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What's up, Veterans Patrick here with Vetted Today, we're talking about this.
So apparently new information has come to light that the Travis Walton case was a staged
hoax.
That's right, Mike Rogers, Travis Walton's brother-in-law, who was there with him on the evening
of his alleged abduction, apparently is saying, this is all a hoax, and it was staged by
Travis himself and Travis's brother.
What?
What did you think, Mike, when you saw all this?
From where?
Walked in the bolt, come down and hit him.
Well, all of the guys described this thing that hit him as being a very powerful bolt
of energy, a blue flame, it's been described as many things by the guys there.
When it hit him, it was powerful enough to knock him back.
I mean, it was like he said, like an explosion going off in front of him.
Why'd you leave?
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I better please hit that like button that really helps out the videos and of course, if
you're not already subscribed, hit that subscribe button, y'all, I better so what's today's
video about?
Apparently, there's been a pretty massive update potentially, depending on how you
look at this, some shocking allegations that have been made against Travis Walton, right?
The famous Travis Walton UFO abduction case and I've got all the news.
So one of the witnesses who was there, okay, when this happened, has come forward with
a bombshell revelation about Travis Walton and Mike Rogers.
Now, before we get to this bombshell news about Travis Walton and his abduction case, here's
a little refresher of his story.
On the evening of November 5th, 1975, the dense pine forest of Arizona's Apache site greaves
National Forest near Heber, 22-year-old logger, Travis Walton was wrapping up a long day of
work with his six-man crew.
As the sunset and the group drove their truck down a remote logging road toward home, they
spotted something extraordinary, a large glowing object hovering silently above the trees,
emitting a strange pulsating light, curious and unafraid.
Travis jumped out of the truck and approached the craft on foot, while his co-workers watched
from the vehicle.
According to the crew, a brilliant beam of blue-green light suddenly shot out from the object, striking
Travis in the chest or upper body.
The force lifted him off the ground briefly before slamming him backward onto the dirt road
where he lay motions.
When I got up about here, I crouched down behind the log, and I could hear a sound coming
from it.
It was kind of a very strange mechanical sound, and I was kind of wrestling with the idea
of being so close to this, I'd expected it to take off, you know, and I'd run and running
up here.
I figured this was my last chance to, you know, to see this thing up close.
I decided to, I'd better get the hell out of there.
And as I raised up and turned to go, I felt this numbing shock and blacked out.
The guys in the truck, so they saw this brilliant beam come out of the ground and hit me in
the head in the chest and then knocked me flying through here.
Believing he might be dead or seriously injured and terrified by what they had just seen,
the other loggers panicked, floored the accelerator, and sped away to get help.
When they returned minutes later with reinforcements, Travis was gone, nobody, no blood, no trace.
A massive search involving police, helicopters, trackers, and volunteers scoured the rugged
forest for days, but he had vanished without explanation.
Why don't you leave?
It was blind panic.
I didn't have time to think.
I mean, we were all going to get Travis.
Yeah, after I had left, I was driving the truck, and after I had gone down the road about
a quarter of a mile, then I was thinking.
And I had time to think to stop what, you know, what I'd done.
Did you go back?
Yeah, after a hysterical sort of a discussion among us, he wasn't there.
No, it wasn't.
And no, it wasn't.
The crew faced intense suspicion.
Some even accused them of murder and fabricating a wild UFO story to cover it up, especially
since the logging contract had a tight deadline and potential penalties looming.
Five days and six hours later, on the night of November 10th, Travis reappeared.
Disoriented, dehydrated, and dazed.
He called his sister from a pay phone in nearby town, claiming he'd been taken aboard
an extraterrestrial craft under later hypnosis and interviews.
He described waking up inside a curved metallic room with a bitter metallic taste in his mouth.
He encountered small grayish, humanoid beings with large eyes and soft, marshmallow-like
skin who examined him silently.
Hannocked, he fought back, grabbing a strange object that resembled a helmet or tool.
Eventually, he was led to another area where he saw a taller, more human-like figure
in a suit before being returned, dropped off along a highway about 15 to 20 miles from
the original site.
As companions returned to the scene, they found no sign of Travis.
He maintains that he blacked out and came to inside a strange room.
I didn't regain consciousness very quickly.
I was very groggy and in a lot of pain.
But when I could finally focus my eyes, I saw these creatures standing over me, which
just flipped me out immediately.
I was pretty hysterical.
I was screaming all kinds of things out and they started towards me, and I grabbed a
thing off of the table there and lashed out at him.
They stopped.
They just kind of put their hands up like that at me, and then they just turned around
and left the room.
I was afraid they'd come back, so I was going to try to find a way out of there.
I guess I kind of assumed there was still, or that the craft was still here in the woods,
but I went looking for a way out.
I went into another room, and as I was looking for a way out, another being came in, and
this was a very human appearing person.
He led me out of this craft, which appeared to be parked inside of a larger building or
a larger craft.
He just took me right out of there, down a hallway to a room where there were some other people
who looked like him.
They put this mask over my face, there was a kind of oxygen mask thing, there was no
hose connected to it, they put it over my face, and that was the last thing that I just
blacked out.
Travis Wolton says that the incident ended four days later, when he found himself lying
at the sight of a road not far away.
The case stands out because all seven men, including Travis, reportedly passed polygraph test
regarding their accounts of deciding and events.
They did, in fact, see something, which they believed to be a UFO, and that is strictly
what the polygraph proved that they did, in fact, see something.
It does not determine if there was, in fact, a UFO.
Determine strictly that they did see something, which they believed to be a UFO.
Gelsen said five of the six tests showed conclusively that the men were telling the truth,
the sixth was inconclusive.
It inspired the 1993 film Fire in the Sky, which dramatized the abduction experience.
To this day, the Travis Wolton story remains one of the most famous and fiercely debated
in UFO history, with supporters citing the multiple witnesses and consistent testimony.
He was on a craft of some sort, and he had contact with beings of two different kinds,
or two different types of people, and they were very much like people.
But they could converse with him.
They didn't make any speech, no contact, either physical or mental.
They didn't know conversation whatsoever.
While skeptics point to potential motives and consistencies or alternative explanations
for what really happened that November night in 1975.
There are some people in this town who don't believe your story.
Yeah, but they don't tell me that to my face.
How do you respond to that?
I want to be believed because that is my reputation, and it is people's attitudes toward me through my life.
When he was hit by the beam, we took off and went up the road here.
That's the question, why'd you leave?
I think if you'd have been here, you would know that.
We left because it was such a thing to happen, you know, I don't know how to explain it.
It was just very frightening, and seeing travelers getting knocked down like that was by something
that we'd never seen before, and I guess you'd just say fear of the unknown.
That once again is the story, whether you believe it or not is your business.
What they saw in this clearing was to them a UFO.
All right, now that we're caught up with Travis's story, and before we get to this bombshell update,
I do need to keep the mics on y'all.
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All right, so let's get to this bombshell update.
Now, there were many people there with Travis Walton, right, when he got abducted, okay?
Let's go over the whole crew that was there that evening.
You got Alan Dayless, Kenneth Peterson, Mike Rogers, Duane Smith, and John Goulet.
And of course, Travis Walden, and one more name.
Steve Pierce.
And how old for you and at the time?
17.
So you were at the youngest one on the group?
Yes, ma'am.
Mike thought I was 18, but I-
That's how you got the job.
Yeah.
You had to be 18.
Yeah.
Steve Pierce recently made a post on Facebook,
and I think you're going to find it interesting.
Now, I want to give a shout out to Astrol on X for bringing this to my attention.
I had not heard about this.
So I'm going to put a link in the description to this post.
You can go read it for yourself, but shout out to Astrol.
Go get them a follow on X.
All right, so here's the post in question.
Now, get ready.
All right, I want you to get triggered.
If you really believe Travis Walton's story, this may trigger you.
There are many things that a person can keep secret.
Many dark truths that they never talk about or won't ever admit.
And inevitably, they end up taking these hidden truths to the grave.
Some things were meant to stay covered, and some things need to be shared.
No matter how ugly, they may seem.
If it's meant to be known, the truth always has a way of coming out.
The passing of Mike Rogers has finally revealed the truth behind fire in the sky,
and what really happened to Travis.
Upon his deathbed, his last words revealed the ugly truth
that has been the subject of much speculation for so many years.
He revealed that the abduction was indeed a staged hoax.
The whole setup was orchestrated in the disturbed minds of Mike and Travis.
This horrible plot to gain popularity has ruined the lives of so many that were involved.
I for one have dealt with the backlash over this for many, many years.
It has destroyed my life and the lives of those that were close to me since I was 17.
I have lived with the horror of what I witnessed that night in the woods.
It has haunted me in every aspect of my life.
I have lived with the tumultuous chaos every day.
My whole life has revolved around fire in the sky,
and to finally have validation that it was all a hoax
has sent me on the road to utmost devastation.
How dare Mike and Travis live with this secret all these years,
knowing what it has done to the lives of those involved,
not to mention the public.
This lie is of epic proportions.
How dare Travis gain popularity and monetary gain at the expense of myself
and a few others.
He is nothing but a liar, a fake, a phony, a thief,
and abominable human being.
Perhaps Mike had to confess so that he could finally have peace,
but I ask you, what about my peace?
My peace was stolen from me, and I've not known anything else in my life.
I have lost everything I've ever had because I couldn't move past the trauma that this has caused me.
John died believing this was all true.
He too lived with the trauma, never knowing what was real.
I hope now he rests in peace.
As for Mike, you have a lot to answer for,
and as for Travis, your day of reckoning is coming,
and that is something I will take to the grave.
Wow.
So again, this is Steve Pierce who was there that night with Travis Walton claiming
that Mike Rogers and Travis Walton designed this whole thing.
So they hoax their friends as well.
This is crazy, right?
Many people have suspected a lot of things,
but no one from the group has ever come out and said anything like this.
In fact, they've always stuck with the story, right?
That was kind of the whole thing.
Apparently, they had all passed some light detector tests back then,
and everyone but one person, right?
It's just very odd about this.
So I don't know.
They're saying Mike Rogers on his deathbed,
it's all a hoax, it wasn't real, right?
And that's Robert Patrick's character in the movie, Fire in the Sky,
you know, his best friend, right?
So him and Travis got together and fake this whole thing, hoaxed it.
Now for those of you who have been skeptical about this story,
you're immediately going to,
I told you so.
I knew it, you know, make sense.
But for those of you that believe it,
you may, he's lying,
you know, that sort of thing.
I don't know.
I for one, Fire in the Sky was like that movie,
you know, it's one of my favorite UFO movies,
and that movie stuck with me for so long.
As a, you know, young adult,
when that came out in 93, I was a teenager.
It was so impactful for me, you know.
I'll never forget the abduction scene,
like where he's on the table,
and that white thing comes over his face,
like it's crazy.
I don't know, this is nuts.
And I know people that know Travis Wall,
and they say he's a great guy.
A lot of people have felt he's been very genuine and authentic,
so it'll be interesting to hear his response
to this, right?
Because it's always been, well, these guys are credible.
And so are they still, Steve Pears still credible?
Now that he's telling a different story,
could there be some motivation for Steve Pears
to just make this up?
What's more likely that Travis Wall
and actually got abducted by aliens,
or they staged it as a hoax?
Now,
something else that Astral on X found
that was interesting to me and I did a little digging
is there was this national inquire contest happening
at the time for $100,000, right, for a UFO case.
And some people say Travis and Mike were trying to get that money,
so they staged this UFO abduction
and were trying to get this money.
People say, well, that's crazy.
They would never get involved with that,
but they did.
And in fact, they did take money from the national inquire.
Now, it wasn't the $100,000,
they took $5,000 from the national inquire for that story.
They couldn't pass lie detector tests.
So it sounds like they took multiple lie detector tests.
And this one with the national inquire, they couldn't pass.
Then they got $5,000.
They got, Travis Wall got $2,500,
and the rest of the crew got the other $2,500,
because Travis Wall is the one that got abducted.
The national inquire has long had an interest in UFOs
and in selling newspapers.
They asked Walton to take a lie detector test
and called him the services of Jack McCarthy.
I received a call at my home
asking me to come to the Sheraton Hotel in Scottsdale
and not to tell anybody where I was going, period.
Well, naturally, I told my wife.
And picked up my portable equipment and left for the hotel.
A lie detector is used to reveal whether a person
is telling the truth by measuring pulse rate,
respiration, and blood pressure.
Some experts, however, dealt its reliability.
But after two hours of questioning and recording reactions,
McCarthy thought he had the answer.
When I completed my examinations
after reading my charts, I rendered the opinion
to the reporters from the national inquire
that the charts were deceptive.
And in my opinion, he was attempting
to perpetrate a UFO hoax.
Well, the lid blew off the room.
I thought his brother Dwayne was going to throw me off the balcony.
He was raging like a bull saying
that no way that his brother would lie.
And those charts were very, very clear, obviously deceptive.
Prior to the examination, the reporters from the national inquire,
I forgot to mention this.
Asked me if I would have any objection ahead of time
to having pictures taken on my charts,
the equipment, and myself following the examination,
I should know, no problem.
Well, after I rendered my opinion,
the pictures were completely forgotten.
They had no more interest in pictures.
But what they did do, they went into an adjoining room,
and drew up a little form for me to sign,
ask me to sign it.
To the effect that I wouldn't reveal where I had been that day,
they would say nothing about this examination.
And so forth and so forth.
Travis Walton argues that he failed the test
because he was excessively nervous
as a result of his recent close encounter with aliens.
Despite his claim of being overly nervous,
his reactions on the chart
are in self-indisclaimer to that contention.
He was not overly nervous.
His reactions were normal.
They were very deceptive.
And in my opinion,
he was lying and did not take any UFO tricks.
Despite the controversy, the national inquire
gave the forestry workers the UFO encounter of the year award,
with checks amounting to a total of $5,000.
And what's interesting is, guess who's not in the picture?
Steve Pierce.
So I don't know.
Make that for what you will.
Maybe he just didn't want to be a part of it.
He was a kid at the time.
So maybe it was just, you know,
wasn't allowed to be a part of it.
I don't know.
Maybe he suspected something during that time.
I don't know.
This is very interesting.
All right, so what's also interesting is that
this isn't the first time that Mike Rodgers has come out to say
that this was a hoax.
After doing research on this video,
I'm like, what, just a few years ago,
this whole phone call came out,
allegedly of Mike Rodgers talking to this filmmaker
and spilling the beans on a phone call.
And it got released.
Check this out.
All I can remember is that we were talking in the woods one day,
Travis and I.
And I remember leaving a chain saw
on the stop.
Okay.
He had a stop and he took his rhythm
because we were talking about
creating a UFO hoax.
Okay.
Yeah.
I don't know how the UFO got there.
Okay.
But I remember that
when I drove when I was driving the truck and he jumped out,
it was it was all deliberate.
It was all a stage thing.
Okay.
Yeah.
And he ran up there and there was something
and there was something about the UFO
not being real,
although it looked real.
Well, basically, so what you're saying is
I, you and Travis together
hoaxed this.
Yeah.
I mean, the Travis and Brother Blaine helped him.
I believe that.
He was first actually suspected that
Blaine was part of it.
Yeah.
I mean, he was his protector
and he was saying weird things
on that principle van the center view.
I have nothing.
I don't care at all for his life.
I know where you are.
I know.
That was really that was really bizarre.
And I thought all along,
he was just trying to make himself believe
that his brother was okay.
So that was back in 2021, right?
And of course,
Mike Rogers comes out afterwards
and tries to say that
this was BS.
He called me up one day.
I mean, you know, I after he sent that email to me
and he said that he wanted to talk to me,
you know, like in person, I said, okay.
I had no idea he was
recording me, okay?
Now, whatever you've heard,
whatever is there,
supposedly that I said,
I can tell you that
all I can tell you is I did talk to the guy
but I didn't say those things.
So he's saying he talked to the guy
but he didn't say those things, right?
And there's also a couple other discrepancies there.
He's saying that the guy called him,
which the filmmakers saying that's not what happened
that Mike called him, right?
But regardless, Mike is saying
it was essentially digitally manipulated.
Yeah, I'm a little bit unclear on what I said to him.
Obviously, because I didn't record it, you know,
but he obviously did and he's manipulated.
Now, Ryan Gordon, the filmmaker
who recorded that phone call,
he also came out and did an interview
to sort of dispel some of these myths, right?
That he had digitally manipulated this phone call
and he was trying to say,
no, Mike Rogers did say these things.
And he went on the show with Erica Luke's,
okay, this is also years ago.
And he had a potential opportunity
to actually speak to Mike
and then we're going to kind of debate
or at least talk it over, right,
on this podcast and of course,
Mike kind of bailed on the podcast
and Ryan was left to defend himself.
So Mike went on first,
he was going to stay on with Ryan
and then Mike sort of left.
It was painful to just sit there
and listen to all that.
And of course, I wish that Mike could have stuck around
had the courage to debate me on this.
And I find that interesting
that he didn't want to face the person.
He said he had digitally manipulated the conversation.
And as it turns out, listening to this interview,
you find out that Ryan, he came with receipts.
I want to say right off the top of my head,
it was a 23rd of April.
So what, three months ago,
Ish and the following day,
Mike and I had spent several hours on the phone.
Mike was aware and I have him on recording,
telling me that I have permission
to record all interactions with him.
I think that that's important here.
The reason why is I was in the process
of working with Travis Walton
on selling a remake of his show,
Fire in the Sky.
So there you have it.
And like Mike said in that other interview,
he didn't know he was being recorded.
Well, Ryan is trying to say,
we had already talked about that.
So again, another discrepancy from Mike Rogers.
And this guy Ryan showed a lot of different receipts
and confirmed them with the host of the show
that he had sent them all this stuff.
Right.
And it doesn't stop there.
On the day of the 30th,
which is when that call was recorded,
I had already spent roughly six hours,
Ish on calls with Mike.
He would text me frequently.
I have shared a lot of these text messages with you folks.
He text me just before 7 p.m.
on the 30th,
telling me that he had a secret
that he wanted to whisper in my ear.
And that I would tell him,
I told him that I would call as soon as I could,
you both have copies of those text messages.
And I'm hoping that again,
if I continually ask you to affirm,
so they don't have a way to show these,
is that accurate that he's telling me
he has a secret he wants to whisper in my ear.
It's the idea we did see those text messages, yes.
So he text Ryan and says,
hey, I've got a secret to whisper,
whatever the phrase was,
right, secret to tell Ryan.
And then he ends up calling him because he gets impatient.
What?
The secret was what you all heard on that call.
So as I'm driving,
I'm telling him to hold on.
I'm going to show you guys something here.
So I wear my watch on my right hand.
This is the Apple Watch that recorded that call.
And my iPhone.
So I pull over to the side of the road.
So I don't get in trouble with the police for talking and driving.
And I'm telling my hold on, hold on.
And when I get pulled there, I say, okay,
pick up where you were.
And he starts out immediately with what I remember,
or all I can remember.
So Ryan's just given a little background of how the phone call happened.
What exactly went down?
Because Mike was completely changing the story, right?
He's saying that Ryan called him.
That's not true.
Mike called Ryan, right?
He's saying, Mike is saying he didn't know he's being recorded.
And Ryan showed proof that he did know he was being recorded, right?
And then he tried to say it was digitally manipulated
with the way that the audio recording starts.
But that's because of how it went down, right?
Ryan's driving to the car.
He's not allowed to talk on the phone and drive on this particular place.
So he pulls over.
He uses his Apple Watch and then tells him,
okay, start where you were, right?
So honestly, these hosts were saying how Ryan was so professional
and honest about everything and again, had receipts.
And for Mike Rogers to say that he talked to Ryan,
but he didn't say those things, right?
Well, Ryan again brought receipts that Mike was fully aware
that he had told Ryan that this was a hoax.
Now, I'm going to go over a couple of hard facts with you here.
And I believe I have also sent you guys the proof and evidence on this as well.
But I'd like to read and this is what I wish Mike was around here.
So we've covered April 30th that he said he had a secret to whisper in my ear.
Of course, I wish Mike was here.
So if he's saying that he didn't admit to a hoax or he's denying everything
that we talked about, what was the secret?
I wish he was here to answer that question.
Yeah.
And I agree.
What was that secret then, right?
What exactly was he going to tell Ryan?
Sounds like he did and maybe got cold feet.
And again, Ryan made Mike fully aware, right?
That one, that this has been recorded and two,
that Ryan was going to release it.
On June 8th, I emailed the copy of the audio from this recording
to both Travis Walton and Mike Rogers.
The intent of me doing that was letting them know roughly a month in advance
that working together, we're going to be releasing this audio.
I think that's really important for folks to know.
Mike was not taken off guard by this.
He knew that this was coming out and we all collaborated together on its release.
It was very important.
I know we're along the way, of course,
that he mentioned anything about the call being manipulated.
So that's interesting.
So both Travis and Mike Rogers were aware of this recording,
aware that it was going to come out.
And nowhere was Mike saying, hey, this isn't real.
You know, they even went to the spot and Mike was describing to Ryan
how they staged it at the location of the alleged abduction.
On June the 9th, and I can show all of this, of course.
Travis Walton emailed me back and asked me not to release the audio
as it had the very real possibility of destroying his 45 years of hard work.
And that's a quote.
So even Travis was aware of this happening, right?
Because again, Ryan was working with Travis on doing a remake of Fire in the Sky.
And Travis was clearly like, this is not going to be good for me.
This comes out.
But again, Mike, I guess trying to go out and defuse the situation and just make up things about
Ryan allegedly and kind of backpedal, it doesn't work out because Ryan has all the receipts to prove
that Mike was fully aware of this coming out and knew what he had said.
And in no point along the way, he was saying, I didn't say it was a hoax.
That's not true.
You know, fully aware.
And so it's Travis.
And you know, in this same podcast, Mike changes his story that he's been telling the same one
for 45 years and Ryan caught it.
Just on this interview that you all just did with him for the first time,
I heard him say he didn't even see the UFO.
That's a huge, that's a huge divergence from what he said for the past 45 years.
He describes it as beautiful and all these things.
That was, that was interesting.
He also said an interesting comment that he had a feeling something was going to happen.
So that's why he took off.
And here's the clip that Ryan is talking about.
Travis was standing there with his hands on his pocket.
He passed down.
He, uh, he then stood up.
And at that time, I didn't actually see a blood hitting, okay?
I was, I had a lot of anticipation and anxiety building up.
I just knew something was going to happen.
So I turned away and turned the truck back on or released the emergency brake.
So the discrepancy is that allegedly, you know, Mike has been saying this whole time
that he saw the crap and then he changes it to.
He never actually saw anything.
And left because he had a feeling, but that's not what happened at all, right?
Totally changes story.
Now Mike's older, right?
So is it just sort of mental fog from just his age?
I don't know.
But this isn't the first time that this has come out that this was a hoax.
And I didn't know about any of this to be honest with you.
This is my first time learning about all this.
But apparently, again, Mike Rogers on his deathbed confessed again and admitted it was true.
Right?
That he did hoax this.
Now, you may be wondering, where did that come from?
Steve Pears made that post.
And, you know, where did this come from?
Well, Mike Rogers' daughter had made a Facebook post in February when Mike Rogers passed.
And to be honest with you, there's a lot more red flags than this, you know.
Because Mike Rogers also admitted to hoaxing many other things.
So let's get into it.
Shout out to Paranormal on X for posting this and highlighting some of the key points and other
key points that I found in it that we're going to go over.
So this is from Michelle Detrus, who is Mike Rogers' daughter.
On Friday, February 6th, my father died.
We held this funeral this past Saturday, February 28th,
2026 in Snowflake, Arizona.
His name was Michael Howard Rogers.
He was best known for his role as the crew captain in the movie Fire in the Sky.
And of course, for his role in that UFO story.
And she went on to say,
my father wished to confess several hoaxes that he carried out beginning in November of 1975.
Yes, that UFO incident.
One of the best known UFO stories in the world was a hoax.
One of his last hoaxes includes what is known as the Phoenix Lights in March of 1997,
which he explained to me in great detail, including how and what he created the UFO
on a large ranch north of Prescott, Arizona.
The land belonging to a friend of his named Buford Bell, who has long since passed.
So I guess he also confessed to hoaxing the Phoenix Lights.
I have to admit, this is definitely a little strange here.
And it doesn't stop there.
When I asked him why he did not confess any of this himself, he said it was because he is terrified
of going to jail a prison, most specifically for the Phoenix Lights hoax, because the military
got involved to investigate what was definitely seen as a potential threat to millions of people.
He said that he did not intend to fly his UFO over the enormous city of Phoenix.
That its intended path was over small towns where it would definitely be noticed by some people
out in the country. What fly as UFO? I mean, this does not sound like a man that has it all
together here. In any case, to the point of this post is to confess on behalf of my father
for all of his hoaxes that he carried out all over the world from November 1975 to at least
March of 1997. This includes several crop circles in England beginning with an intricate
snowflake design in 1994. So he's also claiming to have hoaxed some crop circles in England in 1994.
What again, this is not sounding good at all. He wanted me to confess and apologize to the world
for his hoaxes. Well, that's interesting. Now, you may be thinking, well, Patrick clearly,
he just wasn't a sound mind. So him saying that they hoaxed the Walton cases. He just wasn't
thinking right, but he's been right all along. Well, maybe not. Maybe if you can't trust
what he's saying about the hoax, oh, well, you should just dismiss that what he's saying about
the hoaxes, then maybe you should dismiss what he said about that evening as well, right? It works
both ways. So it makes me think, I don't know what's going on, right? Was Mike Rogers ever a reliable
witness, right? He changes story. A few years ago, he seemed to be of sound mind, right?
But maybe this was all a ploy to sort of dismiss the other hoaxes because if he starts admitting
to everything's a hoax, then you're just like, okay, he's just crazy, right? But who knows?
And he's on his deathbed. But people take deathbed confessions to heart. That's used all the time
in this community. In fact, people say deathbed confessions are the best because they're on the
end. What do they have to lose, right? But then they dismissive deathbed confession that they
don't really like, right? So I do find that kind of interesting. I mean, when Astral posted this on
Twitter, even Chris Ramsey had come out and said, oh, look, yeah, but he also confessed to this,
this, this, you know, yeah, but Chris Ramsey's also said on Area 52, the deathbed confessions are
like the most reliable deathbed confessions are huge. Yeah, to me, that's that's the biggest
piece of evidence. Of course. You're alleviating your burdens, you're alleviating your mind,
you're not worried about any repercussions. It's the most credible confession. It's the most
credible, you know, unless you're completely delirious, to me, it's the most credible thing
you can ever hear from another human being, period, is when you're about to leave this planet.
What do you, what do you want to leave this planet with? A lie, a joke, a farce, a hoax,
somebody's cover up, some sigh up. It's all very strange to leave somebody with that,
but to leave them with that story. Yeah. And so yeah, it's like, well, that just sounds crazy,
but we, we, people say all kinds of crazy things. I don't know how it's any more crazy than to
believe a spaceship flew over Phoenix lights than for some dude to say he did it in a UFO. Why is
that any more crazy, right? I mean, I think it's all crazy, but I'm just saying, right? We're
distinguishing between crazy and the UFO community is crazy in and of itself, if you ask me,
right? Maybe this guy does have a UFO, right? People say they fly and UFOs all the time,
and people take those stories. People say Travis Wall said he got abducted by aliens.
Why is that any less crazy, right? It's just at the end of the day,
what we need is evidence. And we've had zero evidence of the Travis Wall case. And to be fair,
zero evidence provided that Mike Rogers hoaxed all of this or that Travis Wall and hoaxed it,
right? We just have confessions. We just have stories like always. So where are we left?
It's the same spot we started. I hate to say it. We don't know anything.
So everyone's just going to put in the comments how they feel, what they think, their opinion,
and there's nothing wrong with that, but nobody knows any facts. And we're left with the same
thing we're always left with, which is just, you know, a picture of water with the hole at the
bottom, and it's just draining out and we're kind of screwed. So anyway, thank you all so much for
tuning in. We'll see you guys on the next one. Remember, every day's a gift, y'all. Peace!
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Hey man, I've had nine sightings in my life, and Dave were very fucking real to me,
and I saw what I saw was the top of the tree flying along the highway while I was driving
to work on day. Quite a bit of sightings while I was driving to work. I was a terrible driver,
and I used to look at the sky. I first started working, and so as I was driving, this was in New
Jersey on the Garden of Safe Park where there's a lot of trees, and it seemed to be taking the shape
of a tree. I thought it was a tree. It looked like the top of a tree like a Christmas tree,
and it was flying along with the traffic, and I pulled over to get a better look because
it had slowed down. I caught up with it, and it was right over the tree line,
is on the side of the highway, and other people slowed down with me and pulled over, and they were
behind me. I went and took my phone out at the time, and this was a long time ago, my 20 years ago,
and I had an old-ass foot phone, and I unfit this, and I went to take a picture, and when I looked
up, it was just a dot in the sky. It freaking was there, and then it was gone. That was one of them.
That one, when I had gotten closer, it no longer looked to actually like a tree. It looked like
like it was morphing, like bubbles, and it was the color of trees, so I don't know if it was
like that the whole time.
Vetted: The UFO Sleuth
