While I was reading the
material posted to the Anomalist website (www.anomalist.com), I followed a
couple of links and came to a story headlined, “’Roswell Was Real, Claimed
Apollo 14 Astronaut, Elizondo Suggests 2 UFOs Crashed That Day.” (No, the
headline is not suggesting that Elizondo was an astronaut… I think they needed
a semi-colon rather than a comma to make it clear.)
That headline intrigued
me because of the suggestion that two UFOs had crashed on the same day. This
was the theory spun by Stan Friedman in an attempt to validate the Plains of
San Agustin crash site identified by Barney Barnett. Friedman’s theory was that
the UFOs had collided with one falling to the Brazel (Foster) ranch near
Corona, New Mexico, and the other coming down farther to the west, on the
Plains.
I do not believe there
was a crash on the Plains in July 1947, and the reason that theory was ever
considered was that the original information, provided by Jesse Marcel, Sr.,
had no mention of alien bodies. Barney Barnett, however, who lived in Socorro,
New Mexico, did tell of something falling on the Plains and that he had seen the
bodies of an alien flight crew. Ruth Barnett kept a diary for all of 1947, and
there is no mention of anything like that in her written record. I have
explored this in the past, at length, and you can read more about it here:
http://kevinrandle.blogspot.com/2018/07/finding-ruth-barnett-diary.html
http://kevinrandle.blogspot.com/2015/02/the-plains-of-san-agustin-crash.html
The point is, given the
information I have uncovered and the investigation that I conducted, there was
no evidence substantiate the dual crash aspect of the Roswell case. In one of
the more notorious tales told, Gerald Anderson, said that he was on the Plains
that day and saw the crashed craft and the alien creatures. Friedman continued
to support Anderson long after it was clear that Anderson lied about his
involvement. You can read more about that here, but you need to scroll down to
find the relevant information about Anderson:
http://kevinrandle.blogspot.com/2020/08/stan-friedman-vs-philip-klass-whats.html
To me, if Elizondo was,
in fact, saying that two UFOs crashed that day, it suggested he was not on the
inside because two UFOs had not crashed that day. The Barnett tale had been
single witness with no corroboration, and in fact, scientists who were in the
area at the time and who had a perfect view of the entire Plains, did not
corroborate the story. Given all that, it seemed that Elizondo might not have
been the insider that he claimed.
However…
And you knew there
would be a “however”…
I wanted to know
exactly what he had said, and I wanted to know where he had said it. According
to the story in the Roswell Daily Record, Elizondo said, “Before I was
part of AATIP, I had no idea about Roswell, other than that there was sort of
some alleged crash at some point and some farmer found debris – but during my
time with AATIP, there was some very interesting anecdotal information that
suggests there wasn’t just one crash, there may have been two crashes, and that
somehow it may have been related to some sort of testing that was being done at
the time at White Sands, and that the material was recovered.”
He didn’t add much in
that article about what he knew, only that these were things that he had heard
from those who had been around since the days of Project Blue Book. This is
exactly the same sort of thing that Don Schmitt, Tom Carey, and I have heard
for many years from people who were actually in Roswell at the time or who were
in the Army Air Forces when the object crashed. Brigadier General Arthur Arthur Exon
Exon,
for example, provided us with these same stories about what he had heard when
he was assigned to Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in 1947. Exon even talked about
the recovery of alien creatures and what happened to the bodies once they had
been moved out of Roswell.
My original purpose
here was to suggest that if Elizondo was talking about two crashes on the same
day, that would tend to undercut his importance to the UFO investigation given
that there was only the single event. But the newspaper story doesn’t say
anything about two crashes on the same day, only that there were two crashes.
And, he says that these were anecdotal tales he had been told, not that he had
seen documents or classified studies which changes the importance of what he
said. Only that he had heard these things from others who he suggested would
have known the truth.
This turned out not to
be much of a chase for accurate information. I guess you could say that it was
a “nothing burger.” I was intrigued by the headline that was inaccurate and
reading the whole story gave the correct information. It does, however, show
that Roswell is still alive in the UFO world.
Kevin: While I realize the headline " ... [s]uggests 2 UFOs Crashed ...," is it not distinctly possible that Elizondo & Co. are confusing the number of crashes with the number of crash sites? It wouldn't be the first time that an important fact became distorted as it was "whispered down the lane."
ReplyDeleteJohn -
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure that it matters because the headline is inaccurate. Elizondo was talking of two crashes as opposed to two crashes on the same day. Remove the same day aspect and it changes the discussion. Besides, the newspaper article makes it clear he was repeating what he had been told by others rather than observations of documents and evidence seen by him. I just thought it an interesting little tale of how the headline becomes, sort of, click bait, but the story makes it clear (to quote Karl Kolshak).
One thing that is certain about Luis Elizondo is that he was a big help in getting the mainstream media to finally start taking the subject seriously.
ReplyDeleteGetting those Navy videos published has been game changer.
If there was only one crash at Roswell, then where were the bodies of the aliens found, in what place were they discovered? Jesse Marcel and Mac Brazel said that they only discovered metal remains, while other witnesses of the collapse say that they also saw the bodies.
ReplyDeleteThis means that the bodies were found in another place more distant. Wouldn't it be more logical to believe that there could have been two collapses at short intervals? It is known that many UFO sightings were reported during that period.
Here ´re some infos about the Crash in the Plains:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.ufoexplorations.com/other-roswell-crash-secret-of-plain
Here´re some and very important informations about the Crash in the Plains of San Agustin:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.ufoexplorations.com/other-roswell-crash-secret-of-plain
LP-V: One crash at Roswell, but multiple crash sites is the best developed theory of the case at this point. Jesse Marcel and Mack Brazel were at the Foster Ranch debris field where they found metallic debris along with a parchment-like substance, wood-like I-beam shaped material, and even translucent thread-like material. There were also two (2) bodies found at the Dee Proctor body site about two (2) to three (3) miles from the Foster Ranch debris field. And then, in addition, the main body of the spacecraft with three additional crew -- two (2) deceased and one (1) alive -- were all located at the impact site approx. 30-35 miles away from Foster Ranch. This impact site was in Chaves County and much nearer to Roswell, while the Foster Ranch was in Lincoln County and nearer to Corona, NM.
ReplyDeleteI would suggest that you undertake more reading and research about the Roswell UFO crash of July, 1947. There is a ton of material about the case on this blog, plus numerous books on the subject, including the recently published Understanding Roswell by Kevin Randle.
I have always thought there was only one real crash and that some of the debris landed on the ranch with the craft near by. That would explain a lot of things such as the newspaper story about a flying disc being captured. I never thought it was two separate crashes like some researchers do. Then again I could be wrong.
ReplyDeleteLemurian: The information you refer to above has already been answered and refuted by Kevin in the Wednesday, April 14, 2021 entry on this blog: Did Herbert Dick Lie About Being on the Plains of San Agustin? Rather interesting that you neglected to mention this in your comment.
ReplyDelete