The North Koreans would believe that it was the Americans doing (part 2)

“The worry was that the North Koreans would believe that it was the Americans doing the hacking when it was really a hacker using their system.”

Area 51 The Revealing Truth of Ufos, Secret Aircraft, Cover-Ups & Conspiracies

When the story broke, the New Yorker noted: “In fact, this was the second sighting of the element: Russian scientists had claimed the discovery of element 115 back in 2003, but the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry—chemistry’s equivalent of the International Astronomical Union, which famously demoted Pluto from planet status in 2006—wouldn’t acknowledge it without a confirming experiment from another team. The Helmholtz Center’s work must still be reviewed by both the IUPAC and the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics, but ununpentium is now a step closer to inclusion on the periodic table. If that happens, the International Union will assign it a permanent, official name.” Today, Element 115 goes by the name of moscovium (symbol Mc on the periodic table).

None of this proves that Bob Lazar was working (albeit briefly) with Element 115 thirty years ago, but if nothing else, the matter is one that continues to intrigue those who pursue the truth behind Lazar’s claims. It should be noted that other examples exist of the connection between computer hacking and UFOs, all of which are well worth noting and demonstrate that Matthew Bevan was not a lone wolf, which also takes us back to Area 51. Leonard Stringfield was a U.S. intelligence officer who served in the U.S.

Air Force during the Second World War and, after his retirement, focused all of his spare time looking into the UFO issue—specifically cases of crashed UFOs and dead aliens. Roswell-style events. Over the years and decades, Stringfield cultivated numerous contacts and sources, some anonymous and others who were willing to speak on the record about their knowledge of such crashes. One of those informants was a retired source who worked in U.S. intelligence.

He told Stringfield of a way that it just might have been possible to access the top- secret, computerized files held at the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, which— as you will recall—is what Matthew Bevan did by targeting the very same installation. Stringfield was told: “Since 1948, secret information concerning UFO activity involving the US military has been contained in a computer center at Wright-Patterson AFB. At this base, a master computer file is maintained with duplicate support back-up files secreted at other military installations. Get the complete ‘dump file,’ both the master and the support back-up files and you’ve got all the hidden UFO data.”

One year before Matthew Bevan began the hacking that eventually had him arrested by Scotland Yard’s Computer Crimes Unit, Dateline NBC ran a story that closely paralleled what Bevan was soon destined to do. An episode of the show that aired on October 27, 1992, revealed something that viewers found astonishing and that, for the government, was surely a matter of major concern.

One section of the show was on not just hacking but hacking of UFO-related data. One of the hackers—whose true identity was carefully and deliberately hidden by NBC—revealed what he had found while fishing around the computer banks of Wright-Patterson. Not only that, NBC had access to the actual files that the hacker had obtained. With such priceless material in hand, they chose to show it on-screen. One portion read: “WRIGHT-PATTERSON AFB/Catalogued UFO parts list, an underground facility of Foreign.…” At that point, the camera panned away and the remaining segment of the material was not referenced in text format; however, it was later revealed that at least part of the material downloaded by the hacker did, indeed, reference alien autopsy data stored on Wright-Patterson’s computers.

Such was the interest and furor that followed that NBC—a year later— chose to return to the story and made a public statement regarding the hacker, the material found, and its implications. The producer of that particular episode was Susan Adams. Not only was she amazed by the incredible revelations but Adams also decided to share further data on the revelations. She confirmed that the hacker had only been willing to share what he knew when he got a cast-iron guarantee that his identity would never, ever be released or compromised.

NBC’s lawyers prepared the required paperwork to ensure that everyone was comfortable with the story being filmed and broadcast. The primary reason—it barely needs explaining—was because what the hacker was engaging in was, essentially, illegal activity. Certainly, hacking U.S. military computer systems is something that no one should be thinking of doing. As the Bevan situation showed, he was extremely lucky not to find himself behind bars. Interestingly, the Air Force—and the staff at Wright-Patterson—kept a complete silence on the issue. Were they, perhaps, concerned that by taking legal action against both the hacker and NBC, their actions would cause even more revelations concerning UFOs at Wright-Patterson? That does seem to be the most likely scenario.

It is not just at the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, apparently, that computerized files on both UFOs and alien bodies have allegedly been stored. Investigators Donald Schmitt and Kevin Randle have learned that such material may also be held at the North American Air Defense Command at Cheyenne Mountain, Colorado Springs—NORAD.

Commenting on those who had either direct or indirect access to actual crash-recovered exhibits of alien technology or alien remains, Schmitt and Randle stated, “There are others, however, who have firsthand experiences, but who did not see the bodies. They, through their work with the military, saw files containing notes about the crashes and photographs of the bodies. One of those is a man who said he worked at NORAD in Colorado Springs. In the course of computerizing some of the files, he came across one labeled: USAAF (United States Army Air Force) Early Automation. The file dealt with the recovery of several small bodies and included black and white photographs of them. The man said the bodies were small, no more than four or five feet tall, with big heads.”