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December 8 Event
December 8th Event Part II
December 8th Event Part III
December 8th Event Part IV
Abductions and Hypnosis
Abductions and Hypnosis Part 2
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Roswell Testimonies Part II
What Really Went On There In 1947?


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after the crash) and I
said, "Oh, I picked up a few little bits and pieces and
fragments." So, what are they? "I dunno."
Then lo and behold, here comes the military out to the
ranch, a day or two later. I'm almost positive that the
officer in charge, his name was Armstrong, a real nice
guy. He had a [black] sergeant with him that was real
nice. I think there was two other enlisted men. They
said, "We understand your father found this weather
balloon." I said, "Well yeah." "And we understand you
found some bits and pieces." I said, "Yeah, I've got a
cigar box that's got a few of them in there, down at the
saddle shed."
And this (I think he was a captain), and he said, "Well,
we would like to take it with us." I said, "Well..." And
he smiled and he said, "Your father turned the rest of
it over to us, and you know he's under an oath not to
tell. Well," he said, "we came after those bits and
pieces." And I kind of smiled and said, "OK, you can
have the stuff, I have no use for it at all."
He said, "Well, have you examined it?" And I said,
"Well, enough to know that I don't know what the hell it
is." And he said, "We would rather you didn't talk very
much about it."
2.5 Glenn Dennis

[Glenn Dennis was a mortician in Roswell in 1947. His
employer provided mortuary services for Roswell Army Air
Field. Dennis drove a combination hearse and ambulance
for both civilian and military assignments. On July 9 or
10, 1947, Dennis got several phone calls from the
Roswell AAF mortuary officer, who was more of an
administrator than a mortuary technician. The officer
wanted to know about hermetically sealed caskets ("What
was the smallest one they could get?"), and about
chemical solutions. Dennis was interviewed in August
1989 by Stanton Friedman.]
This is what was so interesting. See, this is why I feel
like there was really something involved in this,
because they didn't want to do anything that was going
to make an imbalance. They kept saying, "OK, what's this
going to do to the blood system, what's this going to do
to the tissue?" Then when they informed me that these
bodies [had] laid out in the middle of July, in the
middle of the prairie, I mean that body's going to be as
dark as your [blue] blazer there, and it's going to be
in bad shape. I was the one who suggested dry ice. I'd
done that a time or two.
I talked to them four or five times in the afternoon.
They would keep calling back and asking me different
questions involving the body. What they were really
after was how to move those bodies. They didn't give me
any indication they even had the bodies, or where they
were. But they kept talking about these bodies, and I
said, "What do the bodies look like?" And they said, "I
don't know, but I'll tell you one thing: This happened
some time ago." The only thing that was mentioned was
that they were exposed to the elements for several days.
I understand these bodies weren't in the same location
as where they found some of the others. They said the
bodies weren't in the vehicle itself; the bodies were
separated by two or three miles from it. They talked
about three different bodies: two of them mangled, one
that was in pretty good shape.
[That evening, Dennis took a GI accident victim to the
base infirmary, which was in the same building as the
hospital and the mortuary. He walked the injured GI
inside, then drove around to the back to see a pretty
young Army Air Forces nurse he had recently gotten to
know.]
There were two MPs standing right there, and I got out
and started to go in. I wouldn't have gotten as far as I
did if I hadn't parked in the emergency area. They
probably thought I was coming after somebody. The doors
were open to the military ambulances and that's where
some wreckage was, and there was an MP on each side. I
saw all the wreckage.
I don't know what it was, but I knew there was something
going on, and that's when I first got an inclination
that something was happening. What was so curious about
it, was that in two of those ambulances was a deal that
looked like [the bottom] half of a canoe. It didn't look
like aluminum. You know what stainless steel looks like
when you put heat on it? How it'll turn kinda purplish,
with kind of a blue hue to it? [Dennis later said that
he saw a row of unrecognizable symbols several inches
high on the metal devices.] I just glanced in and kept
going.
When I got inside, I noticed there was quite a bit of
activity. When I went back into the lounge, there were
"big birds" [high-ranking officers he didn't recognize,
though he was familiar with all the local medical
people] everywhere. They were really shook up. So I went
down the hall where I usually go, and I got down the
hall just a little way and an MP met me right there. He
wanted to know who the hell I was and where I was from,
and what business did I have there? I explained who I
was. Evidently he was under the impression that they
called me to come out.
Anyway, I got past that and I went on in and then this
is where I met the nurse. She was involved in this
thing, she was on duty. She told me, "How in the hell
did you get in here?" I said, "I just walked in." She
said, "My God, you are going to get killed." And I said,
"They didn't stop me." I was going to the Coke machine
to get us a Coke, and this big red-headed colonel said,
"What's that son of a bitch doing here?"
He hollered at the MPs and that's when it hit the fan.
These two MPs grabbed me by the arms and carried me
clear outside. They carried me to the ambulance. I
didn't walk, they carried me. And they told me to get my
ass out of there. [They followed him back to the funeral
home.]
About two or three hours later, they [called] and told
me, "You open your mouth and you'll be so far back in
the jug they'll have to shoot pinto beans [into you]
with a bean shooter." I just laughed and said, "Go to
hell."
[Dennis spoke with the nurse again the following day.]
She said there were three little bodies. Two of them
were just mangled beyond everything, but there was one
of them that was really in pretty good condition.
And she said, "Let me show you the difference between
our anatomy and theirs. Really, what they looked like
was ancient Chinese: small, fragile, no hair." She said
their noses didn't protrude, the eyes were set pretty
deep, and the ears were just little indentations. She
said the anatomy of the arms was different, the upper
arm was longer than the lower. They didn't have thumbs,
they had four different, she called them "tentacles", I
think. Didn't have any fingernails. She then described
how they had little things like suction cups on their
fingertips.
I asked her were these men or women? [Were their] sex
organs the same as ours? She said, "No, some were
missing." The first thing that decomposes on a body
would be the brain, next the sex organs, especially in
women. But she thought there had probably been
something, some animals. Some of these bodies were badly
mutilated.
She said they got the bodies out of those containers
[the ones he had seen in the backs of the ambulances, on
the way into the hospital]. See, they weren't at the
crash site, they were about a mile or two from the crash
site. She said they looked like they had their own
little cabins. She said the lower portion, the abdomen
and legs, was crushed, but the upper portion wasn't that
bad. She told me the head was larger and it was kind of
like, the eyes were different.
[A few weeks later, Dennis heard from his father.]
"What the hell'd you get into? What kind of trouble are
you in?" I said, "I'm not in any trouble." And he said,
"The hell you're not. The sheriff [an old friend of the
elder Dennis] said that the base personnel have been in
and they want to know all about your background."
3 THE COPS

3.1 Barbara Dugger
[Barbara Dugger is the granddaughter of George and Inez
Wilcox. George was the sheriff who Mac Brazel contacted
after discovering the crashed flying saucer. Barbara
Dugger was interviewed in 1991 by Kevin Randle.]
[My grandmother said] "Don't tell anybody. When the
incident happened, the military police came to the
jailhouse and told George and I that if we ever told
anything about the incident, not only would we be
killed, but our entire family would be killed."
They called my grandfather and someone came and told him
about this incident. He went out there to the site.
There was a big burned area and he saw debris. It was in
the evening. There were four space beings. Their heads
were large. They wore suits like silk. One of the little
men was alive. If she [Inez] said it happened, it
happened.
[Regarding the death threat, Barbara said Inez said:]
"They meant it, Barbara. They were not kidding."
She said the event shocked him. He never wanted to be
sheriff again after that. Grandmother ran for sheriff
and was defeated. My grandmother was a very loyal
citizen of the United States, and she thought it was in
the best interest of the country not to talk about it.
4 THE PRESS
4.1 Frank Joyce
[Frank Joyce worked at the radio station KGFL. He got a
phone call from a man, presumably Mac Brazel, who
reported wreckage on his ranch.]
He asked me what to do about it. I recommended he go to
Roswell Army Air Base [sic].
The next thing I heard was that the PIO, [Lieutenant]
Walter Haut, came into the station some time after I got
this call. He handed me a news release printed on
onionskin stationary and left immediately. I called him
back at the base and said, "I suggest that you not
release this type of story that says you have a flying
saucer or flying disk." He said, "No, it's Ok. I have
the OK from the C.O. [Colonel Blanchard]."
I sent the release on the Western Union wire to the
United Press bureau. After I returned to the station,
there was a flash on the wire with the story: "The U.S.
Army Air Corps [sic] says it has a flying disk." They
typed a paragraph or two, and then other people got on
the wire and asked for more information. Then the phone
calls started coming on, and I referred them to [the
airfield].
Then the wire stopped and just hummed. Then a phone call
came in, and the caller identified himself as an officer
at the Pentagon, and this man said some very bad things
about what would happen to me. He was really pretty
nasty. Finally, I got through to him: I said, "You're
talking about a release from the U.S. Army Air Corps."
Bang, the phone went dead, he was just gone.
Then [station owner Walt] Whitmore called me and said,
"Frank, what's going on down there?" He was quite upset.
He asked, "Where did you get this story?" In the
meantime, I got this [USAAF news] release and hid it, to
have proof so no one could accuse me of making it up.
Whitmore came in to the station and I gave him the
release. He took it with him.
The next significant thing occurred in the evening. I
got a call from [Mac] Brazel. He said we haven't got
this story right. I invited him over to the station. He
arrived not long after sunset. He was alone, but I had
the feeling that we were being watched. He said
something about a weather balloon. I said, "Look, this
is completely different than what you told me on the
phone the other day about the little green men," and
that's when he said, "No, they weren't green." I had the
feeling he was under tremendous pressure. He said, "Our
lives will never be the same again."
4.2 Lydia Sleppy
[Lydia Sleppy was a teletype operator at Roswell radio
station KSWS. The event she describes below took place
around 4:00 pm on July 7, 1947. She was interviewed in
October 1990 by Stanton Friedman.]
We were Mutual Broadcasting and ABC, and if we had
anything newsworthy, we would put it on the [teletype]
machine, and I was the one who did the typing. It was in
my office. Mr Tucker [Merle Tucker was the station
owner] was in Washington DC trying to get an application
approved for a station in El Paso, when this call came
from John McBoyle [another KSWS staffer]. He told me he
had something hot for the network. I said, "Give me a
minute and I'll get the assistant manager," because if
it was anything like that, I wanted one of them there
while I was taking it down.
I went back and asked Mr [Karl] Lambertz (he came up
from the big Dallas station) if he would come up and
watch. John was dictating and [Karl] was standing right
at my shoulder. I got into it enough to know that it was
a pretty big story, when the bell came on [signaling an
interruption]. Typing came across: "This is the FBI, you
will cease transmitting."
I had my shorthand pad, and I turned around and told
[Karl] that I had been cut off, but that I could take it
in shorthand and then we could call it in to the
network. I took it in shorthand, as John went on to give
the story. He had seen them take the thing away. He'd
been out there [presumably at the Foster ranch] when
they took it away. And at that time, if I remember
correctly, John said they were gonna load it up and take
it to Texas. But when the planes came in, they were from
Wright Field.
4.3 Walt Whitmore Jr
[Walt Whitmore Jr was the son of the owner of Roswell
radio station KGFL. Here is his description of wreckage
from the crash.]
[It was] very much like lead foil in appearance but
could not be torn or cut at all. Extremely light in
weight. Some small beams that appeared to be either wood
or woodlike had a sort of wr


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