Monday, June 8, 2026
HomeAlien LifeAliens DO Exist, Says Top Secret FBI Memo!

Aliens DO Exist, Says Top Secret FBI Memo!

The FBI Memo That Kills the UFO Debate: A Top-Secret Document Exposing Recovered Alien Craft and Their Pilots

Forget what you’ve been told. Forget the grainy videos, the late-night talk show jokes, and the official denials. What if the most explosive proof of alien visitation wasn’t hidden in some bunker under the desert, but was sitting in plain sight, officially released by the government itself?

It’s real. It’s been authenticated. And it tells a story so world-shattering that the powers-that-be are hoping you’ll just dismiss it as a quirky piece of history.

This isn’t some fringe theory from a darkened corner of the internet. This is a document from the Federal Bureau of Investigation. A typewritten memo, sent from one special agent to the Director, that lays out the recovery of not one, but three flying saucers. And their occupants.

This is the story of the memo they never wanted you to understand. The one that proves it all.

The Document That Changes Everything

First, you need to see what we’re talking about. This isn’t just a story. It’s evidence. A single page that could, and should, have changed the world.

The Hottel Memo describing alien bodies and a crashed saucer

On March 22, 1950, a man named Guy Hottel, the Special Agent in Charge of the FBI’s Washington Field Office, typed up a memo and sent it straight to the top—to the legendary and fearsome Director J. Edgar Hoover. The subject? “Flying Saucers.”

The memo, available today in the FBI’s own public online vault, is chilling in its straightforward, bureaucratic language. This isn’t a man telling a wild tale. This is an agent reporting facts as they were told to him by an Air Force investigator. No emotion. Just information.

Let’s break down the exact words. Word for word.

It states that the Air Force investigator confirmed that “three so-called flying saucers had been recovered in New Mexico.”

Stop right there. Not a weather balloon. Not a swamp gas reflection. Three. Recovered. Saucers.

The memo goes on to describe them with stunning clarity: “They were described as being circular in shape with raised centers, approximately 50 feet in diameter.”

This is the classic, iconic image of a UFO, the one seared into our collective consciousness. But this wasn’t 20 years after the fact. This was in 1950, when the phenomenon was still raw, new, and terrifyingly real to those who witnessed it.

And then, the memo drops the biggest bombshell in human history.

The Pilots: Not of This Earth

“Each one was occupied by three bodies of human shape but only 3 feet tall, dressed in metallic cloth of a very fine texture.”

Read that again. Slowly.

Three bodies per ship. Nine in total. Human-like in form, but tiny. Just three feet tall. Dressed not in cotton or wool, but in a “metallic cloth.” What on earth is a metallic cloth of a very fine texture? It sounds like something pulled directly from a science fiction epic, yet here it is in a dry FBI report.

This detail is staggering. It aligns perfectly with decades of witness testimony that would come later. The small stature, the humanoid shape—these are the “Greys” of modern UFO lore, described here in an official capacity years before they became a pop culture staple. They weren’t just seeing ships; they were recovering the pilots.

Deep Dive: The New Mexico Connection

Why New Mexico? The state is forever linked with one name: Roswell. The infamous Roswell incident, where a supposed alien craft crashed in 1947, was just three years before this memo was written. The official story, of course, was that it was a top-secret high-altitude surveillance balloon from “Project Mogul.” A story that, for many, has never held water.

Could the Hottel memo be talking about a different event entirely? Or could it be the real story of Roswell, passed through back channels and finally landing on Hoover’s desk?

The memo offers a tantalizing explanation for why these craft crashed in that specific location. And it’s not because of a lightning strike or pilot error.

“According to Mr (name redacted), the saucers were found in New Mexico due to the fact that the Government has a very high-powered radar set-up in that area and it is believed the radar interferes with the controlling mechanism of the saucers.”

This is a mind-bending detail. The very technology we were using to watch our skies was allegedly the weapon that brought them down. Think about it. In the post-WWII era, America was frantically building advanced radar installations all over the deserts of the Southwest, particularly around sensitive military and nuclear sites like those in New Mexico. The idea that this powerful, experimental radiation could disrupt an exotic form of propulsion or navigation system isn’t just plausible—it’s chillingly logical.

It suggests the crashes weren’t an invasion. They weren’t an attack. They were accidents. Tragic, technological accidents that left the most advanced secret in the universe sitting broken in the American desert.

The Japanese Researchers and the Fear of Exposure

For decades, this memo was just one of millions of files buried in government archives. It wasn’t until UFO investigators, specifically researchers at the Hakui Center for UFO Research in Tokyo, Japan, dug it up and recognized its incredible importance that it began to gain public attention. They saw it for what it was: an official admission.

The original reports surrounding their discovery claimed the FBI was deeply concerned. Not about the content of the memo, but about the precedent it set. If the public started digging through the FBI’s newly digitized “Vault” and connecting the dots on documents like this, what other secrets might be uncovered? How many other memos from agents like Guy Hottel were out there, telling similar stories of recovered craft, strange materials, and non-human bodies?

The fear wasn’t that one document would get out. The fear was that the dam of secrecy was about to break.

The Official Story: A Predictable Dismissal

Of course, once the Hottel memo went viral, the FBI had to respond. They couldn’t just ignore a document from their own files that essentially confirmed the Roswell conspiracy.

Their explanation? It’s a hoax.

Well, sort of. They don’t claim Agent Hottel or the Air Force investigator made it up. Instead, they frame it as a game of telephone. The official line is that the story Hottel was reporting originated from a third-hand account told by a man named Silas Newton, a known con artist and oil prospector, who was trying to promote a bogus alien-based technology scheme.

So, the story goes like this: Newton and his partner told a wild tale to a man, who told it to an Air Force investigator, who told it to FBI Agent Guy Hottel, who then typed it up for Director Hoover. The FBI essentially waves it away as, “We just wrote down what we were told. It’s not our fault the story was bunk.”

Is that believable?

A Cover-Up or Just Bureaucracy?

Let’s get critical for a moment. The FBI, under the iron-fisted rule of J. Edgar Hoover, was not in the business of wasting time on frivolous rumors. An agent in charge of the Washington Field Office wouldn’t risk his career by sending a memo about a ridiculous hoax directly to the most powerful man in law enforcement unless he had reason to believe it was credible.

The source was an Air Force investigator. These were serious people. Why would a military investigator be repeating a wild story from a known con man to the FBI?

Here’s the alternative theory. What if Silas Newton wasn’t a con man? Or what if he was, but the story he was telling wasn’t his own? What if he was a patsy, a convenient scapegoat used to discredit a real leak? By associating the explosive details—three ships, nine bodies, radar interference—with a known fraud, the government could poison the well. Forever after, anyone who repeated those details would be accused of falling for an old con man’s trick.

It’s a brilliant strategy of disinformation. You don’t hide the truth. You muddy it. You release it, but you attach it to a lie, letting the public discredit it for you.

What If It’s All True? The Terrifying Implications

Let’s entertain the possibility that the official dismissal is the real lie. Let’s assume the memo is 100% accurate. What does that mean for our world?

It means that since at least 1950, and likely since the Roswell crash of 1947, the United States government has been in possession of extraterrestrial technology and biological remains.

Every technological leap of the last 70 years would have to be re-examined. The transistor. Microchips. Fiber optics. Lasers. The entire digital revolution. Did we invent it all? Or did we reverse-engineer it from a 50-foot circular craft pulled from the New Mexico sand?

It would mean that a secret of unimaginable magnitude has been kept from the public, not for years, but for generations. A small, unelected group of military and intelligence officials would have become the sole gatekeepers of the greatest discovery in history. They would have made decisions on behalf of all humanity, in total secrecy.

Why keep the secret? The memo itself hints at the chaos. If the existence of powerful radar systems could make these ships fall from the sky, imagine the panic. We were simultaneously defenseless and armed with a weapon we didn’t even understand. The Cold War was just heating up. What would the Soviets have done with this information? What would the public have done?

The decision was likely made to bury it. To study it in secret. And to deny, deny, deny.

The Echoes of the Memo Today

For decades, the Hottel memo was a curiosity for UFO researchers. But today, in an era where the U.S. government is openly admitting to tracking “Unidentified Aerial Phenomena” (UAPs), it takes on a chilling new relevance.

High-ranking officials and decorated fighter pilots like David Fravor and Ryan Graves are going on record describing craft that defy the laws of physics—vehicles that perform maneuvers identical to those described by witnesses for over 70 years. The Pentagon has released official videos. Congress is holding hearings.

Suddenly, the Hottel memo doesn’t look like a historical oddity. It looks like Chapter One.

It’s the origin story of the cover-up. The first piece of black-and-white proof that the government knew. They knew about the craft, they knew about the bodies, and they knew the public couldn’t handle it.

The truth isn’t just “out there.” It’s been right here all along, sitting in an FBI file, typed in plain English. A ghost in the machine, whispering of crashed saucers, tiny beings in metallic suits, and a secret that has been kept for a lifetime.

The only question left is: What else are they hiding?

Arindam Mukherjee
Arindam Mukherjee
Arindam loves aliens, mysteries and pursing his interest in the area of hacking as a technical writer at 'Planet wank'. You can catch him at his social profiles anytime.
RELATED ARTICLES
- Advertisment -

Most Popular

Recent Comments

Warren Pan Abbott on The legend of the Devil Monkey !
chris davies on The McPherson Tape Mystery
chris davies on The McPherson Tape Mystery
Reed Reedly on ET has Internet!
Bea Houseoffashion on Proof Of Time Travellers – Gallery
Marcus2012 on ET has Internet!
Reed Reedly on ET has Internet!
LaughsAtConspiracyNuts on The 9/11 Conspiracy – Myths and Facts
Alex Sliverman on Did the ancients fly?
Doctor Wholigan on Time Traveler in 1938 film
chris davies on The McPherson Tape Mystery
Archie1954 on 10 secret UFO hideouts
chris davies on Ghosts of flight 401
chris davies on Ghosts of flight 401
chris davies on Ghosts of flight 401
chris davies on Ghosts of flight 401
Marcus2012 on ET has Internet!
jason Macdonald on Proof of Time Travel? – China
chris davies on Long-Lost Pyramids Found?
Reed Reedly on ET has Internet!
Milkman on Connected Universe
Tenmiles on Baigong Pipes Mystery
Simon Foster on Sirius – The Documentary
From the 1st April on 2013 – Alien Contact date ?
SkyWatcher on Is ET ignoring us?
I Come From The Future on Obama to make UFO Alien disclouser soon ?
Just another person on 2013 – Alien Contact date ?
Malcolm Windowcleaner on The strange case of Rudolph Fentz
Mason Servio on Strange Things on Mars
Marke Wisdom Seeker on What will we find as arctic melts?
Andrea A Elisabeth Levyne on Aliens Captured in Varginha, Brazil
Mitch Grouyeki on Amazing Space Shuttle pictures