William Leonard Moore (born October 31, 1943?) is an author and former UFO researcher. Prominent from the late 1970s to the late 1980s, he co-authored two books with Charles Berlitz, including The Roswell Incident - the first book written about the alleged Roswell UFO crash/retrieval. Bill Moore later became a controversial figure within UFOlogy due to his involvement with a group of intelligence contacts known as ‘The Aviary’. He played a role in The Bennewitz Affair, and was a central figure in the release of the controversial Majestic 12 documents.
Michael D. Swords is an American scientist.
In 1962 Swords graduated from the University of Notre Dame with a B.S.. He studied biochemistry at Iowa State University (where he earned his M.S.), and at Case Western Reserve University (where he earned his Ph.D. in 1972).
As of 2006, Swords is a professor of natural sciences at Western Michigan University, where he received a Teaching Excellence award in 1978.
Swords is also interested in ufology, and is seen as an authority of the Condon Committee. He was editor of the Journal for UFO Studies. He was a prominently featured talking head on the prime-time 2005 television special Peter Jennings Reporting: UFOs — Seeing Is Believing, discussing the early history of the U.S. Military's UFO investigations (see also Project Sign and Project Grudge.)
Bill Moore, who asserts that "the Men in Black” are really government agents in disguise ... members of a rather bizarre unit of Air Force Intelligence known currently as the Air Force Special Activities Center (AFSAC) ... As of 1991, the AFSAC, headquartered in Fort Belvoir, Virginia," and "under the operational authority of Air Force Intelligence Command centered at Kelly Air Force Base in Texas." (Clark, 321–22) Curiously, Moore also reports that AFSAC was inspired by the tales of Men in Black from the 1950s, and had nothing to do with those early accounts. Similarly, Clark notes that Dr. Michael D. Swords has speculated that the Barker/Bender Men in Black case (occurring shortly after the CIA-directed Robertson Panel issued its recommendations to spy on civilian UFO groups) might have been a psychological warfare experiment.
The “Men in Black” probably worked out of the AFOSI. Click on the explanation below.
http://www.osi.andrews.af.mil/
U.S. Air Force Office of Special Investigations
The Air Force Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI, or OSI), is a Field Operating Agency (FOA) of the United States Air Force that provides professional investigative services to commanders throughout the Air Force. AFOSI identifies, investigates, and neutralizes criminal, terrorist, and espionage threats to personnel and resources of the Air Force and Department of Defense using Special Agents.
What is a Special Agent?
If you want to find out, click on the link below.
- In U.S. Air Force Office of Special Investigations, go to "Federal law enforcement."
- Click on "Special Agent."
This information above is from the Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
http://www.cmg-media.com/index.shtml
No comments:
Post a Comment