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TRINITY: The Best-Kept Secret

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Reme: And I told him what I saw and so his dad says, well, the first thing we got to do is we got to get you home. We’ll look into this in the next day or so. It probably belongs to the government, and that’s probably it. We need to maybe stay away from thereAnd so they drove me home, I left my horse there and they took care of it. They drove me home and Faustino had a long talk with my mom regarding the object that we had discovered on the Padilla ranch. Faustino emphasized it might endanger his job, since my dad worked for the government. Reme: The Owl Bar and Café. And so the Owl Bar and Café was run by Estanislado Miera. In the parking lot, they had a basketball hoop, where we played. They had what they called a Fountain where they sold ice cream and shakes, food. They also had a jukebox. So that’s where the soldiers went to socialize. And so we would go there and play hoops and then sometimes Estanislado would come out and ask us to help him. Sometimes we would help grind up meat for hamburgers, wash dishes, clean the place up.

A December 2010 interview is the only place I’ve found Harris even referring to the recovery of alien cadavers, and then only in passing—they are not mentioned in either edition of Trinity: The Best-Kept Secret. Nor have I come across any other interview in which Harris repeats her passing 2010 oblique reference to the pilot flying the alien bodies away. I have found no reference by Vallee to either the captured live alien or the recovered alien cadavers– even though, I again underscore, the information comes from a source that Vallee finds impeccable with regard to the overhead-pilot claim. Paola Harris: I know. I very happily will do this and thank you for trusting me, and you can trust me because my work is all to just record and archive it for the future, so that’s what I want to do. However, in the late 70s, author Leonard Stringfield purported that not only was the incident real, but that the craft involved was one of many captured and stored by the U.S. military. [12] In later years, many alleged 'first hand' accounts of the Roswell crash contained the Aztec crash story, [12] with some claiming the craft was made of a material impervious to all heat, while others claiming the craft was damaged by the crash. The supposed humanoid bodies were said to measure between 36 inches (91cm) and 42 inches (110cm) in height, and weigh around 40 pounds (18kg). Ufologists claim that shortly after the craft was downed, the military cleared the area of evidence, including the bodies—subsequently taking it to Hangar 18 at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. [2] [3] FBI memo [ edit ] Paola Harris: Around the 15th. That 15th of August, you know, is the Feast of the Madonna. It’s the greatest feast in Italy. Okay, never mind. It’s a major date. Okay, so it’s around the 15th, so whose dad was it that sent you, and you were how old? Reme: That particular piece has a little carbon type of hairs in it and so if you notice that piece, even though it melts, has a few melts around there.It transfers that heat from one side to the other. And so that prevents meltdown.Reme: What ever they found, they did not tell us. What I do know is they found a complete change of attitude. When we were coming down the hill towards the crashed object, they were doubting us a lot. Reme: We are not talking about flat land here. We are talking about hills, canyons, and arroyos. Standing on top of a hill, looking downwards where we had seen the object, it was no longer visible to us, at that time. No explanation why. We simply could not see it. It seemed gone. Jose says well, “I don’t know what’s going on here.” Eddy and Faustino said, “What did you say you saw?” My response was, it’s down there, but we can’t see it. Faustino said let’s walk down there and take a look. We started walking down and then we saw it. The object had a lot of debris over it and so I’m asking Faustino, how come we couldn’t see it from up there. His response was that he didn’t know. Perhaps I will be shown to be in error in some details and in some of my assessments. When convinced of an error, I will correct it here, and show my work. But the information that I have already compiled, and that I distill for you here, is more than sufficient to reach an unequivocally negative conclusion, beyond a reasonable doubt, on the credibility of the Trinity UFO crash-recovery story. To the original fiction of Baca and Padilla, Harris and Vallee later grafted on the morphing delusional fantasies of the eccentric son (William P. “Billy” Brophy) of a long-deceased military pilot (William J. Brophy). The pilot himself probably had no connection whatever to any of the multiple and conflicting UFO-crash stories to which his name has been attached by his fabulist son.

As Vallee points out, not only did the family witness the crash, but also the full military retrieval operations, perhaps one of the only times witnesses had done so.Reme: They were trying to update him in the use of computers as teaching tools. So in the process of doing that, he named some of his students that were in his class in the article, and omitted Jose and I. Jose and I discussed this.We thought he might be surprised that we were still around so I gave a call. Video of “The New Extraterrestrial Paradigm,” by Paola Harris, published August 27, 2016 (includes video footage of interviews of Baca and Padilla, but the audio quality is very poor).

Trinity is an important and valuable book, though not for the reasons its authors believe it to be. It is important because it documents a variant of the Roswell myth that makes explicit what is implicit in the standard version: that at the heart of the myth is death. Specifically, the mass death of nuclear annihilation.” If that occurs in this case, then I would expect the promoters of the Trinity UFO crash story to seek to deflect attention away from the most damning and incontrovertible lies told by Reme Baca and Jose Padilla—for example, the revelations about New Mexico State Police officer Eddie Apodaca, or the evidence that Jose Padilla falsely claimed extensive service as a California Highway Patrol officer, or the documents that show that Reme Baca falsely claimed to be a close associate of Governor Dixy Lee Ray and imputed to Governor Ray actions that in the real world would have been serious federal crimes. Regrettably, in my view, Vallee invested in the Trinity case his prestige, and he has also devoted some portion of his reportedly ample financial resources to promoting it (he hired a publicist, who appears to have been quite effective). In so doing, I believe that the scientist has placed his trust in persons unworthy of that trust.It is one of the most astounding cases I have ever covered in my career and it helps complete the puzzle of why there has been so many crash retrievals in New Mexico. As journalist Ben Moffet, who so beautifully describes the cover-up - we can begin to see where it fits in UFO history. The findings have been described as being similar to the Roswell Incident, which up until now was the US government's earliest recorded recovery of a UFO, July 1947. They claim to have documented evidence of an avocado-shaped aircraft weighing several tons being removed from the property where it crash-landed n 1945. During the late 1940s and early 50s, Silas Newton and Leo A. Gebauer traveled through Aztec, attempting to sell devices known in the oil business as "doodlebugs." [8] They claimed that these devices could find oil, gas and gold, and that they could do so because they were based on "alien technology" recovered from the supposed crash of a flying saucer. When J. P. Cahn of the San Francisco Chronicle asked the con-men for a piece of metal from the supposed alien devices, they provided him with a sample that turned out to be ordinary aluminium. [8] In 1949, author Frank Scully published a series of columns in Variety magazine retelling the crash story told to him by Newton and Gebauer. He later expanded these columns to create "Behind the Flying Saucers" in 1950, a best selling book that influenced public perceptions about UFOs. Two years later in 1952 the hoax was exposed in True magazine, [9] with a follow-up article in 1956 presenting other victims of Newton and Gebauer. [10] One of the victims was the millionaire Herman Flader, who pressed charges. The two were convicted of fraud in 1953. [1] [3] Influence on Ufology [ edit ]

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