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Conspiracy

Unknown object crash near Area 51 fuels cover-up claims

by: George Knapp Posted: Nov 2, 2025 / 12:56 PM CST Updated: Nov 2, 2025 / 01:04 PM CST LAS VEGAS (KLAS) — A mysterious object of unknown origin fell from the sky and crashed just outside of Nevada’s secretive Area 51 military base, and five weeks later, the public is still in the dark.   The crash was quickly covered up, both literally and figuratively. 8 News Now Chief Investigator George Knapp of Nexstar’s KLAS thinks the official story as told by the military is demonstrably false. How quickly might the government respond to the crash of an unknown object? What happened back on Sept. 23 on public land outside the boundary of Area 51 is a textbook example of how crash retrievals work, one that locals have become accustom to. Scanners and computers at Dreamland Resort listen to and record radio traffic inside Area 51 around the clock. On the morning of Sept. 23, Joerg Arnu heard some astonishing news.  “I had my cup of coffee, and I am listening to Area 51 security, and all of a sudden they got very serious, and locked down the base,” Arnu told KLAS. He learned there had been a large, but totally secret air operation in the middle of the night and that something had gone wrong. Child found unresponsive in pond at Edmond apartment “‘We just had an asset go down. We had an asset go down,’” Arnu recalled. “This is not Creech security. This is Area 51 security, and they had an asset go down. Then the next thing you hear, UAV, unmanned aircraft, unmanned aircraft with ordnance.” He picked up details that strict security measures were implemented almost immediately. Not only was Area 51 itself locked down, but within a very short time, so too was a large swath of the Tiikaboo

Bizarre
Carl Richardson

Boy Who Inspired “The Exorcist” Became A NASA Engineer On The Apollo Program

By: James Felton James is a published author with multiple pop-history and science books to his name. He specializes in history, space, strange science, and anything out of the ordinary. View full profile The boy who inspired the film and book The Exorcist went on to become an engineer at NASA, working on the Apollo program and patenting technology of his own design that helped space shuttles withstand the extreme heat of takeoff and reentry. In August 1949, a series of articles told the strange tale of a teenage boy who had a number of paranormal experiences, prompting a call to a priest. According to reports, the boy (named at the time as Roland Doe to protect his identity) and his family began to hear scratching noises from the walls, and saw objects jump to the floor when the boy was around. More disturbingly his bed would apparently shake violently at night. While they may have been better off searching for a source of carbon monoxide, the family followed the far more dubious process of asking a priest to stay the night. The priest – who was said to be skeptical, just like his counterpart in the films – did so, and supposedly witnessed events like the scratching on the walls, plus sheets moving around mysteriously on their own. The priest, to his credit, is reported to have called in the family doctor shortly afterward. The press picked up on the story, but it wasn’t until later that month that it blew up, when several papers reported that the boy had been “freed” from the “devil’s grip” after 20 to 30 exorcisms by a catholic priest.  “In all except the last of these, the boy broke into a violent tantrum of screaming, cursing and voicing of Latin phrases – a language he had never studied – whenever the priest reached

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