Senate Intelligence Committee Proposes Amnesty to Defense Contractors for Disclosure of 'Non-Earth Origin or Exotic Materials' in Approved UFO Language

Written by Christopher Sharp - 24 June 2023

The Senate Intelligence Committee has unanimously approved its new Intelligence Authorization Act (IAA) for 2024, which contains extraordinary Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP) provisions. 

Noteworthy elements of the legislation include the suspension of U.S. government funding for illicit UAP programs and the provision of legal amnesty to defense contractors suspected of possessing non-human craft or materials.

Regarding the proposed amnesty provision, defense contractors and other entities in possession of UAP-related material or information obtained from or through the U.S. government must voluntarily disclose it to the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), the government's dedicated UAP office, within 60 days of the bill's enactment.

Subsequently, within 180 days, any defense contractor falling under the purview of this new law must make the disclosed information or materials available for assessment, analysis, and inspection. And that includes ‘all non-earth origin or exotic unidentified anomalous phenomena material.’

If complied with, then any defense contractor linked to potential illegal UAP programs will face ‘no criminal or civil actions’.

The language is nothing short of sensational, especially for an Intelligence Committee composed of heavyweight politicians such as Senators Marco Rubio and Kirsten Gillibrand, who are believed to hold presidential ambitions.

Sources have informed Liberation Times that committee members have received compelling and credible information from multiple sources that has shaped the language.

Another proposed provision aims to withdraw funding from any potentially illegal UAP activities that are safeguarded under ‘special access’ or ‘restricted access’ limitations.

This applies if such activity has not been ‘formally, officially, explicitly, and specifically described, explained, and justified to the appropriate committees of Congress.’

And to what specific activities is Congress referring?

‘Recruiting, employing, training, equipping, and operations of, and providing security for, government or contractor personnel with a primary, secondary, or contingency mission of capturing, recovering, and securing unidentified anomalous phenomena craft or pieces and components of such craft.’

Notice the reference to ‘craft,’ which aligns with the assertions made by former senior intelligence official David Grusch, who claimed that the U.S. government holds “intact and partially intact” craft of non-human origin. 

Furthermore, the bill mentions another UAP-related activity, indicating the committee's potential suspicions regarding the possibility of reverse engineering possessed crafts.

‘Analyzing such craft or pieces or components thereof, including for the purpose of determining properties, material composition, method of manufacture, origin, characteristics, usage and application, performance, operational modalities, or reverse engineering of such craft or component technology.’

Another extraordinary activity that would result in the withdrawal of funding from potential programs pertains to potentially secretive advancements in propulsion technology derived from UAP craft.

‘The development of propulsion technology, or aerospace craft that uses propulsion technology, systems, or subsystems, that is based on or derived from or inspired by inspection, analysis, or reverse engineering of recovered unidentified anomalous phenomena craft or materials.’

The language then delves into specifics regarding the propulsion aspect and implies the potential existence of an operational craft utilizing exotic propulsion:

‘Any aerospace craft that uses propulsion technology other than chemical propellants, solar power, or electric ion thrust.’

To clarify, the aforementioned points indicate that Congress harbors suspicions regarding the existence of covert activities, possibly orchestrated by defense contractors, involving ‘non-earth origin or exotic materials.’

These activities are believed to entail possession of aerospace craft that operate using unconventional propulsion technologies.

Previously, discussions surrounding UAP primarily revolved around sightings of enigmatic objects in the skies reported and filmed by pilots and aviators. However, there is now a bipartisan consensus that potential secretive and unlawful programs related to non-earthly materials should be thoroughly investigated.

The spotlight on such alleged activities has been intensified by David Grusch, whose complaint pertaining to UAP has been deemed ‘credible and urgent’ by the Inspector General of the Intelligence Community.

Speaking to reporter Matt Laslo, Vice Chairman of the Senate's Intelligence Committee, Senator Rubio, addressed the allegations put forth by UAP whistleblower Dave Grusch:

“Those claims have been made for years, and that’s certainly something we’d be very disturbed by—and that’s what the gist of the whistleblower’s claim is, that there are programs that should have been notified to Congress that were not. So we’re gonna be interested in that no matter what the topic is.”

The language within the proposed IAA undeniably implies the presence of specific information. However, it's important to acknowledge that the Pentagon recently declared that the AARO is unable to validate claims regarding current or past programs related to the possession or reverse-engineering of non-human materials, leading to ongoing disputes over such assertions.

Nevertheless, it should be noted that the Department of Defense has not confirmed whether this statement extends to programs involving materials of unknown origin that have not been independently verified by the AARO.

Speaking to Liberation Times, journalist and filmmaker Jeremy Corbell commented:

‘We know that Dr. Kirkpatrick of AARO has clearance to look into Controlled Access Programs (CAPs). You don't need Title 50 authority— that just gives you the ability to task other agencies— but it does NOT prevent him from being briefed. Kirkpatrick still works for Ronald Moultrie, and Moultrie has Title 50. As Moultrie is the number one intelligence officer in the DoD, Kirkpatrick is not inhibited from getting briefed into anything.

‘People CAN break their NDAs to him and his authorized staff. I am also aware that there is a memo signed by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and the Special Access Program (SAP) lead for the DoD that says he's authorized to get any CAP or SAP— that he's an 'authorized recipient' of any Title 10 or Title 50.

‘So, the question becomes: Does Dr. Kirkpatrick want to uncover what has been widely reported? That we have in our possession craft of non-human origin, not made here on Earth. Dr. Kirkpatrick's motivations and dedication to transparency to the public and congressional oversight on the UAP issue— remains suspect.’

The IAA, in conjunction with the National Defense Authorization Act, is anticipated to be signed into law by President Biden in December 2023. Should this occur, defense contractors will have until March 2024, at the latest, to disclose any information or materials concerning UAP.

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