Well, let me take a look. Let me read to you first day what the Air Force says about the about the bodies.
First of all, I'm going to read from the introductory space science volume to Department of Physics, United States Air Force.
This is chapter 13, unidentified flying objects. Now, this is what the Air Force has the students at the Air Force Academy read.
I'm not looking this up. This is an air for you can pick out an Air Force physics book and read this stuff. And at the end of the chapter, they go on to say this leads us to believe in the unpleasant possibility of alien visitors to our planet or at least of alien controlled UFOs.
Now the picture that we have of the of the big head that the Air Force describes.
He said the government goes to great lengths, the Air Force in particular to discredit this kind of stuff. Where did this come from?
That came from the private collection of Leonard Stringfield, who was one of the premier researchers. He worked for the Air Force in the early 50s in a secret project reporting UFOs.
You think maybe it's a top secret area if the Air Force actually does have them. Maybe they got him here.
Current warning signs indicate it's an air force facility, but all branches of the military have used it,
It may not be a coincidence that the air force's only unmanned aerial vehicle squadron is based at Nellis.
Three days after our visit, FBI agents working with Air Force Intelligence