In recent years a number of women like Melinda Leslie and Leah Haley have come forward with accounts of having been abducted by ufo entities (whatever they are), and having told no one of their experiences or having told only a few close friends or family members. Yet, despite this, the government somehow seemed to know about their experiences, and they reported then actually being abducted by military personnel, often, apparently, US Navy, and being submitted to medical tests. The question is, of course, how did the government even know about their ufo abductions? I believe my own experiences of years ago may shed some light on the matter.
As a child in 1955 I had an encounter or abduction experience of my own, and told absolutely no one. But in 1963 I was a US Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps cadet at New Mexico State University. There transferred in over me one Air Force Major Francis Cunnion, wearing a paratrooper badge. He explained that in 1953 he had joined a specia operations crash retrieval team whose members, he said, were trained to parachute onto any crashed Soviet aircraft in North America, to gather intelligence data. Various strange things began happening to me then, detailed in my book.
Years later, after leaving the Air Force, I was working as a civilian for the US Social Security Administration when a management official named Roland Clements transferred in over me. He tried to fire me using illegally altered documents, and this is a matter of public record. I then learned from a friend (and Clements admitted it to me) that he, too, had been a member of that same crash retrieval team, a unit so tiny that almost no one has even heard of it. Realizing that this exceeded the bounds of coincidence and that I had been targeted, I realized that my abduction experience was the only thing that might make me worthy of such unwanted attention, and that the unit could have been a ufo crash retrieval team, with the aircraft just being a cover story. They did not even have to know about my specific abduction; since these things seem to run in families or bloodlines, all they had to do was track the families of potential abductees. Author Kevin Randle has since verified that the unit was indeed a ufo retrieval team, under the aegis of Project Moondust. That the government is able to do this, and so obsessed with it (while denying the very existence of ufos) has terrifying implications. William B Stoecker
