Streetlights shaped like alien heads line the roads of Roswell, New Mexico, where murals of flying saucers streak across storefronts and tourists pose beside statues of little green men.
Nearly eight decades after a mysterious crash in the desert sparked global fascination with extraterrestrials, the small city remains synonymous with one of the world’s most enduring mysteries: the Roswell Incident.
In July 1947, the US military announced it had recovered the wreckage of a UFO from a nearby ranch before quickly retracting the claim, saying the debris was from a weather balloon.
The episode helped ignite decades of speculation that something far stranger had fallen from the sky — and that whatever was recovered, including rumors of bodies that didn’t belong to human beings, was quietly transported to Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, a sprawling military installation in Ohio long speculated to house secret government research into unidentified flying objects.
Renewed attention is falling on the base after the disappearance of retired Air Force Maj. Gen. William Neil McCasland, a former commander of the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson whose career placed him at the center of some of the Pentagon’s most advanced aerospace research.
The US Air Force has repeatedly denied any extraterrestrial technology or “alien bodies” were ever in their possession. But Donald Schmitt, the lead investigator at the International UFO Museum and Research Center in Roswell, says he believes the government is not telling the truth.
“We are presently up to 30 deathbed confessions, all admissible in a court of law, attesting that it did happen. I can’t say that about 99.9% of the other UFO cases, because they’re very fleeting. It’s a sighting, it’s a photograph, it’s a video. Now you see it. Now you don’t,” Schmitt said.
“With Roswell, you have the actual recovery of a craft, the remains, the wreckage and the crew, the bodies (from a craft of unknown origin),” he said.
Since the Roswell crash, over 1,600 reports of possible sightings have been made in the US alone, according to the Department of Defense, but Russia, China and Japan, among other countries, also are tracking sightings.
In recent years, both extraterrestrial enthusiasts and doubters have been drawn to dramatic government-released military videos and reports of unidentified aerial encounters, as well as high-profile congressional hearings featuring whistleblowers who claim firsthand knowledge of unidentified anomalous phenomena, or UAPs, the modern term for UFOs.
But Wright-Patterson has played a central role in the US military’s real investigations into mysterious objects in the sky — from Cold War-era research programs to efforts to study UAPs.
While authorities say there is no evidence linking McCasland’s disappearance from his Albuquerque home to UFO research, the case has revived curiosity about the base and the decades of speculation surrounding it.
Here’s what we know about the mysterious military base and UFO lore.
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