Whistleblowers Reveal Secret US Government Investigation into Crashed UFOs

Whistleblowers Reveal Secret US Government Investigation into Crashed UFOs

...By Judah Olanisebee for TDPel Media.

According to whistleblowers, US Government investigators retrieved debris from crashed UFOs and attempted to rebuild them in secret.

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Experts who worked on the retrieval teams were bound by secrecy agreements.

However, at least six of them have come forward to testify before a US Congress investigation into reported close encounters and the reverse-engineering work.

In 2020, a law was passed allowing individuals who worked on secret UFO programs to provide evidence to the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office probe, which is examining 650 “sightings” and has reported its findings to the US Senate.

Whistleblowers Speak Out

Several whistleblowers have come forward to testify before a US Congress investigation into the retrieval of debris from crashed UFOs by secret US Government investigators.

These individuals were part of Roswell-style retrieval teams and had been bound by secrecy agreements.

However, at least six of them have come forward to testify before a US Congress investigation into reported close encounters and the reverse-engineering work.

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Risks Involved

Immunologist and Nobel Prize nominee Dr. Garry Nolan, who analyzed material allegedly discarded during UFO flyovers, said in a podcast that testifying before Congress comes with risks.

He explained that testifying before Congress means that one is under oath, and these individuals are putting their careers at risk.

US Defense Department Response

A spokesman for the US Defense Department stated that it had not discovered any UFO programs that were improperly withheld from Congress, but its investigation was ongoing.

Contact with Aliens?

Boffins believe that they may have sent a message to aliens, but it will take 27 years to receive a response.

The signal was sent to the Pioneer 10 space probe in 1972, which is now 12 billion miles away from Earth.

They believe that it likely reached a white dwarf star, 27 light-years away, in 2002.

US astronomer Macy Huston, who was not involved in the study, stated that if a response were sent, it would depend on how long or often we monitor the star for a response and how long or often the return signal is transmitted.

 

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