
Camp Gagnon When the U.S. Military ADMITTED It Had a UFO
Mar 12, 2026
They unpack the Roswell debris discovery and strange self-healing material. They trace the military recovery, the flying disc press release, and the sudden weather balloon retraction. They recount claims of transported wreckage and alleged bodies, then examine Project Mogul, dummy explanations, and why Roswell reshaped public trust in government.
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Jesse Marcel's Later Testimony Reignites Roswell
- Stanton Friedman contacted Major Jesse Marcel in 1978, who then described indestructible, extremely thin metallic material with purple symbols and claimed it was nonâterrestrial.
- Marcel maintained this account publicly for the rest of his life, reigniting Roswell interest.
Glenn Dennis Funeral Home Account About Bodies
- Mortician Glenn Dennis claimed the base asked his funeral home about hermetic caskets and preservation chemicals, then later said he saw debris with symbols and heard about autopsies on small bodies.
- Researchers cannot verify the nurse Naomi Self whom Dennis named, and his details shifted over time.
Pilot Pappy Henderson Claims He Flew Remains
- Captain Oliver 'Pappy' Henderson later said he personally flew wreckage and small bodies from Roswell to Wright-Patterson; his testimony emerged decades after the event.
- Flight logs confirm heavy cargo movements from Roswell to Wright-Patterson in July 1947, supporting transport occurred.




