Latest UFO claims include supposed National Air and Space Intelligence Center employee at Wright-Patterson Air ... - Dayton Daily News
As an Air Force veteran is asserting that the U.S. government possesses downed craft of extra-terrestrial origin, a website has quoted what it says is an employee of the National Air and Space Intelligence Center at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base on the subject.
But Dayton’s congressman, Mike Turner, who leads the House Intelligence Committee, says there is no evidence for these latest claims.
A site called TheDebrief.org, NewsNation and others are reporting claims from David Charles Grusch, 36, an Air Force veteran who worked for the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency and the National Reconnaissance Office.
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Grusch told NewsNation that in his time with the “Unidentified Aerial Phenomena” task force — now known as the “All Domain Anomaly Resolution Office” — he was refused access to a government “crash retrieval program,” which NewsNation said “included spacecraft from quite a number of other species.”
“The UAP task force was refused access to a broad crash retrieval program. These are retrieving non-human-origin technical vehicles — call it ‘space craft,’ if you will — vehicles that have either landed or crashed,” Grush told NewsNation this week.
In its own account this week, the Debrief.org quoted and paraphrased a “Jonathan Grey,” who the site identified as “a generational officer” of the federal intelligence community with a top-secret clearance who “currently works for the National Air and Space...
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