Claims, Contradictions and Corroborations: THE SATURN REPORT

Alien Base: The Evidence for Extraterrestrial Colonization of Earth: THE SATURN REPORT

Adamski’s most ludicrous claim at this time was his supposed visit to the planet Saturn. In March 1962 his coworkers received a copy of his report on the ‘Trip to the Twelve Counsellors’ Meeting of our Solar System’ that took place from 27 to 30 March that year. ‘The [space] ship had come in on the 24th to one of our air bases where a high official of the US Government had a conference with the crew,’ wrote Adamski. ‘After the conference, the craft was returning to its home planet Saturn. The trip took nine hours, at a speed greater than 200 million m.p.h.’

Adamski’s follow-up explanations were received with increasing scepticism by all but the most devoted coworkers. Lou Zinsstag regarded the Saturn story as a ‘personal mental experience’. Henk Hinfelaar, a New Zealand coworker, was equally doubtful. He reported that shortly after release of the Saturn report, ‘many things began to happen which gave rise to doubts, and evidence began to pile up indicating that a great change was taking place as far as George Adamski was concerned . . . he alone can resolve it. Until he does there is no alternative but to by-pass him as a source of information.’

Hinfelaar and Zinsstag came to the conclusion that Adamski had ‘got into the wrong hands’. He himself had admitted that he was now dealing with a ‘new set of boys’, as he put it. Lou elaborated: Either, we reasoned, his ‘new set of boys’ was an extremely clever fake organization, a group of secret agents (not necessarily governmental), trained experts in mind control and hypnosis, or else George was dealing with a new group of space people who were deliberately feeding him false information in order to confuse an issue which had been established by the earlier, friendlier group. Why not? ‘They are no angels’, George had said