UFO expert slams ‘bombshell’ US report on physical danger of alien encounters

UFO reports have been taken more seriously since the Pentagon revealed its extensive investigations – but a leading ufologist has raised major concerns over the report.

The multi-million dollar dossier examines what the US calls “UAPs” – unidentified aerial phenomena – and was triggered after an unexplained encounter episode with USS Nimitz in 2004.

While the official position from the US military is that the phenomenon remains unexplained, but is unlikely to represent proof of contact with aliens, one recently declassified document reveals strange physical side-effects from contact with UFOs that suggests they could represent a danger to humans.

The twelve-year-old report produced by Bigelow Aerospace as part of a $22million US government contract describes injuries caused by “anomalous advanced aerospace systems”.

It contains testimony from people who have seen or come in contact with UFOs and have later reported a wide range of physical illnesses, including headaches, temporary paralysis, and what appear to have been radiation burns.

Much of the data contained within the report appears to have been drawn from a dossier compiled by UFOlogist John F. Schuessler in 1996.

Among the dozens of case reports are a handful from the UK.

One, from Rowley Regis in the West Midlands, describes a woman who saw a “strange light” in her garden.

“She called the dog inside and he laid down as if drugged,” the report states.

Then, three small beings materialised inside her house, apparently communicating with her telepathically for a short time before leaving an “egg-shaped” craft that left a circular dent in her lawn.

The woman later “felt sick and had sore eyes for a week”. The report adds that her electric clock stopped and all of her videotapes were ruined as if they had been exposed to a strong magnet.

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In the same year, 1979, an apparent 'alien abduction' was reported in Livingston in Scotland.

“Robert Taylor encountered a large object while walking in the woods,” the report says. “Something came out from it and grabbed him as he lapsed into unconsciousness.

“When he came to he remembered the choking odour in the air. He had a blinding headache, burning sensation on his chin, itching on his left thigh, and he was extremely weak”

Again, after the incident, “trace marks were found on the ground where the incident occurred.

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A third eerie occurrence took place in Todmorden, West Yorkshire, a year later.

“Police officer Alan Godfrey was coming off duty when he found an oval-shaped object hovering over the road ahead,” the document states.

“He sketched it into his report pad and found himself down the road further than he should have been. He went back to the spot and found the road dry in a swirled pattern”.

Under hypnosis, Godfrey later recalled how a beam of light blinded him and caused him to pass out. He came to in a room where he was being medically examined by small, strange-looking beings.

However, he later told the Huddersfield Daily Examiner “I never said I was abducted by aliens".

Godfrey had been the investigating officer in the mysterious death of 56-year-old Zigmund Adamski six months earlier. That, too, has been blamed on some kind of alien encounter.

However, while the the newly released Advanced Aerospace Weapon System Applications Program (AAWSAP) documentation has been described by some as a “bombshell of revelations from the Pentagon,” British UFO researcher Nigel Watson is more sceptical.

He told the Daily Star: "None of these cases were actually researched by AAWSAP, or by any official UFO investigation team in the US or the UK.

“Indeed, these and the other cases are merely culled from UFO magazines and tabloid newspapers like the National Enquirer. A rather lazy way of collecting data for a serious research document”

“The only bombshell,” from the multi-million dollar report, Nigel says, is that the Pentagon paid so much for so little!”

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