Hal Puthoff Says US Recovered 4 Alien Species From UFOs
Updated
Updated · Fox News · May 25
Hal Puthoff Says US Recovered 4 Alien Species From UFOs
5 articles · Updated · Fox News · May 25
Four separate alien species have been recovered by U.S. officials from UFO incidents, Dr. Hal Puthoff said on Steve Bartlett’s podcast, adding he had no direct access but trusted people involved in alleged recoveries.
Puthoff, a former adviser to the Advanced Aerospace Weapon System Applications Program, said the claim came from recovery participants; former colleague Eric Davis has previously described the alleged beings as Nordics, Grays, Insectoids and Reptilians.
The claim lands as the Trump administration’s PURSUE disclosure program released a second batch of UAP documents on Friday, fueling demands from UFO advocates for harder evidence rather than partial disclosures.
It also builds on 2023 congressional testimony from former intelligence officer David Grusch, who alleged the government held non-human biologics from dozens of downed craft—claims the Pentagon did not immediately comment on.
With no official proof, why are insiders claiming the US holds remains of four distinct alien species?
As government reports find zero evidence, what is the true motive behind these explosive whistleblower claims?
The Four Species Controversy: 2023–2024 UAP Recovery Claims, Whistleblower Risks, and the Battle for Disclosure
Overview
Between 2023 and 2024, there has been a surge in claims about the recovery of non-human species and technology, with Dr. Hal Puthoff stating that high-level sources told him about four distinct alien types—Grays, Nordics, Insectoids, and Reptilians—recovered from crashed UFOs. These claims echo the 2023 congressional testimony of David Grusch, who alleged the U.S. government possesses non-human remains from crashed UAPs. The continuity of such insider assertions has fueled public and political debate, further amplified by the documentary 'The Age of Disclosure,' which aims to bring these extraordinary claims to a wider audience.