Justin
The owners were spectacular: "The RAAF capturesflying saucer on a ranch in Roswell," "The Army says it has found a frisbee", "The Army is a flying saucer on a ranch in New Mexico." On July 8, 1947, the press officer of the base of the U.S. AirForce in Roswell (Roswell Army Air Field, RAAF) had launched the biggest story of the century.
On the 9th the headline read: "Ramey belies the Flying Saucer." Ramey was a brigadier general in themilitary base of Fort Worth (Texas) and moved to Brazel's request, to view the remains, which immediately identified as a weather balloon. After the press photographed the remains.
RAAF Base of the509 Bomb Group, which in 1945 tested the first atomic bomb. It is said that there were the remains of the crashed UFO.
The next day, Friedman made contact with Jesse Marcel, information officer ofthe RAAF when the alleged accident occurred near Corona, 120 miles of Roswell. Marcel said he was ordered to pick up the pieces and delivered to Wright Field (Ohio), where the Army stored materialcaptured from the enemy. He could not remember the exact dates.
While this was happening, the press officer, Walter Haut, officially announced the news, it would be denied the same day sayingthat it was a weather balloon.
The famous video of an alien autopsy had many similarities with the descriptions were witnesses who saw the bodies in 1947.
In his book "Crash at Corona", Friedmanpicks Marcel's testimony: "The remains were scattered over an immense area. Were not something that had crashed or had exploded on impact with the ground. Were something that exploded while flying athigh speed. My opinion as aviation is understood that this was not a weather balloon or an aircraft or a missile. "
Brazel and his son just found rubber strips, tinfoil, cardboard and wooden rods.
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