WASHINGTON, DC
In April 2004, Senator Hatch's DC office received two visitors with an unusual request.Sterling Allan, a constituent from Utah, and his associate, Harry Dschaak, from Idaho, a few weeks earlier had a covertly-arranged, in-person visit with Area 51 microbiologist, Dr. Dan Burisch.
Burisch had told Allan and Dschaak that he wished to have a congressional hearing in which he might testify about some of the black op projects in which he had been involved, including the creation of designer viruses in which he had inserted an identifying signature sequence to prove the laboratory origin of the virus.
Burisch also has laboratory ties to the Gulf War Syndrome which has turned out to be a friendly-fire weapon of mass destruction.
The testimony would include Burisch disclosing his experience for nearly a year of working on a daily basis with an extraterrestrial at Area 51, taking tissue samples, and communicating telepathically with the being.
Included with the briefing material that the pair left with Hatch's office was a book by the well-respected research and field specialist, Dr. Steven Greer, called Disclosure. The book contains "over five dozen top-secret military, government, intelligence and corporate witnesses to secret projects tell their true stories which disclose the greatest covert program in world history. This explosive testimony by actual government insiders proves that UFOs are real, that some are of extraterrestrial origin."
Within a few days, HATCH'S OFFICE RESPONDED THAT THERE WOULD NEVER BE ANY CONGRESSIONAL HEARINGS ON THE SUBJECT OF ETS OR UFOS.
Allan then composed an open letter to Senator Hatch, itemizing a number of relevant questions, and requesting that the Sentator put his response in writing for public record.Finally, on July 7, the Senator mailed a reply in which he said: "AS YOU, I FIND THE POSSIBILITY OF INTELLIGENT LIFE ON OTHER PLANETS INTRIGUING; HOWEVER, THERE IS NOT SUFFICIENT EVIDENCE TO DETERMINE WHETHER SUCH LIFE EXISTS. I HAVE REVIEWED THE INFORMATION YOU RECOMMENDED TO ME, AND I CAN ASSURE YOU THAT YOUR CONCERNS ARE UNNECESSARY. THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT DOES NOT HAVE ANY INFORMATION ABOUT EXTRATERRESTRIAL LIFE TO CONCEAL, AND THERE ARE NO SECRET PROJECTS FOR ME TO INVESTIGATE."
The full text of the letter is posted for review by the public.
According to the Sept. 2002 scientifically conducted Roper poll, roughly seven in ten adults in the U.S. think that the government does not tell everything it knows about extraterrestrial life and UFOs. One in seven adults in the U.S. say they have had a close encounter of some kind with Unidentified Flying Objects. Extrapolated to the U.S population in general that amounts to tens of millions of people who will have a hard time believing the Senator's statement, based on their first-hand experience.
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