Does a secret cabal of assassins at Area 51 exist, a cabal that has one specific role, namely, to terminate with extreme prejudice certain UFO researchers…?
Area 51 The Revealing Truth of Ufos, Secret Aircraft, Cover-Ups & Conspiracies
Deep underground, scientists who had spent much of their working lives striving to understand why, exactly, the aging process occurs as it does, sat next to biblical experts who were deciphering and interpreting ancient texts on the aforementioned life-extending, digestible substances. Military personnel, who were dutifully ensuring that the program ran under the strictest levels of security and safety, rubbed shoulders with modern-day alchemists. The team was striving to crack the white powder gold conundrum. Not only that, but experts in the field of “ancient astronauts” worked alongside demonologists.
The story continued that at least as late as 2010, absolutely no progress had been made beyond adding to the lore and legend that surround tales of immortality and massive life spans in times long gone. Rather ironically, the fact that I was told that the project was a 100 percent failure added credibility to the story—for me, at least, it did. You may think otherwise.
To me, it sounds exactly like the kind of off-the-wall program that a significant amount of money might be provided to in the event that it just might, one day, offer something sensational and literally life-changing. The fact that the source of the story specifically didn’t spin some controversial and conspiratorial tale of a secret, ruling elite living forever was one of the things that makes me think that there might be something to all of this—and perhaps still is.
Does a secret cabal of assassins at Area 51 exist, a cabal that has one specific role, namely, to terminate with extreme prejudice certain UFO researchers who get too close for comfort to the truth behind the phenomenon of flying saucers? Many might scoff at such a possibility. The facts, however, most assuredly do point in that direction. After all, the guards at the base have the legal authority of the U.S. government to shoot and kill intruders.
A perfect example is a strange and disturbing story that suggests that one of those who uncovered the truth—and who paid with his life as a result—was none other than President John F. Kennedy, who was killed on November 22, 1963, at Dealey Plaza, Dallas, Texas. By whom? That’s the big question. The answer may well be by that aforementioned cabal. As we saw earlier in the pages of this book, the JFK connection to Area 51, the movie Seven Days in May, and the death of Marilyn Monroe suggest that the president did have knowledge of Area 51, even if he didn’t gain access to it. It’s possible that those who wished to see the president gone—due to fears that he might have blown the whistle on what was going on at the base—decided to take just about the most drastic action of all. While many might dismiss such a possibility, the fact is that the JFK assassination is filled with UFO links.
FBI special agent Guy Banister investigated a body of UFO reports for J. Edgar Hoover in the summer months of 1947. Then, in the early 1960s, we see him fingered as a central player in the Kennedy killing. Indeed, while working in New Orleans in 1963, Banister became deeply acquainted with none other than Lee Harvey Oswald under unclear, murky circumstances. It turns out that another individual had ties to 1947-era ufology and the death of JFK. That man was Fred Crisman, one of the key figures in the notorious UFO saga of Maury Island, Puget Sound, Washington State. It’s a bizarre story involving an exploded UFO that predates Kenneth Arnold’s famous flying saucer encounter of June 24, 1947, by a few days. It’s a case that involves the deaths of two members of the military—Lt. Frank Brown and Captain William Davidson—and threats from a Man in Black-type character. Then are claims of secret surveillance of the central players in the odd story.
As for Crisman, author Kenn Thomas tells us: “In 1968, New Orleans district attorney Jim Garrison subpoenaed Fred Crisman as part of his investigation into the JFK assassination, which became the subject of Oliver Stone’s 1992 JFK movie. Garrison believed that Crisman was the infamous grassy knoll shooter. And he’s the central figure in the ‘Mystery Tramp’ photo of the Dallas rail yard hobos.” It turns out that Garrison—played in the movie JFK by Kevin Costner— knew Guy Banister years before the Kennedy assassination, specifically in the 1940s.
Garrison said in his book On the Trail of the Assassins: “When he was in the police department, we had lunch together now and then, swapping colorful stories about our earlier careers in the FBI. A ruddy-faced man with blue eyes which stared right at you, he dressed immaculately and always wore a small rosebud in his lapel.” While a great deal of dispute exists over who shot JFK, we know for sure who killed Lee Harvey Oswald: Dallas strip club owner and mob buddy Jack Ruby. Journalist Dorothy Kilgallen was deeply interested in the circumstances surrounding the JFK affair, particularly so Ruby’s links—to the extent that she managed to secure an interview with him.
Back in 1955, as we have seen, the following words of Kilgallen appeared in the pages of the Los Angeles Examiner: “British scientists and airmen, after examining the wreckage of one mysterious flying ship, are convinced these strange aerial objects are not optical illusions or Soviet inventions, but are flying saucers which originate on another planet.” Kilgallen claimed that her information came from a British official of Cabinet rank.
Some suggest that Kilgallen’s death on November 8, 1965, was not the result of an accidental overdose of booze and pills. They see a far more sinister explanation: Kilgallen’s interest in UFOs had led her to uncover evidence of the cabal that killed Kennedy. The list goes on. The late conspiracy theorist Bill Cooper made the wild and crazy claim that one of the Secret Service agents present in Dealey Plaza when Kennedy was killed—a man named William Greer —was responsible for the president’s death. How was death achieved? Via nothing less than a weapon employing extraterrestrial technology.
One day before his death, JFK spoke at the dedication ceremony of the Aerospace Medical Health Center at Brooks Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas. The base had been chosen to conduct groundbreaking work in the field of space medicine: figuring out how to keep astronauts free from deadly radiation, learning more about how gravity-free environments can affect the human body, and so on. While at Brooks, Kennedy met with personnel from Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton, Ohio (the alleged home of the legendary Hangar 18).
JFK also met with staff from Fort Detrick, Maryland. For years, rumors have circulated to the effect that Fort Detrick has been the home of classified research into “alien viruses.”
Still on the matter of Roswell, in 1997, one of the most controversial of all UFO books—ever—was published. Its title: The Day after Roswell. Penned by Bill Birnes (of UFO Hunters and UFO Magazine) and the late Lt. Col. Philip Corso, it told of Corso’s alleged knowledge of alien technology, artifacts, and bodies in the hands of the U.S. military. At the time of his death in 1998 at the age of eighty-three, Corso was planning another book: The Day after Dallas. No prizes for guessing the subject matter.
Moving on, back in the 1950s, U.S. senator Richard Russell Jr. paid a visit to the Soviet Union. At the time, Russell was the chairman of the Armed Services Committee. The date was October 4, 1955. Russell had a profound UFO encounter that revolved around a pair of UFOs while the train he was on was negotiating Russia’s Trans-Caucasus area. Both the CIA and the Air Force took serious notice of what Russell had to say. Official records on the matter state that Russell “saw the first flying disc ascend and pass over the train.”