Roswell:
What Really Happened By
Kal Korff According
to much widely held public opinion, the United States government successfully
recovered the remains of a crashed UFO along with its extraterrestrial occupants
near Roswell, New Mexico, in July 1947. In what is now known as the "the
Roswell incident," the U.S. military is said to have quickly covered up the
affair and continues to shroud it in extreme secrecy even today. If these events
surrounding Roswell in the summer of 1947 actually took place, as have been claimed
in several books on the subject and by numerous UFO researchers, it would certainly
constitute the story of the millennium and be the greatest government-sponsored
cover-up of all time. Indeed, should irrefutable evidence ever surface that any
government on this earth possessed the physical remains of either an extraterrestrial
spacecraft or its occupants, it is an understatement to say that such a revelation
would fundamentally transform humanity as we know it. What
does one do with the numerous claims about Roswell that have surfaced over the
years? How does one begin to determine the truth about what really happened in
1947 and sort the fact from the fiction? The
Roswell incident, and all that surrounds it, is a complex web of events, not easily
understandable nor explainable until examined fully and in painstaking detail.
In my new book, The Roswell UFO Crash: What They Don't Want You to Know (Prometheus
Books 1997), I undertake such a dissection. The book presents the results of some
sixteen years of research and, for all practical purposes, leaves no stone unturned.
The Roswell "mystery" has been solved, and there is no credible evidence
that the remains of an extraterrestrial spacecraft was involved. The
Original Roswell Event
For
non UFO buffs, the Roswell incident effectively began after the Fourth of July
holiday weekend in 1947 when a rancher named William "Mac" Brazel reported
to the local sheriff, George Wilcox, that he might have recovered the remains
of "one of them flying saucers." Wilcox, according to various accounts,
then contacted military authorities at nearby Roswell Army Air Field, where Major
Jesse Marcelwas assigned to investigate. Marcel and two Counter Intelligence Corps
agents, Sheridan Cavitt and Lewis Rickett, drove out to the ranch where Brazel
worked to examine and collect the wreckage. On July 8, 1947, the public information
office at Roswell AAF made the startling announcement that they had recovered
the remains of a "flying disc." However,
by the next day the excitement was over. Brigadier General Roger Ramey, who had
ordered the wreckage sent to him for examination at Carswell Air Force Base (also
known as Fort Worth), held a press conference, with Major Marcel present, and
announced that all the hoopla had been over a mistaken weather balloon, and nothing
more. With Ramey's
deflating announcement, the Roswell "flying saucer" story was effectively
dead and would remain so for decades. Then, in 1978, UFO researcher Stanton Friedman
happened to meet Marcel. Because Marcel dredged up his recovered-saucer story,
and Friedman thought he had at last found a "star" witness who could
blow open the U.S. government's alleged cover-up of crashed saucers and pickled
aliens, the Roswell myth began anew, with Friedman as its most vocal (and visible)
champion. "Hundreds
of Witnesses" In
the pro-UFO community, much fanfare has been made over the years about the "dozens"
or even "hundreds of eyewitnesses" to the alleged UFO crash near Roswell.
If the near-holy reverence for the number of alleged witnesses surrounding the
Roswell affair were limited to just the UFO buffs who have conducted no direct
research of their own, this situation might be understandable. However, this is
not the case, for the authors of numerous Roswell books play the numbers game
as well. In the pro-UFO book The Truth About the UFO Crash at Roswell, Kevin Randle
and Donald Schmitt note the fact that Bill Moore, coauthor of The Roswell Incident
(1980), interviewed "more then seventy witnesses who had some knowledge of
the [Roswell UFO crash] event." Indeed, both Friedman and Moore, around the
time of the initial publication of The Roswell Incident, boasted that they had
interviewed more than "ninety witnesses." While
these double-digit figures are certainly accurate, the presentation of such a
seemingly impressive number of witnesses by themselves, without qualification,
is misleading. The relevant issue is not how many witnesses were interviewed,
but rather what type of witnesses (i.e., firsthand, secondhand), and how truthful
and accurate their statements were. Unfortunately,
a careful reading of Bill Moore and Charles Berlitz's Roswell Incident reveals
that, despite the impressive claim of having "interviewed more than seventy
witnesses," the testimonies of just twenty-five people are presented. Out
of these twenty-five, only seven of them are firsthand sources who claim to have
seen the alleged saucer debris, and one of these accounts is suspect. Of these
seven people, however, only five claim to have actually handled the material personally,
and one of them is adamant that it was not from an extraterrestrial spacecraft. The
remainder of the professed "witnesses" cited in The Roswell Incident
are either secondhand sources (whose testimonies constitute hearsay) or people
who saw no wreckage at all or were never present at the "debris field"
during the critical time. In other words, they are not actually witnesses in the
true sense of the word. Father
Time and Flawed Memories While
the pro-UFO community and the Roswell authors stress the number of witnesses,
another factor in their firm belief that an extraterrestrial spacecraft crashed
at Roswell is the apparent consistency of the eyewitness testimonies. However,
a careful reading of the statements presented in The Roswell Incident and elsewhere
reveals that there are serious discrepancies among the various accounts which,
when analyzed in detail and taken collectively, severely weaken the case. One
undeniable truth that many UFO advocates seem to easily forget is that when Moore
and Friedman first started interviewing some of the original witnesses regarding
Roswell, the recollections of these people had undoubtedly changed. If nothing
else, their memories reflected the passage of nearly thirty-one years, if not
more. Even the very first person interviewed, Marcel, was not questioned by
Friedman until 1978, again almost thirty-one years after the event. It
is an irrefutable fact that the passage of time erodes the accuracy of one's recollections
of an event. Despite this, the Roswell authors continue to stress just how "clear
and sharp" their witnesses' memories are, even though nearly fifty years
have now elapsed. Certainly these memories could not have improved. Perhaps
the most absurd attempt to paint the Roswell eyewitnesses and their testimonies
as beyond dispute can be found in Randle and Schmitt's The Truth about the UFO
Crash at Roswell, which was later adapted for television by Showtime, under the
name Roswell. In
drawing a parallel between the alleged UFO events at Roswell and the assassination
of President John F. Kennedy, Randle and Schmitt state, "The Roswell memories
are vivid and detailed, despite the passage of so many years" and constitute
a "snapshot memory." If
this is the case, to use Randle and Schmitt's analogy, then these people forgot
to load film in their camera, for even the most important "star" witness
to Roswell, Major Marcel, when first interviewed, could not even remember the
year of the alleged UFO crash, let alone the month. Indeed, Marcel's own answer
as to when this supposed snapshot memory" event took place was simply "in
the late forties"! In
my book on Roswell, I examine systematically the accounts of all major "witnesses"
presented in the Roswell Incident and all others. For the first time, these testimonies
are exposed for what they are: a mishmash of erroneous accounts, embellishments
and outright confabulations. In fact, as I show, some of the people who have been
touted as witnesses by the pro-UFO Roswell authors are not really witnesses at
all. Here are some examples: Lydia
Sleppy: Claims she was operating a teletype machine announcing the recovery of
the flying disk when her teletype suddenly went dead and broadcast an ominous
message from the FBI back to her ordering her to stop broadcasting the story in
the interests of national security. Truth:
A check by this author with all relevant FBI field offices and their headquarters
turned up no evidence that the FBI sent any such message, nor did they have the
monitoring equipment in place to do so. Furthermore, the type of teletype machine
in use by Sleppy at the time would have required her to throw a "receiver"
switch in order for her to receive an incoming transmission. There was no way
that the FBI could have "interrupted" her as she claims. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Loretta
Proctor: Neighbor of Mac Brazel, the rancher who originally discovered the "saucer"
debris. She claims she tried to bend, burn, and break a piece of the material
Brazel showed her but was unable to. Proctor's testimony is used by crashed-saucer
buffs to buttress the argument that a spaceship made of unknown, exotic material
crashed near Roswell. Truth:
Loretta Proctor has changed her story several times. She has transformed herself
from a "witness" who never saw any debris, to one who now tried to bend,
break, and burn the "mysterious" material. She began changing her account
after her husband, Floyd, who made it very clear in earlier interviews that they
had never seen any material, passed away. -------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sergeant
Melvin E. Brown: Brown is touted as a "witness" who saw alien bodies
by Roswell authors Friedman, Randle and Schmitt, and Michael Hesemann and Philip
Mantle (Beyond Roswell). Truth:
Melvin Brown cannot be considered a witness since he died in 1986 and was never
interviewed by UFO researchers. Indeed, the only "proof" one has that
Brown was a "witness" comes from his daughter, Beverly Bean, who first
made the claim years after his death. No other member of Brown's family supports
her claim. Furthermore, a check by this author of Brown's military file revealed
that he was a cook who held no security clearance and never pulled guard duty.
Also noted in the book are the blatant contradictions and changes in Beverly Bean's
various accounts. Major
Jesse Marcel: The Hidden Truth In
my book I publish for the first time excerpts from the military file of Jesse
Marcel, excerpts which prove that although Marcel served his country honorably,
he was not a credible witness and should not be considered as such. (Despite this
fact, Stanton Friedman and other pro-UFO Roswell authors consider his every word
to be gospel truth.) The file is extremely incriminating, for it clearly demonstrates
that Marcel had a penchant for exaggerating things while repeatedly trying to
"write himself" into the history books. Ironically, Marcel's tendency
to exaggerate was specifically noted in his military file by none other than the
commander of the base at Roswell at that time, in a review of his performance
that was signed just after the incident occurred. Marcel
claimed that he personally flew the UFO wreckage to Carswell AFB. He could not
have done so, for he was never a pilot. Despite this, Marcel claimed in numerous
interviews with Friedman and former National Enquirer reporter Bob Pratt that
he was not only a pilot but had managed to shoot down five enemy aircraft! If
so, this would have made Marcel an "ace," a distinction that certainly
would have been noted in his military file. Instead, there's no record of this
or even anything close, and in fact it was General Ramey who specifically noted
in Marcel's file that because he was not a pilot, he would be severely limited
in his career opportunities in the Air Force. It's no wonder, then, that Marcel
would later "blame" Ramey for the "UFO cover-up" at Roswell. Marcel
claimed he had a bachelor's degree in physics and even named the universities
he attended. However, when I checked with those institutions, I discovered that
one of them he never attended, and he never finished his education at the other.
Curiously, while Marcel blatantly lied to UFO researchers such as Friedman about
his mythical educational background, he never dared make such false claims to
the military. Indeed, in signed statements contained in Marcel's military file,
he replies "none" when asked under oath if he had a college degree. Does
this tell us that Marcel knew his gullible UFO peers would never check on him
anyway? Or did he even care? We don't know. The
book also notes that Friedman, even as of this writing, has failed to refute these
devastating new revelations about his "star" Roswell witness. Indeed,
in what can only be politely called lame rationalization, Friedman counters that
military records are notoriously inaccurate. While this is sometimes true, the
comment is irrelevant, since throughout Marcel's file his signature repeatedly
appears indicating that he signed off on its contents, certifying them to be true.
Until Friedman and other pro-UFO Roswell researchers bother obtaining Marcel's
entire military file, they are in no position to make comments on it, let alone
dismiss it. In
addition to disproving Marcel's testimony, I also systematically dismantle and
refute other Roswell "eyewitness" testimonies such as those of British
Major Hughie Green, Roswell mortician Glen Dennis, Rueben Anaya, Frankie Rowe,
Frank Kaufmann, Jim Ragsdale, and others. In
short, no credible evidence from any witness has turned out to present a compelling
case that the object was extraterrestrial in origin. Having
discovered the sad truth behind many of the testimonies concerning the recovery
of alleged "flying saucer" debris near Roswell, where does this leave
us? With no known scientifically verifiable physical remnants to study, is there
any way that we can determine the true nature and origin of the actual wreckage
that was collected? Fortunately, the answer is yes, but we must first examine
additional evidence. The
Air Force Cover-up Begins
The
beginning of the Air Force cover-up of the true nature of the object recovered
by Major Marcel started with Marcel's arrival at Carswell AFB and General Ramey's
subsequent announcement that the debris was simply a misidentified weather balloon.
As noted, Marcel maintains that the Roswell debris was from a flying saucer and
that the weather balloon "explanation" provided by Ramey was a convenient
cover story. Although Marcel's credibility as a truthful witness in the Roswell
saga has been impeached, there is no disputing the fact that he accompanied the
wreckage to Carswell AFB and was present in Ramey's office with him when the weather
balloon explanation was given. But was there a cover-up as Marcel claims, and
was the weather balloon story part of that cover-up? According
to Colonel Thomas J. DuBose, who was General Ramey's assistant, the weather balloon
story was indeed part of the cover-up, designed to get the press "taken off
[Ramey's] back in a hurry." If
the Roswell incident did not involve the retrieval of wreckage from a genuine
flying saucer, then why was the weather balloon story given as an "explanation,"
and what was the reason for the cover-up? What was there to possibly hide, since
the debris Marcel himself had helped recover was on display in Ramey's office? Flying
Saucer or Weather Balloon? According
to the pro-UFO Roswell authors, specifically Friedman, Randle, and Schmitt, the
debris photographed inside Ramey's office is not the material Marcel and Sheridan
Cavitt recovered from the ranch. Instead, it is the remnants of a weather balloon
that were brought in as a cover story to hide the true nature of the Roswell incident.
Unfortunately for the pro-UFO Roswell advocates, the source of the claim that
the wreckage in Ramey's office was replaced by that of a weather balloon is none
other than, once again, Major Jesse Marcel. The
key to understanding (and unraveling) the truth behind Marcel's "bait and
switch" claim is a clear understanding of the items shown in the photographs
that were taken in General Ramey's office by reporter J. Bond Johnson of the Fort
Worth Star-Telegram and others. Either the photos show the real debris that Marcel
collected and claims was part of a flying saucer, or they do not. And if the photos
do not show genuine flying saucer wreckage, and General Ramey's weather balloon
story was true, then they depict a weather balloon. On the other hand, if the
photos show neither item, then there was indeed a cover-up and Ramey lied. Clearly,
both Marcel and Ramey cannot be right, since the same material appears in all
the known photos taken in Ramey's office that day. In
order to determine definitively the truthfulness of Marcel's substituted wreckage
claim, I have analyzed in detail both the photos and the testimonies of the only
other people who were in Ramey's office when the debris was photographed -- Colonel
DuBose and Irving Newton. It appears that Marcel was once again confabulating. Testimony
of Brigadier General Thomas J. DuBose As
mentioned earlier, Colonel Thomas J. DuBose, who later retired as a brigadier
general, was present when the wreckage was brought into Ramey's office. There's
no disputing this fact, because DuBose met the B-29 personally when it arrived
at Carswell AFB (Fort Worth) from Roswell carrying the debris that Marcel had
collected. DuBose not only greeted the incoming plane, but hand carried the wreckage
remnants in a sealed canvas mail pouch, immediately escorting it to Ramey's office. In
a revealing interview, DuBose puts to rest the "mystery" of the so-called
substituted wreckage and exposes it for what it is - another Major Marcel myth.
DuBose's comments have never appeared before in any book on Roswell. Q:
There are two researchers (Schmitt and Randle) who are presently saying that the
debris in General Ramey's office had been switched and that you men had a weather
balloon there in its place.
A:
Oh Bull! That material was never switched! Q:
So what you're saying is that the material in General Ramey's office was the actual
debris brought in from Roswell? A:
That's absolutely right. In
a second and a third, final interview, DuBose repeated his assertions that no
wreckage substitution had taken place. More important, by the time of the third
interview, DuBose had looked at the photos of the recovered debris taken at that
time by J. Bond Johnson. DuBose recognized the material in the photos. Q:
Did you get a chance to read the material and look at the pictures? A:
Yes, and I studied the pictures very carefully. Q:
Do you recognize that material? A:
Oh yes. That's the material that Marcel brought into Fort Worth from Roswell. DuBose's
comments are significant, because they establish that there was no substituted
wreckage and that the material Marcel recovered near Roswell was later photographed
and put on display for public view in Ramey's office by Ramey himself.
I
also present the testimonies of Irving Newton, who was also present that day in
Ramey's office, and Sheridan Cavitt, who helped Marcel collect the wreckage from
the ranch. After looking at the same debris photos, they confirmed that they depict
the material they recalled seeing and that no UFO debris was ever there. In fact,
both Newton and Cavitt make it very clear in their interviews that they have been
misquoted by various UFO researchers, and they resent it. Although
DuBose's testimony and all available evidence easily refute Marcel's substituted
wreckage claim, DuBose was adamant that there was indeed a coverup. He never knew
what the Roswell object was, but he did know that it was not an ordinary weather
balloon, contrary to what was claimed at that time. The question now becomes,
what was the object? Project
Mogul: The Real Answer Project
Mogul was a super-secret operation in 1947 that involved the use of constant-level
balloon trains that were equipped with various instruments for intelligence gathering
purposes. Constant level balloon trains are clusters of balloons that are balanced
so that they can float at a fairly consistent altitude and not continually rise
up into the atmosphere. Project Mogul was a classified operation begun by the
U.S. government after the end of World War II to spy on the former Soviet Union
in order to determine the status of Russian attempts to build nuclear weapons.
Project Mogul was so secret and sensitive that it had a national security rating
of "Top Secret A-1," equal to that of the original Manhattan Project
(the effort to build the world's first atomic bomb). While a Project Mogul balloon
array has been mentioned before as a candidate for the Roswell object, unfortunately
the case for it remained unproven -- until now. In my book, I present previously
unpublished, formerly classified photos and drawings of various components
of Mogul that can be visually compared by the reader to photos of the actual wreckage
that was recovered. From these photos and drawings, it is clear that it is the
same material. I
also present statements from the surviving members of the secret Project Mogul
team. In particular is an interview with Professor Charles Moore, the main scientist
behind Mogul's New York University balloon experiments and the man who actually
launched the very balloon train that was recovered by Marcel. In addition to discussing
Project Mogul and its history, Professor Moore also speaks for the first time
about specific pro-UFO Roswell authors that have contacted him. When
I asked Professor Moore if UFO researcher Stanton Friedman had ever contacted
or interviewed him about Roswell, he told me that in the early 1990s Friedman
had placed a newspaper ad in the local paper soliciting witnesses to Roswell,
and that he wrote to Friedman and later met him and his coauthor, Don Berliner,
at a hotel in Socorro. When
I inquired as to how their discussion went, Professor Moore told me bluntly that
Friedman and Berliner did not want to hear his side of the story and then accused
him and his group of being part of the coverup. It
is curious that nowhere in Friedman and Berliner's Crash at Corona is this meeting
ever mentioned, nor has Friedman ever noted it in his published writings, nor
has he ever refuted the overwhelming and convincing evidence that the whole Roswell
UFO hysteria was caused by people who didn't know the identity of the recovered
material, the discovery of which just happened to take place during that unique
period of time in mid-1947 when the flying saucer craze was first sweeping America. Further
Topics and Conclusion The
other parts of The Roswell UFO Crash: What They Don't Want You to Know expose
the two cases where alleged physical metallic fragments were recovered and scientifically
analyzed. In both instances, thorough analyses revealed that none of the fragments
were extraterrestrial in origin. I
also address the issue of the Majestic-12 (MJ-12) documents. For those not familiar
with the MJ-12 documents, these allegedly authentic top-secret documents were
brought to the public's attention in 1987 by Bill Moore, Stanton Friedman, and
another associate. They refer to a top-secret "Operation Majestic-12,"
supposedly created by President Truman to analyze the Roswell crashed saucer and
aliens. Skeptic Phil Klass and others have shown this to be a hoax. I recount
an interview with the widow and daughter of the late UFO skeptic and Harvard astronomer,
Donald Menzel, an alleged MJ-12 member. Supporters of the MJ-12 papers, including
Friedman, would have us believe that Menzel was a secret government "disinformation"
agent who knew all about Roswell and the aliens recovered. Suffice it to say,
the Menzel family are not amused by these ridiculous claims and were kind enough
to share their thoughts with me, as well as provide additional evidence that their
father could not have been a secret member of the non-existent MJ-12. After
maintaining my personal silence on the subject for nearly fifteen years, I finally
come forth with some detailed insight into Roswell UFO researcher Bill Moore's
claim that he is a UFO disinformation expert for the U.S. government. I was one
of the first people Moore told this to back in 1982, some seven years before he
announced it in July 1989. At the time, Moore approached me and tried to recruit
me on his "mission." Naturally, I declined, and began to distance myself
from him. One
of the last chapters in my book examines the infamous alien autopsy film and presents
a myriad of reasons why it is a hoax. Also described are some behind-the-scenes
details about the production and many of the games that were played on Fox TV
by the film's promoter, Ray Santilli. The
Roswell UFO Crash: What They Don't Want You to Know is the first book to thoroughly
wade through the massive quagmire of Roswell evidence and finally separate the
fact from the fiction. Paranoid UFO conspiracy buffs and X-Files fans will find
that the book confirms their basic premise: Yes, Virginia, there was a "cover-up,"
but it did not involve the remains of an extraterrestrial flying saucer. On
the other hand, pro-UFO Roswell aficionados will find the massive evidence refuting
the Roswell myth in my book disturbing, and not just because their favorite UFO
case has now been explained. Indeed, the message in the final chapter makes it
very clear that the UFO field has suffered in credibility because of Roswell and
especially because of the unprofessional and shoddy "standards" of evidence
the Roswell authors have practiced. Although
I didn't relish wording the last paragraph in my book the way I did, I had to
call things as I see them. This paragraph reads: "The time has come for the
UFO community to take an honest look at itself in the mirror concerning Roswell.
If and when they ever decide to do this, they will see for the first time that
they have two black eyes and a huge hole in their head. All of which have been
self-inflicted." ©1997
by Kal Korff -- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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