government secrets). Imbrogno said he found it "ra-
- ther strange," but admitted that it could just as easily be interpreted as
- a statement, rather than as a threat. "It was just strange coming from
- this guy who had made a big deal about his ties with the NSA."
-
- Imbrogno said that at no time in the book did he insist that "Madison"
- (Birdsall) was an agent assigned to monitor or sabotage his UFO research.
- He said he was merely suspicious of his activities, and thought them wor-
- thy of note in his book. He admitted that the book's editor may have
- "spiced up" one or two passages for dramatic value, but that the book was
- "90% accurate" in its portrayal of Birdsall.
-
- "If I was going to invent incidents involving a government agent just to
- sell more books, do you think I'd design them around a real person who
- could come back and refute what I'd said?" asked Imbrogno. "Hell, no, I'd
- make the guy up out of thin air. Who could argue with me then?"
-
- --Jim Speiser