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SEVERAL people have come forward with rich information following claims of a covert program to study aircraft, said the Pentagon’s UFO boss.
In what is believed to be his last public event, Sean Kirkpatrick, the director of the All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), answered several questions from reporters.
Kirkpatrick also addressed the claims made by former Air Force intelligence officer David Grusch about a secret UFO retrieval unit.
“I can’t comment on anything he’s told other people. The only way we can get anything that he has shared to other people is if he gives permission to them to share it because he’s protected under those same laws,” Kirkpatrick told NewsNation.
“But I have a whole range. I’ve got almost 40 other people that have come in and provided a lot of rich information that we’ve been investigating and crossreferencing and researching and trying to figure out the truth. And again, that’s what I’m saying.”
Grusch previously testified before Congress that the Pentagon has UFOs that were retrieved from crash sites.
He also claimed that the agency has been running a secret program to study and reverse engineer those alleged crafts.
The AARO’s official stance on those claims is that it is “not aware of such any such programs.”
However, since Grusch came forward, the AARO hasn’t definitively stated that he is wrong but Kirkpatrick hasn’t verified any of the claims.
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Congressman Eric Burlison passed an amendment in the House to encourage the US government to renew Grusch’s security clearance so he can share sensitive information in an ultra-secure facility known as a SCIF.
Kirkpatrick added that 40 other people have provided UFO-related information that has been investigated in response to Grusch’s claims.
He added that AARO has plans to publish the first part of a two-part report that will discuss much of these claims.
Senators Chuck Schumer and Mike Rounds introduced an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act in July that would “mandate government records related to Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP), more commonly known as UFOs, carry the presumption of disclosure.”
UAP is the new term, which is supposed to shake off some of the stigma surrounding the word UFO.
Kirkpatrick said more information about UFOs and what the US government has uncovered will soon be made public.
“We’ve got a package of a lot of new material that we’ve got ready for release,” he said.
“We’ve uncovered some things that we are having declassified. Not just operational videos, but historical documents.”
Kirkpatrick described the information as “educational material that will help inform the public.”