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Authors: Robert M. Collins,Timothy Cooper,Rick Doty

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Figure 10:
First basement west vault Bldg 620 showing newly walled up area.

 

A two aspirin migraine setting in yet with all the details? There is more, moving away from building 620, we go next to building 45, Figure 11. This building was once the Wright Laboratory Headquarters in 1982
.
Currently it is the Air Force Research Laboratory’s (AFRL) Air Vehicles Directorate, Integration and Operations Division, Technology Integration Branch.

 

Here we will deviate from the previous way of reporting things and instead let Rick Doty, who worked in Air Force Counter-Intelligence and now a retired MSgt give us a description of a visit he made to WPAFB on a rainy day in May 1982.   

 

“We had lunch at the WPAFB Officer’s Club. We then drove over to the Foreign Technology Division (FTD) now the National Air and Space Intelligence Center (NASIC) to pick-up an AF Lt. Colonel at Detachment 22. The Lt. Colonel escorted the others and myself over to a huge red brick building (Bldg 45) in Area B of WPAFB. This building was about a half mile from the fire truck wash rack.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Figure 11: Back of Bldg 45: Vault is located under this parking lot.

 

     We parked by some trees in the front of the building. We went up a set of brick stairs and through a pair of heavy doors with glass windows (front entry of Bldg 45). We then went down a set of stairs into the basement and then through a set of hallways (see arrowed pathway in Figure 12 (modified) next drawing).

 

We finally arrived at the ‘secure hallway’ where the first badge check was done. We then went past a small auditorium and into a small vaulted room and then up another set of stairs into another vaulted room (mezzanine) and then down again using the stairs even though there was an elevator available. At the bottom, we went through another check point before going through a very long tunnel about 90 to 120 feet with multiple bank-sized vault doors.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Figure 12

 

    
This tunnel system had carpeting all along its length and wide enough to drive a pick-up truck through. We then entered an anteroom where we were checked again. There were a lot of people working in this area (Bob Fugate accompanied me on this trip).

 

     We then proceeded down the remaining tunnel, which forked at a guard duty station. forked to the left down another tunnel into a huge vaulted room estimated to be 100 x 100 feet at least. In this huge vault room, I estimated there to be at least 20 vats, and I couldn’t be sure all the vats were in use.

 

     This huge room had vertical tanks that looked like missiles on the opposite side of the room. On the right, as you entered this huge room, were four to five horizontal tubes that

looked like lung breathers? The vertical “missile tubes” were surrounded by what looked like cryogenic liquid, i.e., liquid nitrogen? The vertical tubes extended to the ceiling approximately 10 feet high. They opened up a few of the “lung breathers” or caskets. In the first one, the alien body was so badly cut-up from all the autopsy work that I got sick to my stomach.

 

    
In the second casket, the body was in much better shape and looked exactly like what was shown in the “FTD alien graphics (refer back to Section 2 Chapter 4). Those graphics reportedly originated from the Foreign Technology Division (now NASIC) at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.”

 

     This vault was very similar to the one located at Ft. Belvoir “Annex K” which is in a remote area of Washington, DC, or Virginia. Rick mentioned that he had been to so many of these facilities that he would get the particulars mixed-up. It seems the Air Force builds underground SCI facilities like they build chow halls.

 

In connection with Ft Belvoir, we reference a Wilber Smith (Canadian “Project Magnet”) and we quote, “According to Smith’s son Jim Smith, shortly before his death in 1962, Wilbert called his son in and told him that he had in fact seen the alien bodies from a crash, and had been shown a crashed flying saucer outside of  Washington D.C.” See, “Wilber Smith Interview and Draft of Wilbert Smith Top Secret UFO Memo” now public:

 

http://www.presidentialufo.com/the-canadian-cover-up/150-top-secret-memo-draft

 

Medical Doctor Paid Hush Money by DOJ?

 

It has also been reported that most, if not all, of the MDs who did the alien autopsy work are being paid hush money by the Justice Department out of “black funds.” An MD by the name of Robert T. Crowley is one example of this. Dr. Crowley was born in 1910 and is more than likely deceased.

 

     We have a personal transcript of Bill Moore’s interview with Crowley back in December 1981 in which Crowley openly admitted to getting a check from the Justice Department.

 

Buildings 450, 29 & 30

 

Moving north, we come to Bldg 450 the Flight Dynamics Laboratory Figure 13. Not much is known about this building other than it does have a second basement. There is another reported tunnel going off in the direction of Bldg 30 close to Medical Bldg 29 (refer back to Figure 3).

 

     Near buildings 29 and 30 is a reported small vault that allegedly was used for VIP viewing going all the way back to the Eisenhower era.

 

Figure 13: Bldg 450

 

 

'Mandible' maybe Alien: Was it from WP?

 

Dental Technician says
'Mandible' maybe Alien.

 

John K. Mosgrove is a 64 (78 in 2008) year-old dental technician currently living in Richmond, Indiana as of 1994. In 1979, he says, while working at a Veterans Administration hospital in Dayton, Ohio (about a 30 minute drive from Wright Patterson Air Force Base), he was assigned the task of replicating a strange mandible, or lower jawbone, taken from a creature of unknown identity. Under orders to remain silent, he told no one about these events for over 14 years; but he did create additional copies of the strange mandible for future study. Carl Day (passed away, November 18th, 2010) of Dayton’s WDTN Channel 2 ran two special reports on Mosgrove in 1994 and had continued to investigate the possible legitimacy of this “alien” mandible.

 

     After Mosgrove had made the replica and gave it to the doctor he peered out the little window in the door. He saw a Major and Lt Col in full military uniform. The doctor handed the replica to them, shook hands with them, and they left. Mosgrove said he’d seen the Lt. Colonel before, trying to decide where it was. It was either at the VA Hospital or it was at Wright-Pat.

 

Figure 14 next: Unknown and human mandible compared.

 

 

 

    
After Mosgrove had made the replica and gave it to the doctor he peered out the little window in the door. He saw a Major and Lt Col in full military uniform. The doctor handed the replica to them, shook hands with them, and they left. Mosgrove said he’d seen the Lt. Colonel before, trying to decide where it was. It was either at the VA Hospital or it was at Wright-Pat.

 

    
Mosgrove could tell from the original impression that this person, or whatever it was, was in a terrible accident, or got hit, because of the bone fragments. “This thing had a terrible hit in the face, like slamming into something. The main part of the force that hit the face would have been more to the upper than the lower. This knocked the teeth out, but it didn’t break the mandible. So that means an indirect hit. If there was anything broken on this lower arch, it would have been the hinge and not particularly the jaw bone.”

 

     He said the teeth that were left in the mandible were all flat-planed, which would mean that there was no reason for incisors to tear. Just a kind of grinding was all they would need, which would mean that they were plant eaters.

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