Watch: CIA scientist believed alien autopsy footage was real
Any UFO enthusiast knows about the Roswell spaceship accident where an alien was given an autopsy. In 2001, a document surfaced that electrified UFO enthusiasts, who staunchly believe that the footage which shows a humanoid alien after the Roswell crash in 1947 being taken apart by medics was not faked after all.
This film footage had been released around the globe to up to 33 countries by British entrepreneur Ray Santilli where he claimed that he obtained this video in 1992 from a retired US military cameraman while trying to obtain archive footage of Elvis Presley. He claimed that he was in the US at the time and that’s when he came across this video.
Santilli sold the footage to TV stations across the planet after which fellow filmmaker Spyros Melaris debunked it last year claiming that they had actually faked the footage by using a pig brain and animal organs in a London apartment. This video managed to trick the entire world for over a decade.
This story has taken a fresh twist as a leaked memo that has been obtained by aerospace billionaire Robert Bigelow from one of his physicists Eric Davis. The memo alleges that a CIA scientist named Kit Green was “briefed three different times during and after his tenure at CIA on topics relevant to UFOs and the Roswell Incident Alien Autopsy”. The memo is believed to have been circulated from the archives of late astronaut Edgar Mitchell that states, “After Kit left the CIA he was called into the Pentagon by a person in uniform. This person showed Kit the alien autopsy photos and reports etc. The photos of the alien cadaver Kit saw were consistent with the cadaver seen in the 1995 Santilli film/video.”
The memo went on to state, “Kit was asked to professionally evaluate the material provided to him at this particular briefing.”
As per a report by The Sun, Green went on to provide a professional evaluation of the footage in January 2001 and a summary of his report stated, “The Alien Autopsy film/video is real, the alien cadaver is real, and the cadaver seen in the film/video is the same as the photos Kit saw at the 1987/88 Pentagon briefing."
The memo also shows an email where Green reveals forensic tissue and organs were stored at Walter Reed-Armed Forces Institute for Pathology Medical Museum in Washington DC. When quizzed as to why there was so much debunking of the Santilli video when it first hit the airways, Green said, “The PR folks around Santilli are indeed not operating with a full set of dishes, are a little dense and not very nice to boot."
The report by The Sun goes on to state, “The memo has re-ignited the heated debate over the footage both in the US and in Britain with a number of top UFO researchers now publicly backing the film, including Linda Moulton Howe, Richard Dolan and Grant Cameron.”
Howe, who as an Emmy award-winning documentary filmmaker said, “Those words from Dr Kit Green about the authenticity of the six-fingered, six-toed human dissected after retrieval from a 1947 UFO crash, it is confirmation that the Santilli film video is real. It is important."
British UFO sleuth, Philip Mantle, who has studied the footage for over 14-years state that this is the world’s largest hoax although he believes that the memo was possibly real. He stated, “What amazed me is that I am personally mentioned in this 11-page document. It just goes to show that just when you think you’ve seen it all then something will crop up to prove otherwise. What has sent some UFO researchers into a tailspin is the comments from Kit Green in this 11-page memo. Dr Kit Green is best known in ufology for his work as a Senior Division Analyst for neurosciences at the CIA and his interest in UFOs. Green states that he had previously seen an authentic alien autopsy (some years before the Santilli film was released) and that it was the same as the alien autopsy film released by Ray Santilli in 1995. Those who have now jumped on the alien autopsy gravy train are Grant Cameron, Richard Dolan and Linda Moulton Howe.”
This shows that even though the technology used was probably not as advanced as it is now, it still did manage to fox a CIA scientist entrusted with providing a professional evaluation.