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Former Nuclear Weapons Technician Recounts UFO

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Former nuclear weapons technician Adrian Reister spotted two abnormal lights and a shadow person in separate events while stationed at Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri, according to testimony provided in an interview with Liberation Times.

Christopher Sharp, writing for the Liberation Times, stated that Reister’s credentials were verified and that “because to the nature of his responsibilities, he is a reputable source.”

According to reports, Reister, who was stationed at Whiteman Air Force Base from 2003 to 2007, was a highly trained technician who was trusted with nuclear weapons.

“I was trained to maintain, disassemble, destroy, transport, and provide protection for our base’s nuclear weapons.” “He commented on his skill set.

Whiteman Air Force Base is home to the 509th Bomb Wing, which has a fleet of twenty B2 Spirit bombers with nuclear capabilities.

During the transit of a nuclear bomb within the base, Reister claimed to have spotted an orb hovering along a tree line.

I believed it was a star at first, but as I continued to monitor the area, the light/orb shot over the treetops and hovered there for a while. Perhaps it was a satellite, I reasoned “he stated. “As the transport team arrived and secured the weapon within the facility, the orb briefly bounced in the sky, then went to the left [north], then shot 90 degrees straight up and vanished.

Reister said that he was familiar with all types of aircraft housed at the base, including the B-2, F-117, and A-10, which took off, landed and maneuvered in the vicinity, and that the UFO he observed was unlike anything he had previously met.

During his second UFO experience, the technician apparently observed a second orb hovering above the base while on duty. Similar to the initial occurrence, this ball remained fixed in the sky before vanishing.

“All of the orbs and sky occurrences that I observed were identical solitary glowing spheres with a yellowish-white hue.” “Reister elaborated.

During the summer of 2006, while working overnight in the base’s support department, he had his third documented contact with the unexplained.

Reister stated that he was alone in a separate bay while one training team worked on a trainer bomb when he began to hear the sound of bare feet strolling, which stood out in contrast to the sound of steel-toe combat boots he was accustomed to hearing.

As I peered around the room, the sound disappeared. Not noticing anything, I simply shrugged my shoulders and returned to my job.

A few minutes later, I heard barefoot walking away from the support area, and this time I stood up to investigate.

I saw a black mass in the shape of a six-foot-tall figure that was neither a shadow nor something that reflected light. It quickly turned the corner into the administrative part of the store, and I pursued it like a lunatic.

As I hurried along the length of the wall from the support part and into the administrative area, I frantically searched for a place to hide; there aren’t many hiding spots in that area, just a few offices and a breakroom. Although my search was exhaustive, I came up empty-handed.

According to Reister, no one could enter or leave the base without being processed through the front security doors, as all other doors were protected at the time with security seals that, if breached, would alert USAF Security Forces.

Reister asserts that no seals were broken that evening, and he is unable to explain how the shadowy figure entered and fled the facility.

Because of the possibility of negative ramifications, none of Reister’s interactions were reported up the command chain.

“Never was anything reported, “Reister explained. “Because if you do, you could be deemed mentally ill and your clearance and [personal reliability program] status could be revoked.”

He did concede, though, that such occurrences should be treated seriously.

“Except for approved employees, no one other than humans, wolves, rats, or rabbits should be anywhere near a base that stockpiles nuclear weapons “Reister added. “The culture must change; if the USAF took a holistic approach, it would observe a trend of similar incidents at other locations, which should garner the attention of higher officials.

Over the previous many decades, hairy humanoids, UFOs, and winged creatures have all been reported in the state of Missouri.

In the summer of 1972, inhabitants of a small Louisiana village on the Mississippi River began claiming sightings with a 12-foot-tall creature with clawed hands and red, orange, or green eyes.

The media dubbed the creature Momo, which is an abbreviation for Missouri Monster.

In January of 2021, a guy claimed to have had a detached retina after seeing a “human-like bat” near the Missouri-Arkansas state line.

The Singular Fortean Society has received two other recent reports of strange winged creatures from Missouri: one from two sisters who claimed to have seen a “body wrapped in wings” in late August of 2020, and another from a woman who claimed to have seen a “black, humanoid figure with extremely large wings and legs” on October 8 of the same year.

Both sightings occurred within one mile of one another in Cape Girardeau.

In October of 2021, while driving north on Glenstone Avenue in Springfield at 5 p.m., electrician Justin Johnson reported seeing a “square metal object” spinning erratically in the air, reportedly only a few hundred feet above the earth.

Johnson videotaped the object for around one minute before uploading the video to his YouTube page.

Some assume the item was a balloon, but it has not been conclusively recognized to date, and Johnson stated that he believed it was “of extraterrestrial origin or secret government technology.”

Since the mid-20th century, the National UFO Reporting Center (NUFORC) has logged approximately 2,600 reported UFO sightings in the state of Missouri, placing it in the 70th percentile for reported UFO sightings in the United States.

 

Source Credit: SingularFortean.com

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‘Queen’ Founding Member Shares Crop Circle Picture

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On May 24th, Brian May, a founding member of the rock band Queen who later earned a Ph.D. in astrophysics, posted several images to Instagram of a crop circle seen near Marlborough, England.

“Have you noticed anything out of the ordinary here in the English countryside?” The photos were captioned by May. “I’d never seen a crop circle before. As a result, I’m always skeptical of them. But yesterday, as we flew back from our production rehearsal space, over a location near Marlborough, there was this. […] Who creates these fascinating works of mathematical art? Is it a hoax? Are they created by extraterrestrials? And… how…? And what is their goal?”
Responses to May’s post have been mixed, with some claiming that the phenomenon is paranormal, while others believe that hoaxers are to blame.

Crop circles have sparked speculation in the modern era since at least the mid-1970s, with theories ranging from hoaxers to otherworldly beings to “earth energies.”

Despite the fact that people have claimed responsibility for certain crop circle formations, mysterious circles of flattened plants discovered in fields date back much further than modern-day hoaxers.

W.Y. Evans-Wentz recorded folktales of faeries coming in the night to thresh farmers’ grain in his 1911 book The Fairy Faith in Celtic Countries. Similarly, in 1678, an English woodcut pamphlet depicts ‘The Mowing-Devil,’ who is shown mowing crops in a circular pattern.

While some dismiss these as folkloric inspiration for modern-day hoaxers, others see them as proof of a phenomenon that predates man-made imitation.

No one has yet claimed responsibility for the crop circle photographed by May.

 

Source Credit: SingularFortean.com

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DoD Announces Expanded Effort to Investigate UFOs

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According to a press release issued by the Department of Defense (DoD):

Due to the passage of the National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal 2022, Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks, in consultation with the Director of National Intelligence (DNI), amended her original directive to the Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence & Security on July 15, 2022, by renaming and expanding the scope of the Airborne Object Identification and Management Group (AOIMSG) to the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO).

USD(I&S) Hon. Ronald S. Moultrie informed the department today of the establishment of AARO within the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and Security, and named Dr. Sean M. Kirkpatrick, most recently the chief scientist at the Defense Intelligence Agency’s Missile and Space Intelligence Center, as its director.

The AARO’s mission will be to coordinate efforts across the Department of Defense and other federal departments and agencies in the United States to detect, identify, and attribute objects of interest in, on, or near military installations, operating areas, training areas, special use airspace, and other areas of interest, and, as needed, to mitigate any associated threats to operational safety and national security. Anomaly, unidentified space, airborne, submerged, and transmedium objects are included.

Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and Security (USD(I&S)) Ronald Moultrie will lead the AARO Executive Council (AAROEXEC), which will provide oversight and direction to the AARO along the following primary lines of effort:

1. Surveillance, Collection and Reporting
2. System Capabilities and Design
3. Intelligence Operations and Analysis
4. Mitigation and Defeat
5. Governance
6. Science and Technology

This newly reported expansion of the Pentagon’s UFO investigation program follows low congressional trust in their investigative efforts.

Following the release of the much-anticipated preliminary assessment report on UFOs by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence last year, many in the intelligence community were critical of what they saw as the report’s failure to offer any concrete explanations for most of the incidents examined, particularly in light of concerns about secret Russian or Chinese technology.

The Pentagon then promised to revamp the task force in charge of investigating UFOs, which resulted in the formation of the AOIMSG, which has since been renamed the AARO.

This reflects Congress’ growing interest in UFOs, which was most recently demonstrated during a House Intelligence Subcommittee hearing on the subject last May—the first of its kind in more than 50 years.

The congressional hearing allowed lawmakers to question the Pentagon about unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP)—the current government term for UFOs—and for government officials to explain their current position and outline plans to investigate the issue further.

During the hearing, there were few mentions of extraterrestrials, though the Pentagon did express a particular interest in reports containing unusual flight characteristics such as incredible speed, transmedium capabilities, and undetectable means of propulsion.

Since the existence of the Pentagon’s Advanced Aviation Threat Identification Program (AATIP), which reportedly ran from 2007 to 2012, was made public in 2017, congressional interest in UFOs has skyrocketed.

Interest in the encounters between Navy pilots and UFOs grew, and in 2019, several senators, including Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.), then vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, were briefed on them.

The Senate Intelligence Committee, led at the time by Senator Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), then included a directive in their Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 ordering the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) to create a report on “unidentified aerial phenomena” in consultation with the Secretary of Defense.

That bill resulted in the formation of the Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force (UAPTF), which was in charge of producing the aforementioned preliminary assessment report.

 

Source Credit: SingularFortean.com

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The Marlborough Monkey is a Cryptid Fans Classic

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The latest documentary by researcher and filmmaker Karac St. Laurent, The Legend of the Marlborough Monkey, takes a fresh look at an older and often overlooked series of cryptid sightings in New Hampshire.

Most people don’t think of Bigfoot sightings in the northeastern United States, but St. Laurent has made a compelling case for taking the subject seriously while still having fun along the way.

The film is a tribute to the classic cryptid documentaries of the 1970s, and it was shot to look like an 8mm film being watched on a VHS tape. With thematic music and Robert Ready’s absolutely perfect deadpan narration, viewers could be forgiven for not immediately recognizing this as a documentary shot in 2021.

Despite its aesthetic, the film is very much a product of modern investigation, and St. Laurent conducts field investigations using equipment anachronistic to the 1970s, both solo and in collaboration with Small Town Monsters alum Aleksandar Petakov.

When some filmmakers might have been content to show only the interviews with researchers and witnesses included in the documentary, the field investigations were a nice touch. Folklorist John Horrigan is an especially bright addition to an already entertaining documentary, and his unique blend of wit and historical storytelling could have carried the film on its own.

Horrigan, interestingly, coined the term “The Marlborough Monkey” to describe the hairy humanoid being reported by New Hampshire residents in the 1990s, based on one account in which the witness said the creature looked like an orangutan. Those reports never stopped, and sightings of ‘The Marlborough Monkey’ are still being reported today.

St. Laurent, however, does not stop with stories; similarly to his first documentary, Release the Bodette Film, a variety of evidence is presented for the viewers to peruse. Much like that film, the viewer is ultimately left to decide what to believe, despite the fact that the vast majority of the film approaches the subject from a staunchly materialistic standpoint. Petakov makes a passing reference to high strangeness during an interview late in the film, but otherwise the assumption is that if something strange is going on, it’s most likely an undiscovered primate. This isn’t necessarily a negative, depending on your point of view, and those who prefer materialist science in the hunt for cryptids will appreciate the film’s mainstream take on the phenomenon.

That viewpoint is consistent with the 1970s-era documentaries to which it pays homage, and given the evidence presented, there’s never any sense that the investigation should be taking a different path. If The Legend of Boggy Creek is one of your favorite documentaries, check out The Legend of the Marlborough Monkey.

The Legend of the Marlborough Monkey has a run time of 43:14 and will be available to watch for free on the Crash-Course Cryptozoology YouTube channel starting at noon on September 12th. Expect it to be available on DVD around Thanksgiving.

 

Source & Photo Credit: SingularFortean.com

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