The man at the helm was Lou Elizondo.
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In my opinion, the ATIP program was an informal working group, not a real program besides anything written on a couple pieces of paper that was directed, not directed, but the man at the helm was Lou Elizondo.
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And when this plan kind of failed and Trump got in office, then that whole crew and ATIP kind of shifted towards targeting Lou Elizondo.
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If you look at Lou Elizondo's early public appearances, especially the videos he released with Chris Mellon, who Chris Mellon, you know, was, I think, an assistant deputy director in the USDI, Undersecretary for Defense for Intelligence.
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And this is what I believe Mellon and Lou Elizondo tried to push with the New York Times article and the videos they brought forth.
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And you can start to see weird milestones in that, like when did Lou Elizondo start talking about UFO crash retrievals?
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And the bridge between Clapper and the bridge between Lou Elizondo.
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I wonder who provided Lou Elizondo the top cover for the ATIP mission.
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And I'll say that if Lou Elizondo had a position within the legacy program, he should just come out and talk about it.
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And that, in my opinion, involves, allegedly, Lou Elizondo, Chris Mellon, and the OSAP crew.
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And so he said that there was 115 and somebody asked about Lou Elizondo and Greer and the questions.
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