American Chronicle: Alien ‘visitor’ shot at Area 51? Astonishing new UFO disclosures — Here we go!

I have recently discovered (through an insider contact) an intriguing release from a genuine DIA (Defence Intelligence Agency) which details an account of a ‘shooting’ of an “alien visitor” supposedly detained at the top secret establishment Area 51, Groom Lake, Nevada – known in ufological circles as ‘Dream Land’.

Now at first glance this sounds preposterous. However, it appears that other ex-AFOSI (Air Force Office of Special Intelligence) officers have come forward to confirm the incident as being genuine. So at ‘second glance’ (!), it is not so much preposterous, as shocking!

The AFOSI insiders, real people – Capt Robert Collins and Officer Richard Doty are rumoured to be members of the shadowy UFO Disclosure group known as ‘The Aviary’.

It has been rumoured for some time that alien ‘visitors’ were either detained or living at Area 51 , specifically at a place known as S-2. It is further rumoured by various insiders that these ET visitors were co-operating with the United States Govt in genetic and technical research.



  1. edwinrogers says:

    That explains liposuction and the microwave oven.

  2. cafen8d says:

    Um, one small problem. OSI is already taken in the AF- Office of Special Investigations, not Intelligence. If you are going to make stupid claims, it would be intelligent to know the difference.

  3. bill says:

    I bet they were ‘illegal aliens’ also!

  4. Mister Mustard says:

    Jesus. I’m going back to reading the Wall Street Journal.

  5. mark says:

    If anyone is not to be trusted, in this field its Richard Doty. Read an intriguing story of how he and another agent out of Kirtland AFB in Albuquerque messed with the mind of Albuquerque physicist and military contractor Paul Bennewitz, to the point of Bennewitz’ suicide. Pure government disinfo agent.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Bennewitz

    Whether you believe in UFOs or not, its a fascinating story of how the government ran a psyops operation on this man.

  6. Two things says:

    Two discussion topics:

    1) What happens to all the world’s religions if extra-terrestrial life, especially sentient, intelligent life, is proven to exist?

    2) I saw the “black triangle/Belgium triangle” when I was 11 or 12, in about 1982. Seriously, no kidding, no BS. I can elaborate, I remember it like it was yesterday, but point is: I saw something I can’t explain. I knew a TON about planes as a child, as a builder of model rockets, planes, and science-loving nerd kid. This thing didn’t make noise, or have any lights. It was huge, and moving too slow to “plane air”.

    Point #1 is what I’m more interested in talking about, though. What do you guys think about all the major religions falling because the bible/koran/torah/whatever are proven to be inaccurate or incomplete?

  7. BubbaRay says:

    #5, mark, thanks for the link, a very interesting article.

    Since I spend so much time looking at the sky from twilight to dawn, I’ve seen two “UFOs.” One was easily explained by atmospheric conditions, but was still exciting to see. The second remains unexplained, but has nothing to do with aliens. While preparing for observation at twilight, I noticed a bright object at azimuth 270, altitude 43 where none should be, and was lucky enough to slew the scope onto the object. It turned out to be Mars, although twice the normal diameter and a superb sight, detail I had never seen before or since. Then, the image literally exploded. Freaked me out — Mars exploding.

    At the time, Mars was at azimuth 270 altitude 5. I exchanged phone calls and emails with several experts on atmospheric phenomena, and no one could come up with a good theory or explanation. A once-in-a-lifetime experience, too bad the photographic equip. wasn’t ready. I’ll never forget it.

  8. doug says:

    #6. I think the impact of extraterrestrial life upon religion is sometimes overblown. After all, during the period in which the monotheist religions developed, great swaths of this planet may as well have been light years away from Palestine and Arabia.

    In other words, the fact that the aliens might not have anything like a belief in Allah or Yaweh would no doubt not rattle Christian or Muslim practitioners here, since the Aztecs and the Incas didnt either.

    And I think that Muslims and Christians claim that their respective books are all literally true, but not that they contain all the truths in the universe, so leaving out the existence of alien life is not a biggie.

  9. mark says:

    6. I think your point is an excellent one. Also, how would a public react to the news that they’re here, technically superior, and, no, theres nothing we can do about it. Lose faith in the government…………..sorry, I just realized the absurdity of that statement.

  10. bobbo says:

    The silly thing is being “illogical” religion can have any response it wishes.

    “These aliens are all children cain who god lifted off the ark because they were tainted and he put them on the other planets to serve the Mormons, but they evolved too quickly due to Satans involvement and here they are trying to start Armaggen. Send us some money to stop this plot!

  11. mark says:

    Bubba- that was an interesting sighting, any idea what it was? I have seen unexplained things in the Virgin Islands (we practically live on our deck outside, so you are alwys looking at ocean or sky), and one while in the Coast Guard on the remote Outer Banks of North Carolina, at 3am on radio watch (our version of guard duty, we had a guard tower on top of the 150 year old Lifeboat Station). This one was witnessed by 2 tourists who ran into the station shortly after (while driving north on Hatteras Island, very lonely stretch of road), who said it had paced their vehicle for 5 miles before heading out to sea. If you could have seen the excitement of these two men, you would have known that something real had occured to them.

  12. mark says:

    7. Oh and Bubba, I actually had to put that in the official log, I got a call from command the next day, nothing really came of it.

  13. BubbaRay says:

    #12, mark, after talking with three astronomers on two experts on atmospheric phenomena, the only idea that anyone could come up with was a very improbable atmospheric inversion layer. Mars explodes!! Wish I could visit your deck and set up my old custom lambda/100 Celestron 8 for a night of southern sky astronomy. 🙂

    For those who didn’t see my earlier link to Les Cowley’s site, here it is again:

    http://www.atoptics.co.uk/

  14. mark says:

    I have seen meteors explode passing overhead, maybe you saw one dead on. When the viewing conditions are perfect a fiery meteor passing overhead is an awesome sight.

  15. natefrog says:

    Did they catch Roger again?

  16. NappyHeadedHo says:

    The Wackenhut guys were drinking on the job and they shot a Mexican whose parents were related and just looked funny. There is an explanation fr everything. Now, lets all just pray to Jesus and hope things get better.

  17. BubbaRay says:

    #15, mark, no, it was definitely Mars, visible for five minutes or more with a gorgeous view of Syrtis Major and the ice caps. I’ve seen a meteor dead on and my only instinct was “Oh goodness, I’m a dead man now”. Fortunately, it exploded at least a mile up, what a show!

  18. RBG says:

    For those of you who think you may have witnessed a craft from another planet, consider that there is absolutely no reason why the thing you saw couldn’t just as well been a time machine, or visitors from another dimension, or a parallel universe, or ghosts, or an advanced undersea civilization or a hundred other weird possibilities only limited by imagination. It could also be a craft made by people on Earth using undisclosed technology. While that is completely unlikely, its still more probable than all the other fanciful ideas.

    RBG

  19. OmarThe Alien says:

    I think my boss is an alien.


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