Contents: 18 pages of information released to CUFON by Congressman 
 Steve Schiff's (R-NM) office, followed by a Washington Post article 
 and some notes. 
 ================================================== =========================
 First District, New Mexico PLEASE REPLY TO:
 Washington Office Committees
 1009 Longworth Building
 Science, Space and Technology Washington, DC 20515-3101
 Judiciary (202) 225-6316
 
 Standards of Official Conduct ---------
 District Office
 Government Operations 625 Silver Avenue SW
 Suite 140
 Subcommittee on Human Relations and Silver Square
 Intergovernmental Relations Albuquerque, NM 87102 
 Ranking Member (505) 766-2538
 
 Republican Research Committee 
 Task Force on Crime 
 Chairman 
 
 Congress of the United States
 House of Representatives
 Washington, DC 20515-3101
 
 
 The Honorable Les Aspin
 Secretary of Defense
 The Pentagon
 Washington, DC 20301-1000
 
 Dear Mr. Secretary:
 
 Last fall I became aware of a strange series of events
 beginning in New Mexico over 45 years ago and involving personnel
 of what was then the Army Air Force. I have since reviewed the
 facts in some detail, and I am writing to request your assistance
 in arriving at a definitive explanation of what transpired and
 why.
 
 In brief, according to contemporary newspaper, wire service,
 national radio newscast, and numerous eyewitness accounts, on or
 about July 3, 1947, rancher William W. (Mac) Brazel found a large
 amount of unusual debris on property he managed northwest of 
 Roswell, New Mexico, near the town of Corona. He brought his
 find to the attention of Chaves County Sheriff George Wilcox, who
 then contacted the Roswell Army Air Field, home of the 509th Bomb
 Group (Atomic) commanded by Colonel William H. Blanchard (Who
 later became vice chief of staff of the Air Force). According to
 testimony of the group intelligence officer, Capt. Jesse Marcel, 
 he and the Counter Intelligence Corps officer in charge at the field, 
 Captain Sheridan W. Cavitt, then accompanied Mr. Brazel to the 
 discovery site.
 
 Marcel testified that he and Cavitt found an area measuring
 about three-quarters of a mile long by 200 to 300 feet wide
 densely strewn with large amount of extremely lightweight,
 extremely strong materials neither could identify. Samples of
 these materials were flown to Eighth Air Force Headquarters in
 Fort Worth, Texas.
 
 On July 8, a press release announcing the find was issued by
 Colonel Blanchard's public information officer. This produced
 such a high level of press interest that, according to the
 Associated Press and a SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER front-page story of
 July 9, 1947, Army Air Force Deputy Chief of Staff Hoyt S. 
 Vandenberg personally handled media enquiries at the Pentagon.
 
 ================================================== =========================
 Page 2 -- Aspin
 
 A few hours later, Eighth Air Force Commanding General Roger
 M. Ramey told reporters in Fort Worth that what had been found in
 New Mexico were the initially misidentified remains of a weather
 balloon and its Rawin radar target. Recently, in written and
 videotaped depositions, Brigadier General Thomas J. DuBose,
 USAF(ret.), General Ramey's chief of staff at the time of the
 incident, testified that the balloon explanation was a cover
 story.
 
 Similarly documented testimony given by a number of still
 living and seemingly credible witnesses suggests that, in
 addition to the cover story, Federal authorities sought to
 intimidate witnesses and their families into silence. Those
 alleged to have been subjected to such intimidation include
 Brazel; his son Bill, who says that, more than two years later,
 military authorities confiscated bits of debris he had found and
 told him not to talk about the incident; Sheriff Wilcox and his
 wife Inez; Glen Dennis, a Roswell mortician who provided contract
 services to Roswell AAF; and the co-owners of Roswell radio
 station KGFL, one of whom has stated that he was told their
 broadcast license would be revoked if KGFL aired an interview
 with Brazel.
 
 It is my understanding that, to date, all inquiries to the
 Executive Branch have resulted in denials of any knowledge or
 record of this incident. Yet it is clear that something was
 recovered by the Army Air Force (see the enclosed), and if
 testimony of apparently honest witnesses is taken at face value,
 it seems likely to have been something other than a weather
 balloon and its radar target. Likewise, it is claimed that
 authorities took extraordinary measures on the matter, measures
 that would seem to have been unnecessary in connection with a
 routine balloon retrieval.
 
 The inconsistency between repeated official denials and the
 public record and testimony of those involved has led to a great
 deal of sensational speculation and called into question the
 credibility of the Departments of Defense, Army, and the Air
 Force. Moreover, the lives of several of my fellow New Mexicans
 and their families have been and continue to be disrupted as a
 result of the incident. I believe a full and honest review and
 reporting of the facts of the case would serve the interests of
 both the United States Government and affected citizens, and help
 put the matter to rest once and for all.
 
 ================================================== =========================
 Page 3 -- Aspin
 
 Therefore, Mr. Secretary, I respectfully request that you
 direct such a review be undertaken on a priority basis and that a
 representative or representatives of the Department of Defense
 and the responsible Military Departments promptly arrange to
 brief and provide me with a written report providing a current,
 complete, and detailed description and explanation of both the
 nature of what was recovered and all official actions taken on
 the matter. I have asked Mary Martinek, my Legislative Director,
 to coordinate all activities concerning this request, and she can
 address any questions your staff may have.
 
 Thank you, Mr. Secretary, for your assistance and
 cooperation.
 
 Sincerely.
 
 /s/
 Steven Schiff
 
 SS:m2
 Enclosures (7)
 cc: The Honorable Joe Skeen
 
 ================================================== =========================
 
 Transcript: Roswell Daily Record; July 9, 1947
 
 Harassed Rancher who Located 'Saucer' Sorry he Told About It
 
 W. W. Brazel, 48, Lincoln county rancher living 30 miles south east of Corona, 
 today told his story of finding what the army at first described as a flying 
 disk. but the publicity which attended his find caused him to add that if he 
 ever found anything else short of a bomb he sure wasn't going to say anything 
 about it.
 
 Brazel was brought here late yesterday by W.E. Whitmore of radio station KGFL, 
 had his picture taken and gave an interview to the Record and Jason Kellahin, 
 sent here from the Albuquerque bureau of the Associated Press to cover the 
 story. The picture he posed for was sent out over AP telephoto wire sending 
 machine specially set up in the Record office by R. D. Adair, AP wire chief 
 dent her from Albuquerque for the sole purpose of getting out his picture and 
 that of sheriff George Wilcox, to whom, Brazel originally gave the information 
 of his find.
 
 Brazel related that on June 14 he and an 8-year old son, Vernon, were about 7 
 or 8 miles from the ranch house on the J. B. Foster ranch, which he operates, 
 when they came upon a large area of bright wreckage made up of rubber strips, 
 tinfoil, a rather tough paper and sticks.
 
 At the time Brazel was in a hurry to get his rounds made and he did not pay 
 much attention to it. But he did remark about what he had seen and on July 4, 
 he, his wife, Vernon and a daughter Betty, age 14, went back to the spot and 
 gathered up quite a bit of the debris.
 
 The next day he first heard about the flying disks, and he wondered if what he 
 had found might be the remnants of one of these.
 
 Monday he came into town to sell some wool and while here he went to see 
 sheriff George Wilcox and "whispered kinda confidential like" that he might 
 have found a flying disk.
 
 Wilcox got in touch with the Roswell Army Air Field and Maj, Jesse Marcel and 
 a man in plain clothes accompanied him home, where they picked up the rest of 
 the pieces of the "disk" and went to his home to try to reconstruct it.
 
 According to Brazel the simply could not reconstruct it at all. They tried to 
 make a kite out of it, but could not do that and could not find any way to put 
 it back together so that it would fit.
 
 The Major Marcel brought it to Roswell and that was the last he heard of it 
 until the story broke that he had found a flying disk.
 
 Brazel said that did not see it fall from the sky and did not see it before it 
 was torn up, so he did not know the size or shape it might have been, but he 
 thought it might have been about as large as a table top. The balloon which 
 held it up, if that was how it worked, must have been about twelve feet long, 
 he felt, measuring the distance by the size of the room in which he sat. The 
 rubber was smoky gray in color and scattered over an area about 200 yards in 
 diameter.
 
 When the debris was gathered up the tinfoil, paper, tape, and sticks made a 
 bundle about three feet long and 7 or 8 inches thick, while the rubber made a 
 bundle about 18 or 20 inches long and about 8 inches thick. In all, he 
 estimated, the entire lot would have weighed maybe five pounds.
 
 There was no sign of any metal in the area which might have been used for an 
 engine and no sign of any propellers of any kind, although at least one paper 
 fin had been glued on to some of the tinfoil.
 
 There were no words to be found anywhere on the instrument, although there 
 were letters on some of the parts. Considerable scotch tape and some tape 
 with flowers printed upon it had been used in the construction.
 
 No strings or wires were to be found but there were some eyelets in the paper 
 to indicate that some sort of attachment may have been used.
 
 Brazel said that he had previously found two weather balloons on the ranch, but 
 that what he found this time did not in any way resemble either of these.
 
 "I am not sure what I found was not any weather observation balloon," he said. 
 "But if I find anything else besides a bomb they are going to have a hard time 
 getting me to say anything about it."
 
 [N.B.: Transcribed verbatim from unreproducable original newspaper story.]
 
 ================================================== =========================
 Roswell Daily Record; July 8, 1947
 
 RAAF Captures Flying Saucer
 On Ranch in Roswell Region
 
 No Details of Flying Disk Are Revealed
 
 Roswell Hardware Man and Wife Report Disk Seen
 
 The intelligence office of the 509th Bombardment group at Roswell Army Air 
 Field announced at noon today that the field had come into possession of a 
 flying saucer.
 
 According to information released by the department, over authority of Maj. 
 J. A. Marcel, intelligence officer, the disk was recovered on a ranch in the 
 Roswell vicinity. After an unidentified rancher had notified sheriff george 
 Wilcox, here, that he had found the instrument on his premises.
 
 Major Marcel and a detail from his department went to the ranch and 
 recovered the disk, it was stated.
 
 After the intelligence officer here had inspected the instrument, it was 
 flown to "higher headquarters."
 
 The intelligence officer stated that no details of the saucer's construction 
 or its appearance had been revealed.
 
 Mr. and Mrs. Dan Wilmot apparently were the only persons in Roswell who have 
 seen what they thought was a flying disk.
 
 They were sitting on their porch at 105 South Penn. last Wednesday night at 
 about ten minutes before ten o'clock when a large glowing object zoomed out of 
 the sky from the southeast, going in a northwesterly direction at a high rate 
 of speed.
 
 Wilmot called Mrs. Wilmot's attention to it and both ran down into the yard 
 to watch. It was in sight less than a minute, perhaps 40 or 50 seconds, 
 Wilmot estimated.
 
 Wilmot said that it appeared to him to be about 1,500 feet high and going 
 fast. He estimated between 400 to 500 miles per hour.
 
 In appearance it looked oval in shape like two inverted saucers faced mouth 
 to mouth, or like two xxx type washbowls placed together in the same fashion. 
 The entire body glowed as though light were showing through from inside, 
 though not like it would be if a light were underneath.
 
 From where he stood, Wilmot said that the object looked to be about 5 feet 
 in size, and making allowance for the distance it was from the town he figured 
 that it must have been 15 or 20 feet in diameter, though this was just a 
 guess. 
 
 Wilmot said that he heard no sound but that Mrs. Wilmot said she heard a 
 swishing sound for a very short time.
 
 The object came into view from the southeast and disappeared over the 
 treetops in the general vicinity of six-mile hill.
 
 Wilmot, who is one of the most respected and reliable citizens in town, kept 
 the story to himself hoping that someone else would come out and tell about 
 having seen one, but finally today decided that he would go ahead and tell 
 about seeing it. The announcement that the RAAF was in possession of one came 
 only a few minutes after he had decided to release the details of what he had 
 seen. 
 
 ================================================== =========================
 Complete text of July 8, 1947, Roswell Army Air Field press release announcing 
 Army Air Force recovery of a "flying disk" in New Mexico, as published in he 
 San Francisco Chronicle, July 9, 1947 (page 1).
 
 San Francisco Chronicle
 The City's Only Home-Owned Newspaper
 FOUNDED 1865 - CLXIV, NO. 175 CCCCAAA SAN FRANCISCO, WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 1947
 
 ROSWELL STATEMENT
 
 Here is the unqualified statement issued by the Roswell Army Base public 
 relations officer:
 "The many rumors regarding the flying disk became a reality yesterday when 
 the intelligence office of the 509th Bomb Group of the Eight Air Force, 
 Roswell Army Air Field, was fortunate enough to gain possession of a disc 
 through the co-operation of one of the local ranchers and the Sheriff's Office 
 of Chaves county.
 "The flying object landed on a ranch near Roswell sometime last week. Not 
 having phone facilities, the rancher stored the disc until such time as he was 
 able to contact the Sheriff's office, who in turn notified Major Jesse A. 
 Marcel, of the 509th Bomb Group Intelligence office.
 "Action was immediately taken and the disc was picked up at the rancher's 
 home. It was inspected at the Roswell Army Air Field and subsequently loaned 
 by Major Marcel to higher headquarters."
 
 ================================================== =========================
 from the United Press Broadcast Wire, July 8, 1947
 
 MORE FLYING DISC (DXR53)
 -O-
 
 THE INTELLIGENCE OFFICE REPORTS THAT IT GAINED POSSESSION OF THE
 "DISC" THROUGH THE CO-OPERATION OF A ROSWELL RANCHER AND SHERIFF
 GEORGE WILSON OF ROSWELL.
 THE DISC LANDED ON A RANCH NEAR ROSWELL SOMETIME LAST WEEK. NOT 
 HAVING PHONE FACILITIES, THE RANCHER, WHOSE NAME HAS NOT YET BEEN 
 OBTAINED, STORED THE DISC UNTIL SUCH TIME AS HE WAS ABLE TO
 CONTACT THE ROSWELL SHERIFF'S OFFICE.
 THE SHERIFF'S OFFICE IN TURN NOTIFIED A MAJOR OF THE 509TH 
 INTELLIGENCE OFFICE. 
 ACTION WAS IMMEDIATELY TAKEN AND THE DISC WAS PICKED UP AT THE
 RANCHER'S HOME AND TAKEN TO THE ROSWELL AIR BASE. FOLLOWING
 EXAMINATION, THE DISC WAS FLOWN BY INTELLIGENCE OFFICERS IN A SUPER-
 FORTRESS TO AN UNDISCLOSED "HIGHER HEADQUARTERS."
 RESIDENTS NEAR THE RANCH ON WHICH THE DISC WAS FOUND REPORTED
 SEEING A STRANGE BLUE LIGHT SEVERAL DAYS AGO ABOUT THREE O'CLOCK IN
 THE MORNING.
 J241P 7/8
 
 ================================================== =========================
 
 FRR
 DID ARMY CALL IT A "FLYING DISC" OR WHAT?
 DXR
 
 NAJ DXR
 FYI, ROSWELL REPORTS TT MAJOR JESSE A. MARCEL, INTELLIGENCE
 OFFICER FOR 509TH BOMBER GROUP AT ROSWELL ARMY AIR BASE, IS IN FORT WORTH
 TEX., AT 8TH ARMY HDQUARTERS, "IF HE HANT ALREADY STARTED BACK FOR
 ROWELL." SUGG U GET DA IN ON FASTEST. TT MITE BE WHERE DISC
 WAS FLOWN.
 FRR V7/8
 
 
 FRR
 DA ALREADY ALERTED. HOW RE ARMY TERMINOLOGY---"FLYING DISC" OR
 WHAT PLS?
 DXR
 
 
 DXR
 OUR S5&4 CALLED IT "FLYING DISC." WE UNABLE GET QUOTES FROM
 -4.6 OURSELVES -S 635. WE AFTER IT FASTEST. S5&4 SAID "FLYING DISCS."
 FRR V7/8..
 
 ================================================== =========================
 
 [Teletype message from FBI Dallas office to FBI Cincinnati office, July 8, 
 1947, regarding the Roswell crash, the weather balloon story, and a special 
 flight to Wright Field.] 
 
 FBI DALLAS 7-8-47 6-17 PM
 DIRECTOR AND SAC, CINCINNATI
 FLYING DISC, INFORMATION CONCERNING. MAJOR CURTAN, HEADQUARTERS
 EIGHTH AIR FORCE, TELEPHONICALLY ADVISED THIS OFFICE THAT AN OBJECT
 PURPORTING TO BE A FLYING DISC WAS RE COVERED NEAR ROSWELL, NEW
 MEXICO, THIS DATE. THE DISC IS HEXAGONAL IN SHAPE AND WAS SUSPENDED
 FROM A BALLOON BY CABLE, WHICH BALLOON WAS APPROXIMATELY TWENTY
 FEET IN DIAMETER. MAJOR CURTAN FURTHER ADVISED THAT THE OBJECT
 FOUND RESEMBLES A HIGH ALTITUDE WEATHER BALLOON WITH A RADAR
 REFLECTOR, BUT THAT TELEPHONIC CONVERSATION BETWEEN THEIR OFFICE
 AND WRIGHT FIELD HAD NOT BORNE OUT THIS BELIEF. DISC AND BALLOON 
 BEING TRANSPORTED TO WRIGHT FIELD BY SPECIAL PLANE FOR EXAMINATION
 INFORMATION PROVIDED THIS OFFICE BECAUSE OF NATIONAL INTEREST IN CASE
 XXXX AND FACT THAT NATIONAL BROADCASTING COMPANY, ASSOCIATED PRESS, AND
 OTHERS ATTEMPTING TO BREAK STORY OF LOCATION OF DISC TODAY. MAJOR
 CURTAN ADVISED WOULD REQUEST WRIGHT FIELD TO ADVISE CINCINNATI
 OFFICE RESULTS OF EXAMINATION. NO FURTHER INVESTIGATION BEING
 CONDUCTED.
 
 
 END
 
 CXXXX ACK IN ORDER
 1
 WA 92 FBI CI MJW
 
 BPI HS
 
 S-3E PM 0
 
 C-22 PH OM FBI WASH DC
 
 ================================================== =========================
 
 [Transcript: Roswell Daily Record; July 9, 1947]
 
 Ramey Says Disk is Weather Balloon
 
 Fort Worth, Texas, July 9 (AP)-An examination by the Army revealed last night 
 that mysterious object found on a lonely New Mexico ranch was a harmless high-
 altitude weather balloon-not a grounded flying saucer.
 
 Excitement was high until Brig. Gen. Roger M. Ramey, commander of the Eighth 
 air forces with headquarters here cleared up the mystery.
 
 The bundle of tinfoil, broken wood beams and rubber remnants of a balloon were 
 sent up here yesterday by army air transport in the wake of reports that it 
 was a flying disk.
 
 But the General said the objects were the crushed remains of ray wind [sic] 
 target used to determine the direction and velocity of winds at high 
 altitudes.
 
 Warrant Officer Irving Newton, forecaster at the army air forces weather 
 station here said, "we use them because they go much higher than the eye can 
 see."
 
 The weather balloon was found several days ago near the center of New Mexico 
 by Rancher W. W. Brazel. He said he didn't think much about it until he went 
 into Corona, N.M., last Saturday and heard the flying disk reports.
 
 He returned to his ranch, 85 miles northwest of Roswell, and recovered the 
 wreckage of the balloon, which he had placed under some brush.
 
 Then Brazel hurried back to Roswell, where he reported his find to the 
 sheriff's office.
 
 The sheriff called the Roswell air field and Maj. Jesse A. Marcel, 509th bomb 
 group intelligence officer, was assigned to the case.
 
 Col. William H. Blanchard, commanding officer of the bomb group, reported the 
 find to General Ramey and the object was flown immediately to the army air 
 field here. 
 
 Ramey went on the air here last night to announce the New Mexico discovery was 
 not a flying disk.
 
 Newton said that when rigged up, the instrument "looks like a six-pointed 
 star, is silvery in appearance and rises in the air like a kite."
 
 In Roswell, the discovery set off a flurry of excitement. Sheriff Wilcox's 
 telephone lines were jammed. Three calls came from England, one of them from 
 The London Daily Mail, he said.
 
 A public relations officer here said the balloon was in his office "and it'll 
 probably stay right there."
 
 Newton, who made the examination, said some 80 weather stations in the U.S. 
 were using that type of balloon and it could have come from any of them.
 
 He said he had sent up identical balloons during the invasion of Okinawa to 
 determine ballistics information for heavy guns.
 
 [N.B.: Transcribed verbatim from unreproducable original newspaper story.]
 
 ================================================== =========================
 OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF DEFENSE
 WASHINGTON, DC 20301-1300
 
 March 31, 1993
 LEGISLATIVE In reply refer to:
 AFFAIRS OSD # 78897
 
 Honorable Steven Schiff
 House of Representatives
 Washington, D.C. 20515
 
 Dear Mr. Schiff:
 
 I have received your letter of March 11, requesting information on 
 alleged events which occurred in Roswell, New Mexico.
 
 In order to be of service to you, i have referred this matter to
 the national Archives and Records Administration for direct reply to
 you.
 
 If I can be of further assistance to you, please do not hesitate to
 let me know.
 
 Sincerely,
 
 /s/
 
 Larry G Shockley, Col, USAF
 Director, Plans and Operations
 
 ================================================== =========================
 First District, New Mexico PLEASE REPLY TO:
 Washington Office
 Committees
 1009 Longworth Building
 Science, Space and Technology Washington, DC 20515-3101
 Judiciary (202) 225-6316
 
 Standards of Official Conduct ---------
 District Office
 Government Operations 625 Silver Avenue SW
 Suite 140
 Subcommittee on Human Relations and Silver Square
 Intergovernmental Relations Albuquerque, NM 87102 
 Ranking Member (505) 766-2538
 
 Republican Research Committee 
 Task Force on Crime 
 Chairman 
 
 Congress of the United States
 House of Representatives
 Washington, DC 20515-3101
 
 MEMORANDUM
 
 April 7, 1993
 
 TO: Rudy deLeon
 Special Assistant
 Office of the Secretary of Defense
 
 FROM: Mary Martinek
 Legislative Director
 
 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
 Pursuant to our telephone conversation, I an faxing to your
 attention a copy of the March 11th letter, with its attachments,
 which Congressman Schiff directed to Secretary Aspin.
 
 I enclose also, for your information, a copy of the
 acknowledgement received this date over the signature of Colonel
 Shockley.
 
 I appreciate your willingness to review the Congressman's request
 and look forward to the oral and written briefing he requested in 
 his letter.
 
 ================================================== =========================
 
 OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE
 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20301
 
 
 THE SPECIAL ASSISTANT
 April 20, 1993
 
 The Honorable Steve Schiff
 U.S. House of Representatives
 Washington, D.C. 20515
 
 Dear Mr. Schiff:
 
 This is in regard to your recent letter to Secretary Aspin 
 regarding alleged events which occurred in Roswell, New Mexico, in 
 1947. I, too, find these unexplained occurrences of great interest; 
 however, these records are too old to be available here at the 
 Pentagon. 
 
 I would, therefore, recommend that you contact the National 
 Archives for additional information as I believe Colonel Shockley has 
 already done on your behalf.
 
 I regret that my response in not more favorable, but I trust you 
 will find this information helpful.
 
 Sincerely,
 
 /s/
 
 Rudy de Leon
 
 ================================================== =========================
 First District, New Mexico PLEASE REPLY TO:
 Washington Office
 Committees
 1009 Longworth Building
 Science, Space and Technology Washington, DC 20515-3101
 Judiciary (202) 225-6316
 
 Standards of Official Conduct ---------
 District Office
 Government Operations 625 Silver Avenue SW
 Suite 140
 Subcommittee on Human Relations and Silver Square
 Intergovernmental Relations Albuquerque, NM 87102 
 Ranking Member (505) 766-2538
 
 Republican Research Committee 
 Task Force on Crime 
 Chairman 
 
 Congress of the United States
 House of Representatives
 Washington, DC 20515-3101
 May 10, 1993
 
 
 The Honorable Les Aspin
 Secretary 
 Department of Defense
 Room 3e966
 The Pentagon
 Washington, DC 20301
 
 Dear Mr. Secretary:
 
 I am in receipt of two letters from members of your staff 
 replying to my march 11, 1993, request for a personal briefing 
 and a written report on a 1947 incident in New Mexico involving 
 personnel of what was then the Army Air Force. Copies of my 
 request with its attachments and your staff's replies are 
 enclosed for your information. 
 
 I realize that, after almost 46 years, it is a virtual
 certainty that all or most of the records concerning this incident
 have been archived. However, my staff and several independent
 investigators have conclusively established they are not in any
 of the unclassified, including previously classified, holdings of
 the National Archives. Moreover, it is my understanding that it 
 is highly unlikely they reside in any of the classified files in
 the custody of the Archives.
 
 Given the above, it seems virtually certain the documents
 relating to this matter are located in the holdings under the 
 jurisdiction of the Department of Defense or one or both of the
 relevant Military Departments. Just two examples of likely
 locations are the U.S. Army Intelligence Records Center at Fort
 Meade, Maryland, and Headquarters, U.S. Air Force Office of
 Special Investigations, Bolling Air Force Base, Washington, D.C.
 
 Wherever the documents may be, what is at issue is my
 request for a personal briefing and a written report on a matter
 involving actions taken by officials of the U.S. Army and U.S.
 Air Force, agencies under your purview.
 
 I realize the research required to uncover the relevant
 documents and related materials will take time and considerable
 effort, and I am prepared to wait a reasonable amount of time for
 this to be accomplished. However I expect the job to be done and
 
 ================================================== =========================
 
 my request to be addressed as set forth in the penultimate
 paragraph of my March letter.
 
 Mw legislative Director, Mary Martinek, is coordinating all
 activities on the inquiry, and she can provide assistance or
 address any questions you and your staff may have.
 
 Mr. Secretary. I deeply appreciate your help on this matter
 and look forward to its timely resolution.
 
 Sincerely,
 
 /s/
 Steven Schiff
 
 SS:m2
 Enclosures (3)
 cc: The Honorable Joe Skeen
 
 ================================================== =========================
 
 National Archives Washington, DC 20408
 
 May 20 1993
 
 The Honorable Steve Schiff
 House of Representatives
 Washington, D.C. 20515-3101
 
 Dear Mr. Schiff:
 
 This is in reply to your letter of March 11, 1993, concerning
 information about a UFO sighting at Roswell, new Mexico, in 1947.
 The Department of the Air Force forwarded your letter, and we
 received it on May 6, 1993.
 
 The U.S. Air Force has retired to our custody its records on
 Project BLUE BOOK relating to the investigations of unidentified
 flying objects. Project BLUE BOOK has been declassified and the
 records are available for examination in our research room. The
 project closed in 1969 and we have no information after that
 date.
 
 We have received numerous requests concerning records relating to
 the Roswell incident among these records. We have not located
 any documentation relating to this event in Project BLUE BOOK 
 records, or in any other pertinent Defense Department records in 
 our custody.
 
 Sincerely,
 
 /s/
 
 R. MICHAEL MCREYNOLDS
 Director
 Textual Reference Division
 
 ================================================== =========================
 First District, New Mexico PLEASE REPLY TO:
 Washington Office
 Committees
 1009 Longworth Building
 Science, Space and Technology Washington, DC 20515-3101
 Judiciary (202) 225-6316
 
 Standards of Official Conduct ---------
 District Office
 Government Operations 625 Silver Avenue SW
 Suite 140
 Subcommittee on Human Relations and Silver Square
 Intergovernmental Relations Albuquerque, NM 87102 
 Ranking Member (505) 766-2538
 
 Republican Research Committee 
 Task Force on Crime 
 Chairman 
 
 Congress of the United States
 House of Representatives
 Washington, DC 20515-3101
 May 10, 1993
 
 
 The Honorable Les Aspin
 Secretary 
 Department of Defense
 Room 3e966
 The Pentagon
 Washington, DC 20301
 
 Dear Mr. Secretary:
 
 I am writing to you, again, to request an answer to my 
 letter to you of May 10th. I enclose a copy of the letter, and
 previous correspondence on the same issue, for your information.
 
 While I realize that the Department of Defense, and you, Mr.
 Secretary, have been very busy in areas throughout the world,
 while also concerned with proposed changes in policy within the
 Department, I must insist on the courtesy of a reply to my
 letter, which is now three months old.
 
 _To reiterate, while I am prepared to wait a reasonable_
 _length of time for the briefing I requested, I do insist that the_
 _Department do the research on my inquiry and report the findings_
 _to me._
 
 I also must insist on having my letters to the Department of
 Defense acknowledged and acted upon. I look forward to your
 response to my letters, and to the scheduled briefing. I will
 expect a reply to this inquiry by September 7th.
 
 Sincerely,
 
 /s/
 Steven Schiff
 
 SS:m2
 Enclosure: As stated
 
 ================================================== =========================
 End of 18 pages of information released to CUFON by Congressman Schiff's 
 office.
 ================================================== =========================
 ================================================== =========================
 Washington Post 1/14/94
 
 GAO Turns To Alien Turf In New Probe
 
 By William Claiborne 
 Washington Post Staff Writer
 
 Where television's "Unsolved Mysteries" has tried and failed, the
 General Accounting Office is unafraid to venture.
 At the request of Rep. Steven Schiff (R-N.M.), Congress's
 investigative branch has launched a study to determine whether the
 government covered up a story alleging that the bodies of alien space
 voyagers were removed from a crashed flying saucer found near Roswell,
 N.M., in 1947.
 After the purported crash of the spacecraft, the bodies of the
 extraterrestrial visitors were said by a local undertaker and other
 conspiracy theorists to have been autopsied and secretly flown to an
 Air Force base in Ohio.
 Even though the "Roswell Incident" has been repeatedly dismissed by
 the Defense Department as nothing more than UFO fantasizing triggered
 by the discovery of a downed weather balloon, the GAO has begun
 searching for documents to prove allegations that the Air Force
 "suppressed" information sought by Schiff.
 Schiff is a member of the House Government Operations Committee,
 which oversees the GAO.
 GAO spokeswoman Laura A. Kopelson said the office's investigation,
 first reported in the Albuquerque Journal yesterday, stemmed from a
 meeting in October between Schiff and GAO Controller General Charles A
 Bowsher. Schiff complained then that the Defense Department had been
 "unresponsive" to his inquiries about the 1947 incident.
 Kopelson said "as far as I know only one investigator had been
 assigned" to the case, and that not enough work had been done to report
 any results to Schiff. At another point, Kopelson said "the people
 doing it are either on sick leave or are unavailable."
 She said there was no way of estimating how much the investigation
 would cost, and that the GAO does not release such information anyway.
 GAO conducted 1,380 inquiries into government operations in 1992.
 Its budget has risen from $46.9 million in 1965 to $490 million last
 year. The agency has been criticized, especially by Republicans, as the
 "lap dog of the requesters," producing reports that tend to support
 whatever conclusion the requesting member of Congress suggests.
 Kopelson said Schiff had asked the GAO "to see if there is any
 evidence that information regarding UFOs had been suppressed" following
 the Roswell incident.
 Schiff, however, said that at a routine October meeting he had
 merely complained about the Defense Department's lack of responsiveness
 but a GAO official said, "We're willing to take a stab at it."
 Schiff, in a telephone interview from Albuquerque, said that last
 March, after receiving inquiries from "UFO believers" and some Roswell
 residents who were in the military in 1947, he wrote Defense Secretary
 Les Aspin asking for more information about the reported spacecraft
 crash and the alleged disappearance of the aliens' bodies.
 The crash of a mysterous object 75 miles northwest of Roswell, which
 the Air Force later claimed was a weather balloon equipped with a
 radar-reflecting device, was the subject of several books and remains
 many UFO buffs' greatest riddle.
 A privately owned museum in Roswell contains a number of documents
 and photographs purporting to prove existence of the aliens. It also
 displays a re-creation of the spacecraft surrounded by figures
 portraying the dead extraterrestrials.
 UFO buffs contend the incident marked the beginning of a government
 conspiracy to suppress evidence of alien life.
 Much of the speculation stems from claims by William Haut, a former
 Air Force public affairs officer, who said that on July 2, 1947, he was
 told to prepare a news release reporting the Air Force had recovered
 parts of a flying saucer and then was told to change the story to
 report a weather balloon.
 Also, a nurse reportedly told a local funeral home director that she
 witnessed the autopsies of the spacemen, whom she described as having
 oversized heads and beetle-like features. The nurse subsequently died
 in a plane crash.
 After the autopsies, conspiracy theorists said the bodies were flown
 to Fort Worth and then to what is now Wright-Patterson Air Force Base
 in Ohio.
 In 1989, NBC's "Unsolved Mysteries" investigated the controversy,
 which the program's host, Robert Stack, concluded remained unsolved.
 Schiff said after calling Aspin last March to request a Defense
 Department briefing on the Roswell incident, he received a call from an
 Air Force lieutenant colonel, who brusquely told him the documents had
 been turned over to the National Archives.
 However, Schiff said, Archives officials told him they did not have
 the records on Roswell, even though they did have records of "Project
 Blue Book," a 1969 Air Force study of reported UFO sightings. That
 study, Schiff said, did not deal with the Roswell case.
 "I was getting pretty upset at all the running around," Schiff said,
 adding that at his meeting with GAO officials, "they made an offer to
 help."
 "Generally, I'm a skeptic on UFOs and alien beings, but there are
 indications from the runaround that I got that whatever it was, it
 wasn't a balloon. Apparently, it's another government coverup," Schiff
 said.
 He called the Defense Department's lack of response "astounding,"
 and said government accountability was an issue "even larger than
 UFOs."
 Asked if the GAO might not be extending itself, Schiff acknowledged
 that the agency "usually does fiscal investigations and at present I
 can't find a fiscal impact" in the Roswell incident.
 Had the agency said, " `This is beyond our realm of expertise,' "
 Schiff said, "I wouldn't insist on it." He added, "If the Defense
 Department had been responsive, it wouldn't have come to this."
 
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