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FOIA Request Forces Pentagon to Admit Testing Wreckage From UFO’s

The government really seems ready to let us all in on these secrets.

Where are Fox Mulder and Dana Scully when you need them?

The fictional, coed team of FBI agents of The X Files fame would be right at home in 2021, (and 2020, for that matter), as a number of wild, paranormal stories continue to make headlines around the nation.

The latest spooky tale comes to us directly from the Pentagon, via the use of the Freedom of Information Act, and is quite literally out of this world.

Researcher Anthony Bragalia wrote to the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) requesting details of all UFO material, which they hold and results of any tests they had been carrying out on it.

He wrote: “This could include physical debris recovered by personnel of the Department of Defense as residue, flotsam, shot-off material or crashed material from UAPS [unidentified aerial phenomenon] or unidentified flying objects.”

Now here is where it gets wild:

In the response, shared with The Sun, the DIA released 154 pages of test results that includes reports on a mysterious “memory” metal called Nitinol, which remembers its original shape when folded.

Bragalia said it was a “stunning admission” from the US government and the documents reveal that some of the retrieved debris possesses “extraordinary capabilities” including the potential to make things invisible or even slow down the speed of light.

He told The Sun: “The Pentagon has admitted to holding and testing anomalous debris from UFOs.

Bragalia had a sneaking suspicion that the “Nitinol” mentioned in the material could have come from the infamous alleged crash of a flying saucer in the desert near Roswell, New Mexico all the way back in 1947.  Several witnesses to that event, and to the subsequent cleanup, described a discovered material that behaved much like the Pentagon’s research suggested.

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