A little more than
thirty years ago, a conflict erupted in the Roswell case when it was discovered
that in a picture of Brigadier General Roger Ramey, portions of a document he
held could be read. Anyone with an engagement of the picture and a magnifying
glass could see that it mentioned Fort Worth, Texas and weather balloons. There
was one interesting word that most researchers agreed on and that was disk.
Given that the date of the photograph was established as July 8, 1947, and that
it was Ramey who held it, the obvious conclusion was that the document related in
some fashion to the Roswell UFO crash.
BG Roger Ramey and COL Thomas Dubose with the rawin target. Photograph taken on July 8, 1947. |
Everyone agrees that
something fell near Corona, New Mexico, sometime in early July 1947, and
everyone agrees that Major Jesse Marcel, Sr., of the 509th Bomb
Group, stationed at the Roswell Army Air Field, along with Captain Sheridan
Cavitt of the Army’s Counterintelligence Corps, had traveled to the site of the
wreck. They recovered debris which they transported to the air field either
late on July 7 or early on July 8. At this point, the consensus deviates dramatically.
One is the theory of an alien off-world spacecraft and at the opposite end is
weather balloons with rawin radar reflectors.
Attempts to read the
entire document held by General Ramey, who commanded the Eighth Air Force, were
sparked by the theory that this document, with an undisputed provenance relates
to the Roswell crash case. The negative for the picture is held in the Special
Collections Library at the University of Texas at Arlington. The photograph,
taken by J. Bond Johnson, was donated to the library, along with thousands of
others taken by Fort Worth Star-Telegram reporters and photographers over the
decades.
Entrance to the Special Collections at the University of Texas at Arlington. Photo by Kevin Randle. |
There are those who
dismiss the importance of this photograph and the information contained on what
is called the Ramey Memo because, what “crashed” near Corona, New Mexico in
early July 1947 was nothing more than weather balloons and rawin radar reflectors
which were part of the top-secret Project Mogul. The nature of the project was
the reason for the secrecy and the cover story that was handed to the press.
The trouble with this
scenario is that the balloon launches in New Mexico were part of an attempt to
create a constant level balloon, meaning an array of balloons that would remain
at a constant altitude for a long time. The project was using off the shelf
weather balloons and rawin radar targets. Nothing in New Mexico was classified
and a report of those experiments, along with several photographs, was
published in newspapers around the country on July 10, 1947.
One of the project
engineers in New Mexico, Charles Moore, told me that the June 4, 1947 launch,
which is the culprit in the case, contained no rawin targets which argues
against the authenticity of the debris displayed and photographed in General
Ramey’s office on July 8.
Well, to be perfectly
accurate, what he told me was that Flight No. 4 was configured just like that
of Flight No. 5. Flight No. 5, according to the documentation, contained no
rawin targets. The question then becomes, if Flight No. 4 had no rawin targets,
where did the rawin target photographed in Ramey’s office originate?
Flight No. 5, which,
according to the documentation was the first successful flight in New Mexico,
raises an additional question. Since there was no data captured by Flight No.
4, and that, according Dr. Albert Crary’s field diary and field notes, was
cancelled, the next question is where did the debris found by Mack Brazel
originate. It certainly wasn’t part of Project Mogul.
Both Jesse Marcel, Sr.
and Thomas Dubose, who appear in other photographs taken in Ramey’s office at
time, when shown those pictures said that it wasn’t what had been brought from
Roswell. Johnny Mann, a reporter for WWL-TV in New Orleans, accompanied Marcel
to Roswell for an interview conducted in the early 1980s. Mann showed Marcel
one of the pictures of the debris taken in Ramey’s office. Marcel told Mann
that the debris displayed there was not what he had found on the Brazel
(Foster) ranch. And Mann told me that during an interview at his home in
Amarillo, Texas, in the mid-1990s.
Jesse Marcel, Sr. holding part of a rawin target. He would tell reporter Johnny Mann that this was not the material he had brought from Roswell |
Thomas Dubose was
interviewed in his home by Don Schmitt and Stan Friedman in the early 1990s.
Dubose was quite clear that the material photographed was not samples of the
debris recovered on the Brazel ranch. According to Dubose, the debris had been
switched.
If the debris in
Ramey’s office was not what had been found in New Mexico, then what relevance
does studying that debris have? Since it was not what was found, it has no
importance in learning about the Roswell crash.
Where does that leave
us? Flight No. 4 was cancelled, according to Dr. Albert Crary’s field notes,
and if it was cancelled, then it couldn’t have left the debris found by Mack
Brazel. As noted, Charles Moore told me that Flight No. 4 was configured in the
same way as Flight No. 5, which contained no rawin targets. That means that
even if we concede that Flight No. 4 was launched, it had no rawin targets and
therefore couldn’t have scattered the metallic debris in the field.
Official records showing nothing for Flight No. 4. Moore claimed that it performed as well as Flight No. 5. |
There is one other
minor point often overlooked in this discussion. The records suggest the
proposed launch of Flight No. 4 was June 4, 1947. That means it laid in that
field for nearly a month before it was discovered by Mack Brazel. Bill Brazel
told Don Schmitt and me, repeatedly, that his father was in that particular
field nearly every day. Brazel reported the debris only a day or two after he
found it. If that is true, and there is no evidence to contradict Bill Brazel’s
claim, then what was found was not the remnants of Flight No. 4.
All of this means is that no matter what interpretation is put on an examination of the photographs taken in Ramey’s office, they prove nothing about what fell. That debris is a substitution for the real debris. Any conclusions drawn from those photographs, as related to the debris, are moot. They mean nothing to understanding the overall case.
That takes us back to
the document held by General Ramey. That photograph becomes important to the
Roswell case because, if we can read the text, we might learn something of relevance.
But the latest interpretation has little to nothing to do with what was
photographed. We are directed to a picture of Jesse Marcel, Sr., crouched by
the debris, holding a piece of it. Sticking out to the left is a small stick,
that appeared to have had part of the foil material from the rawin target
attached to it.
In enlargements of that
picture, and now in a colorized version of it, there appeared to be some
markings on the stick. According to one interpretation, these markings resemble
the embossed lettering that Jesse Marcel, Jr., said that he had seen on what he
called an I-beam. If true, them this takes us right back to rawin targets and
the June 4, 1947 balloon launch.
Colorized version of the photograph that shows the blobs of glue on the support under Marcel's right hand. |
This claim was examined
thirty years ago when the controversy first erupted. Those same blobs were
suggested as what Jesse Marcel, Jr. had mistaken for specific alien symbols
that might represent off-world writing. Marcel himself said that those blobs
didn’t look like anything he had seen on the remains of the debris.
The circumstances
suggest that those blobs were nothing more than the residue of the glue to
attach the foil to the support structures of the rawin target.
What we have here, is
evidence that Flight No. 4, the culprit in all this, was cancelled. Charles
Moore contradicts this documentation by claiming that Flight No. 4 was launched
in the dark, in cloudy weather in violation of the regulations under which they
operated. He said that the launch was at 2:30 or 3:00 a.m. in contradiction
with Albert Crary’s field notes which indicated the flight had been cancelled
at dawn because of clouds. Dawn was two and half to three hours after that
alleged launch.
Moore claims that
Brazel had found the remains of the June 4 balloon array nearly a month later. Remember,
Bill Brazel said that an important water station for the livestock was in the
field so that his father would have been there every other day and in some
cases every day. Mack Brazel complained to family and friends about the big
mess and wondered who was going to clean it up.
Tommy Tyree, who was a
sometimes ranch hand helping Brazel, told Don Schmitt and me that the sheep
refused to cross the field that was densely packed by the debris. Brazel had to
drive them around it. Of course, had it been a Mogul array, Brazel could have
picked it up himself in about twenty minutes, especially since the arrays
created in New Mexico were two thirds the length of those launched in the East
Coast.
All the evidence, when
examined dispassionately, tells us that the balloon wreckage in Ramey’s office
has little to do with the Roswell case. Clearly, it was meant to cover up a
much bigger secret and since the experiments being conducted in New Mexico were
not classified, that secret had to be something else.
That leaves us with the
Ramey memo and what it might say. That document could be the smoking gun. The
problem there is that current technology doesn’t allow us to provide a
consensus interpretation of most of the memo. Artificial Intelligence might be
able to resolve this problem. But at the moment we haven’t had any luck with
AI.