


The former intelligence official who says that doesn't say "bodies," but "biologics," which I assume means some kind of biological material, like, who knows, alien blood.
This former intelligence officer, David Grusch, was quoted by Michael Shellenberger in his previous reporting on the matter of UFOs. Shellenberger mentioned being told about bodies being recovered -- or maybe he just meant "biologics" -- but he didn't report that in his article about what whistleblowers are claiming about UFOs because he wanted to avoid the existential shock of it all.
From that article:
But on Monday, an Air Force whistleblower contradicted the Pentagon's [denial about the recovery of alien craft], telling The Debrief and News Nation that the U.S. government is in possession of "quite a number" of alien spacecraft. "I thought it was totally nuts," David Grusch said. "I thought at first I was being deceived."
But, Grusch said, he soon learned that United States government possessed "quite a number" of different kinds of non-human vehicles. "I have plenty of current and former senior intelligence officers who came to me -- many of whom I knew almost my whole career -- [and] who confided in me."
This is not the first time government officials have suggested that the U.S. may possess alien spaceships. "I was told for decades that Lockheed had some of these retrieved materials," said the late Senator Harry Reid, who fought for greater disclosure. "And I tried to get, as I recall, a classified approval by the Pentagon to have me go look at the stuff. They would not approve that."
Former deputy assistant secretary of Defense for Intelligence, Christopher Mellon, recently reported that he has spoken to more than four witnesses who say they know of "a secret U.S. government program involving the analysis and exploitation of materials recovered from off-world craft... Some have supplied information to the intelligence community's inspector general, others directly to the staff of the congressional oversight committees."
Grusch's claims are shocking, and he has not made public any photographs, video, or written evidence to support them. He says he never saw any of the alleged nonhuman spacecraft himself. And, in response to a query, Defense Department spokesperson Sue Gough repeated what Kirkpatric had said in April. "To date, AARO has not discovered any verifiable information to substantiate claims that any programs regarding the possession or reverse-engineering of extraterrestrial materials have existed in the past or exist currently."
But while Grusch has not shared written evidence in an unclassified way, he did provide classified intelligence reports, emails, and other documents to Thomas A. Monheim, the Intelligence Community Inspector General, as the law allows.
As for photographs, the Defense Department prohibited Grusch from sharing any, as the letter from the DoD below shows.
And now, multiple sources close to the matter have come forward to tell Public that Grusch's core claims are accurate. The individuals are all either high-ranking intelligence officials, former intelligence officials, or individuals who we could verify were involved in U.S. government UAP efforts for three or more decades each. Two of them have testified, including as recently as last year, to both AARO and Congress.
The individuals said they had seen or been presented with "credible" and "verifiable" evidence that the U.S. government, and U.S. military contractors, possess at least 12 or more alien space crafts, some of which they shared with AARO, which AARO has refused to provide to Congress. The reason AARO "has not discovered any verifiable information," they said, is because it does have the authority to verify it and may not want to verify it.
"In his testimony to Congress, Kirkpatrick said that AARO is operating under Title 10 authority, but most intelligence agencies operate under a higher, Title 50 Authority," explained a source "The intelligence community with Title 50, feels free to stonewall AARO with Title 10 because they view Title 10 authority as inferior to Title 50."
The sources all expressed anger and frustration at the Pentagon's denial of the existence of nonhuman craft and materials. "The denials coming out of Susan Gough and the Pentagon are specifically chosen to use AARO as the source of information when Grusch has already addressed that AARO didn't have access. And so, of course, they didn't discover anything."
Said another individual, "The AARO response is typical because they are not doing any investigation of the testimony they've been given. Kirkpatrick has not been reporting properly to the congressional committees."
Grusch's whistleblower claims, not necessarily about the existence of aliens on earth but about the improper refusal to report evidence about the possible existence of aliens on earth, were determined by an inspector general to be "credible and urgent."
According to explosive reporting, and a subsequent clarification, the powerful internal investigative body that oversees the nation's intelligence agencies found a whistleblower's assertion that UFO-related information was inappropriately concealed from Congress "urgent and credible."
I say we take these damned aliens and put them all on buses and send them to LA, SF, DC, and NYC. They'll blend right in. Plus, they can do all the Jobs Americans Won't Do (TM).