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13 January 2026
- 03:5803:58, 13 January 2026 Lyne, Bill (hist | edit) [3,319 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Bill Lyne is a conspiracy-oriented UFO author best known for sweeping claims about secret space programs, clandestine technologies, and alleged non-human infiltration of institutions. His work occupies an extreme end of disclosure-oriented ufology, where the primary explanatory principle is hidden control: that the most important facts are suppressed and that conventional institutions are compromised or deceived at a fundamental level.</p> <h2>B...")
- 03:4503:45, 13 January 2026 Leslie, Desmond (hist | edit) [3,470 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Desmond Leslie was an early flying-saucer-era author whose work helped shape mid-century public understanding of UFOs, particularly through contactee-oriented narratives and speculative historical framing. In ufology history, Leslie is often placed within the “myth formation” phase, when books and media created enduring expectations about contact, government secrecy, and cosmic meaning—often with limited evidentiary grounding by modern stan...")
- 03:3803:38, 13 January 2026 Luckman, Michael (hist | edit) [3,183 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Michael Luckman is an author whose ufology relevance is closely tied to cultural synthesis—presenting UFO themes through entertainment history, celebrity narratives, and broad-population storytelling. His work occupies a space between ufology and pop cultural commentary, treating UFO belief as both an anomalous phenomenon and a cultural movement that shapes—and is shaped by—media ecosystems.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Luckman’s backgroun...")
- 03:3103:31, 13 January 2026 Lorenzen, Jim (hist | edit) [3,372 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Jim Lorenzen was a key figure in the institutionalization of early civilian ufology in the United States. Associated with major mid-century UFO organization-building, he helped create systems for collecting witness reports, organizing data, and distributing analysis through newsletters and books. In ufology history, he exemplifies the “archivist-organizer” role—less glamorous than celebrity whistleblowers, but essential to the movement’s...")
- 03:2303:23, 13 January 2026 Lorenzen, Coral (hist | edit) [3,340 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Coral Lorenzen was a major figure in mid-20th-century American ufology, best known for building and sustaining civilian infrastructure for UFO investigation and publishing. She is frequently associated with the organized case-file tradition—systematically collecting witness reports, correspondence, and clippings; producing newsletters; and presenting UFOs as a persistent anomaly deserving sustained attention.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Lorenze...")
- 03:1603:16, 13 January 2026 Lovelace, Terry (hist | edit) [3,139 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Terry Lovelace is an abduction experiencer-author best known for memoir-style accounts centered on an alleged encounter at a location commonly referred to as “Devil’s Den.” His prominence in contemporary ufology comes from the narrative power of his testimony and his emphasis on the psychological and social consequences of reporting extraordinary experiences.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Lovelace’s public identity is built through self-rep...")
- 03:1003:10, 13 January 2026 Lina, Jüri (hist | edit) [3,084 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Jüri Lina is an author whose work is frequently referenced in conspiracy and esoteric subcultures that overlap with certain strains of ufology. Rather than focusing on UFO cases directly, Lina’s relevance lies in interpretive framing: portraying world events as guided by hidden organizations and esoteric power structures, a theme that readily merges with UFO cover-up narratives.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Lina’s writing emerges from traditi...")
- 03:0403:04, 13 January 2026 Loedding, Alfred (hist | edit) [3,382 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Alfred Loedding is remembered in UFO history as an engineer aligned with early, technically framed arguments that unidentified aerial reports warranted serious evaluation. In the mid-20th-century context—when aviation expanded rapidly and Cold War anxieties elevated airspace anomalies—figures like Loedding helped position UFOs as an engineering and intelligence problem rather than a purely sensational or mystical subject.</p> <h2>Background<...")
- 02:1902:19, 13 January 2026 Loeb, Avi (hist | edit) [4,082 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Avi Loeb is an astronomer whose prominence in ufology-adjacent discourse stems from his willingness to publicly entertain the possibility of extraterrestrial technology—most notably in discussions of the interstellar object ʻOumuamua—and from his advocacy for systematic, instrumented searches for technosignatures and anomalous phenomena. While not a traditional UFO investigator, Loeb is influential in reframing the conversation from witness...")
- 01:5401:54, 13 January 2026 Lindemann, Michael (hist | edit) [3,282 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Michael Lindemann is a UFO publisher, editor, and media figure whose significance lies in curation—collecting reports, publishing commentary, and providing platforms for voices within the UFO disclosure ecosystem. He represents a durable type in ufology: the organizer-communicator who shapes what audiences encounter, how themes are prioritized, and which narratives become central over time.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Lindemann’s professional...")
- 01:4801:48, 13 January 2026 Levenda, Peter (hist | edit) [3,694 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Peter Levenda is an author whose work intersects ufology, occult history, intelligence narratives, and “deep politics” interpretations of modern culture. In UFO discourse, Levenda is frequently cited not for singular case investigations but for frameworks that reposition UFO history as part of broader clandestine ecosystems involving ideology, psychological operations, esoteric traditions, and state secrecy.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Levend...")
- 01:4301:43, 13 January 2026 LeVesque, Thomas Allen (hist | edit) [3,457 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Thomas Allen LeVesque is associated with contemporary ufology as a commentator and synthesis-oriented researcher focused on the modern “UAP era,” in which government acknowledgments, leaked videos, and congressional attention reshaped public discussion. His role is primarily interpretive: connecting disparate threads—historical cases, institutional statements, and whistleblower narratives—into coherent explanatory frameworks.</p> <h2>Bac...")
- 01:2101:21, 13 January 2026 Leir, Roger (hist | edit) [4,347 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Roger Leir was an American physician and ufology figure best known for claims that he surgically removed anomalous “implants” from individuals who reported alien abduction experiences. Leir’s work became prominent because it appeared to move abduction ufology from testimony and hypnosis into the realm of physical artifacts. His publications and interviews argued that certain recovered objects displayed unusual properties. Critics countered...")
- 01:1701:17, 13 January 2026 Layne, Meade (hist | edit) [4,217 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Meade Layne was an early American ufological theorist best known for promoting interpretations of UFOs as “etheric,” interdimensional, or ultraterrestrial phenomena. Rather than framing UFOs as craft arriving from other planets, Layne’s approach treated the phenomenon as originating from adjacent realities or subtle planes of existence. This perspective became one of the foundational pillars of “high strangeness” ufology, influencing la...")
- 01:1101:11, 13 January 2026 Lear, John (hist | edit) [4,199 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>John Lear was an aviation figure and prominent UFO conspiracy promoter whose influence lies in popularizing broad, dramatic claims about extraterrestrial presence and government cover-ups. Lear became a central voice in the late-20th-century shift from “sightings-focused ufology” toward “secret program ufology,” where the most important evidence is presumed hidden behind classification, black budgets, and institutional deception. His narr...")
- 01:0101:01, 13 January 2026 Lazar, Bob (hist | edit) [4,462 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Bob Lazar is an American claimant whose story about working at a secret facility associated with Area 51 became one of the most influential narratives in modern ufology. Lazar alleges he was hired to help reverse-engineer extraterrestrial technology—specifically, disc-shaped craft stored at a site he described as “S-4.” He further claimed that the craft used a propulsion system involving a heavy element he identified as “Element 115.” L...")
- 00:5100:51, 13 January 2026 LaViolette, Paul (hist | edit) [4,015 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Paul LaViolette is an independent researcher and author best known for proposing the “galactic superwave” hypothesis—an idea that periodic energetic events from the galactic center drive major Earth changes, extinctions, climate shifts, and cultural transformations. While not a “nuts-and-bolts” UFO investigator, LaViolette’s work is ufology-adjacent because it provides an expansive cosmological framework often used by alternative rese...")
- 00:4300:43, 13 January 2026 LaPaz, Lincoln (hist | edit) [4,204 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Lincoln LaPaz was an American scientist whose name is strongly associated with early, science-forward investigations of unusual aerial phenomena—especially the “green fireball” episodes reported in the U.S. Southwest during the early Cold War era. In ufology historiography, LaPaz represents a period when unexplained sky events were not solely the domain of civilian enthusiasts: scientists and defense-adjacent institutions also took interest...")
- 00:3600:36, 13 January 2026 Lacatski, James (hist | edit) [4,276 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>James Lacatski is a defense-associated scientist and program figure whose name became prominent during the modern UAP “institutional era,” when U.S. government offices and contractors were publicly linked to structured analysis of unidentified aerial phenomena. In ufology discourse, Lacatski is treated less as a traditional investigator and more as a representative of the insider-adjacent world: program management, specialized analysis, and t...")
12 January 2026
- 23:2723:27, 12 January 2026 Kelleher, Colm (hist | edit) [4,831 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Colm Kelleher is a scientist and research administrator whose relevance to ufology and modern anomalous phenomena discourse is closely tied to the Bigelow-era institutional landscape, particularly through associations with the National Institute for Discovery Science (NIDS) and the broader “high strangeness” narratives linked to Skinwalker Ranch. Kelleher’s role is often described as managerial and analytic: overseeing investigations, coord...")
- 23:2223:22, 12 January 2026 Kazantsev, Alexander (hist | edit) [4,096 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Alexander Kazantsev was a Soviet science-fiction writer whose influence on ufology is indirect but historically notable. He is sometimes referenced in UFO and fortean literature in connection with the cultural evolution of speculative interpretations of the Tunguska event, including the idea—popular in some mystery circles—that a technological or extraterrestrial factor could have been involved. Kazantsev’s relevance is therefore primarily...")
- 23:1723:17, 12 January 2026 Khoury, Peter (hist | edit) [4,176 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Peter Khoury is an Australian UFO experiencer whose name is primarily associated with a widely debated abduction-style account involving an alleged bedroom encounter and a claimed physical trace: a hair sample said to have been recovered during the incident. The case became notable because physical traces are relatively rare within the abduction narrative landscape, where testimony and hypnosis often dominate. As a result, Khoury’s story is rep...")
- 23:1223:12, 12 January 2026 Kinsella, Gary (hist | edit) [4,024 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Gary Kinsella is a British UFO commentator associated with the contemporary UK ufology media and publishing ecosystem. Often linked through collaboration and shared thematic interests with Philip Kinsella, he has engaged a range of UFO and high-strangeness topics through discussions, interviews, and co-authored or collaborative projects. His role is largely communicative and community-oriented rather than technical or institutionally investigativ...")
- 23:0223:02, 12 January 2026 Kinsella, Philip (hist | edit) [4,164 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Philip Kinsella is a British UFO author and commentator known for engaging unusual encounter narratives, including cases involving missing time, anomalous disappearance themes, and the blending of UFO reports with broader paranormal phenomena. Within UK ufology, he is recognized as a belief-forward, experiencer-friendly voice who treats witness testimony and high-strangeness elements as central rather than peripheral to understanding the phenomen...")
- 22:5522:55, 12 January 2026 Kiviat, Robert (hist | edit) [3,885 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Robert Kiviat is an American television producer and host associated with popularizing UFO and fringe-science topics through mass-market television. His work helped shape a distinctive genre: tabloid-investigative TV that presents controversial claims with the aesthetics of journalism—interviews, dramatic narration, and “evidence” segments—while prioritizing pace and viewer engagement. In ufology, Kiviat’s importance is primarily as a m...")
- 22:4922:49, 12 January 2026 Kurtz, Paul (hist | edit) [4,267 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Paul Kurtz was an American philosopher and a foundational architect of modern organized skepticism. His relevance to ufology lies in institution-building: he helped create skeptical organizations, publications, and public outreach efforts that framed UFO and paranormal claims as domains requiring stringent evidentiary scrutiny. Kurtz’s work shaped how mainstream skeptical culture engages ufology—often treating it as a case study in pseudoscie...")
- 22:4422:44, 12 January 2026 Krippner, Stanley (hist | edit) [4,341 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Stanley Krippner was an American psychologist known for research into dreams, consciousness, and anomalous experience. In ufology and the broader study of extraordinary claims, Krippner is often referenced as an academic figure who treated UFO-related experiences—especially abduction narratives and visionary encounters—as legitimate subjects for psychological inquiry. His relevance lies not in proving extraterrestrial craft, but in studying t...")
- 22:3922:39, 12 January 2026 Kirkpatrick, Sean (hist | edit) [4,588 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Sean M. Kirkpatrick is an American physicist and defense-related official whose significance to ufology and the modern UAP discourse stems from his leadership of the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO). During his tenure, AARO functioned as a focal point for governmental collection and analysis of UAP reports. Kirkpatrick became a prominent institutional voice—emphasizing structured reporting and analytic discipline—while also challen...")
- 22:3322:33, 12 January 2026 Kottmeyer, Martin (hist | edit) [4,112 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Martin Kottmeyer is a folklorist and skeptical commentator known for analyzing UFO and abduction narratives as forms of modern legend. His work emphasizes how motifs spread through media, how expectation structures perception and memory, and how testimony can become standardized through cultural scripting. Kottmeyer occupies an important niche in ufology’s intellectual ecology: he studies ufology as a belief-and-story system rather than as an e...")
- 22:2822:28, 12 January 2026 Korff, Kal (hist | edit) [4,184 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Kal Korff is a writer and UFO critic associated with debunking high-profile UFO narratives, especially those tied to Roswell and other iconic cases. Korff’s role in ufology is adversarial: he positions himself against what he views as mythology, exaggeration, or fraud within the UFO community. His work is influential among skeptics and sharply contested among ufologists, making him a recurring figure in the field’s internal conflict over stan...")
- 22:2022:20, 12 January 2026 Knuth, Kevin (hist | edit) [3,878 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Kevin H. Knuth is a physicist whose role in ufology is largely science-facing: he has argued publicly that UAP reports—especially those involving trained observers and multiple data streams—warrant serious scientific analysis rather than stigma-driven dismissal. Knuth is associated with a modern effort to treat UAP as a legitimate research problem, emphasizing quantitative reasoning about kinematics, sensor interpretation, and the limits of i...")
- 22:1222:12, 12 January 2026 Knapp, George (hist | edit) [4,419 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>George Knapp is an American investigative journalist and broadcaster whose reporting has played a major role in shaping modern UFO discourse. He is widely known for bringing secret-base and clandestine-program UFO narratives into mainstream visibility, particularly through early coverage of Bob Lazar and continued reporting on Nevada-linked UFO lore. Knapp’s influence derives from his position at the boundary between journalism and ufology: he...")
- 22:0822:08, 12 January 2026 Kloor, Keith (hist | edit) [4,212 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Keith Kloor is a science journalist whose relevance to ufology arises from his critical coverage of modern UAP narratives, especially those tied to “disclosure” media cycles. Kloor has focused on how claims gain legitimacy through institutional cues, how stories are amplified through journalism and social media, and how evidentiary standards can erode when sensational narratives outpace verifiable documentation. His work represents a contempo...")
- 22:0222:02, 12 January 2026 Klass, Philip (hist | edit) [4,608 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Philip J. Klass was an American journalist and prominent UFO skeptic whose work profoundly influenced how UFO claims are contested in public discourse. He argued that most UFO reports could be explained by misidentification, hoax, rumor, or misunderstanding, and he challenged both the evidentiary standards and the investigative competence of many ufologists. Klass remains a central antagonistic figure in ufology’s intellectual history: widely c...")
- 21:5721:57, 12 January 2026 Klarer, Elizabeth (hist | edit) [4,273 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Elizabeth Klarer was a South African contactee whose claims of extraterrestrial contact became widely known within the postwar contactee movement. She asserted that she had repeated encounters with a human-like extraterrestrial associated with Alpha Centauri and that the relationship included both spiritual instruction and a romantic component. Klarer’s story occupies a distinctive niche in ufology: it is intensely personal, message-oriented, a...")
- 21:5221:52, 12 January 2026 Kimball, Paul (hist | edit) [4,598 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Paul Kimball is a Canadian filmmaker and television producer whose work in the UFO domain is primarily documentary and narrative-driven. Rather than functioning as a primary investigator of sightings or an advocate of a single explanatory theory, Kimball’s contributions center on documenting ufology as a social and investigative phenomenon—profiling key personalities, revisiting famous episodes, and presenting UFO history as a complex cultura...")
- 21:4321:43, 12 January 2026 King, George (hist | edit) [4,030 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>George King was a British contactee and founder of the Aetherius Society, one of the most prominent UFO-centered spiritual movements of the mid-20th century. King claimed telepathic contact with advanced extraterrestrial or “cosmic” intelligences and presented UFOs as part of a moral-spiritual drama involving humanity’s evolution, warnings about war, and the possibility of planetary transformation through spiritual practice.</p> <h2>Backgr...")
- 21:3721:37, 12 January 2026 Keith, Jim (hist | edit) [3,771 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Jim Keith was an American author associated with 1990s conspiracy and Fortean publishing, often blending UFO claims with black-ops rumors, secret-technology narratives, and a broader “suppressed truth” worldview. While not a field investigator in the classical ufology sense, Keith influenced UFO-adjacent culture by providing connective tissue between UAP lore and wider conspiracist frameworks.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Keith’s work emerge...")
- 21:3121:31, 12 January 2026 Keyhoe, Donald (hist | edit) [4,103 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Donald E. Keyhoe was an American former Marine Corps aviator and influential UFO advocate whose work helped define mid-century civilian ufology as a political and institutional accountability project. He is best known for his leadership of NICAP (National Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena) and for arguing that UFOs represented a real phenomenon that the U.S. government was minimizing or concealing.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Keyhoe’...")
- 21:2621:26, 12 January 2026 Keel, John (hist | edit) [4,326 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>John Keel was an American author and investigator best known for reshaping ufology’s interpretive boundaries by arguing that UFOs are inseparable from a broader field of anomalous phenomena. Rather than treating UFOs as simply extraterrestrial spacecraft, Keel emphasized “high strangeness”: apparitions, poltergeist-like events, synchronicities, prophetic experiences, and the sense of an intelligence that manipulates perception and belief. H...")
- 21:0921:09, 12 January 2026 Kean, Leslie (hist | edit) [4,187 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Leslie Kean is an investigative journalist known for elevating UFO/UAP discussion into mainstream respectability through a credibility-centered approach: emphasizing trained observers, official documentation, and the argument that persistent unexplained incidents warrant serious inquiry. Her work is frequently positioned as a corrective to sensational ufology, aiming to reframe the topic as a legitimate subject for journalism, government oversigh...")
- 21:0221:02, 12 January 2026 Jorjani, Jason (hist | edit) [3,883 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Jason Jorjani is an author and media figure whose engagement with UFO topics typically appears within a wider project of esoteric philosophy, alternative history, and speculative models of hidden civilizations. In ufology-adjacent culture, he functions primarily as a synthesizer and rhetorician, offering interpretive architectures that connect UAP themes to metaphysics, myth, and unconventional historical narratives.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>J...")
- 20:5520:55, 12 January 2026 Jung, Carl (hist | edit) [4,493 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Carl Gustav Jung was a Swiss psychiatrist and founder of analytical psychology whose relevance to ufology derives primarily from his influential interpretive framing of “flying saucers” as a modern myth. Jung approached UFO reports not chiefly as aerospace puzzles but as culturally emergent symbols—archetypal images arising in periods of anxiety, uncertainty, and social transformation. His intervention provided ufology with an enduring inte...")
- 20:5120:51, 12 January 2026 Jiménez, Iker (hist | edit) [3,857 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Iker Jiménez is a Spanish journalist and broadcaster known for elevating UFO and paranormal topics into high-visibility television and radio programming. In ufology, his importance is primarily media-structural: he curated and popularized UFO cases for mass audiences, shaping public memory of incidents through narrative presentation, interviews, and recurring thematic framing.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Jiménez emerged from journalism and popu...")
- 20:4520:45, 12 January 2026 Jessup, Morris (hist | edit) [4,176 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Morris K. Jessup was an American author best known for writing a foundational early work on UFOs and speculative propulsion, and for becoming a central character in one of ufology’s most persistent documentary mysteries: the so-called “Varo Edition,” an annotated copy of his book that was reproduced and circulated under unusual circumstances. Jessup’s story occupies a key position in the mythology of “suppressed UFO science,” in which...")
- 20:3920:39, 12 January 2026 Jacobs, David (hist | edit) [4,632 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>David M. Jacobs is an American historian and prominent UFO abduction researcher known for arguing that alleged abductions are part of a coordinated non-human program involving reproductive experimentation, “hybrid” beings, and long-term social integration. Jacobs became a central figure in the abduction era by emphasizing consistency across accounts gathered through hypnosis and by presenting a coherent, often ominous interpretation of motive...")
- 20:3120:31, 12 January 2026 Imbrogno, Philip (hist | edit) [4,142 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Philip Imbrogno is an American UFO author and broadcaster whose work is closely linked to late-20th-century ufology’s disclosure and “high-strangeness” currents. He became a recognizable voice in the media ecosystem that blended alleged insider information, extraordinary case claims, and narratives of clandestine government knowledge. While influential in popularizing certain themes, he remains controversial among researchers who prioritize...")
- 20:1720:17, 12 January 2026 Icke, David (hist | edit) [5,013 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>David Icke is a British author and public speaker whose prominence in UFO-adjacent culture derives from his expansive conspiracy framework, most famously involving alleged “reptilian” or shapeshifting non-human entities operating behind political and financial power structures. Although not a conventional UFO field investigator, Icke’s work significantly shaped late-20th and early-21st century fringe discourse by integrating UFO lore into a...")
11 January 2026
- 04:0504:05, 11 January 2026 Holey, Jan Udo (hist | edit) [3,950 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Jan Udo Holey is a German conspiracy-oriented author and publisher widely known under the pseudonym “Jan van Helsing.” In ufology-adjacent culture, he is associated with a genre that fuses UFO narratives with secret-society claims, covert governance models, and sweeping “hidden history” storytelling. His role is less that of a case investigator and more that of a narrative architect who integrates UFO motifs into broader conspiratorial wo...")
- 03:5903:59, 11 January 2026 Hobana, Ion (hist | edit) [3,605 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Ion Hobana was a Romanian writer and editor known for helping establish and popularize Romanian ufology and OZN (unidentified flying objects) literature. His role is best understood as cultural and infrastructural: creating accessible pathways for UFO discussion in a regional context shaped by different political, media, and scientific institutions than those in the West.</p> <h2>Background</h2> <p>Hobana’s background in science writing and ed...")