Richard French: “There were actually two crashes at Roswell, which most people don’t know.” Photo by Staff Sgt. Nadine Y. BarclayFrench asserted that he was present in Alamagordo, New Mexico, in 1947 when the alien craft crashed. Prior to his passing in 2014, he gave an interview a few years back in which he recalled the day of the tragedy that astonished everyone, stating that there were two crashes in Roswell.“There were actually two crashes at Roswell, which most people don’t know,” French told HuffPost. “The first one was shot down by an experimental U.S. airplane that was flying out of White Sands, N.M., and it shot what was effectively an electronic pulse-type weapon that disabled and took away all the controls of the UFO, and that’s why it crashed… When they hit it with that electromagnetic pulse — bingo! — there goes all their electronics and, consequently, the UFO was uncontrollable.”
When the UFO got hit by the electromagnetic pulse, it lost its electronic system, became uncontrollable, and at last, crashed. French claimed that he was actually an official UFO debunker. A confidential military source told him about the UFO shot down and also the second crash near Roswell days later. He believed that the second ship came to rescue the first ship survivors and try to recover the parts. Other army officials never accepted French’s shocking statements, and they argued how the US army could develop pulse-power weapons systems in the 1960s if their laser systems were so limited that time. French further told HuffPost that a “confidential source” told him about the second crash: It was within a few miles of where the original crash had been. “We think that the reason they were in there at that time was to try and recover parts and any survivors of the first crash. I’m [referring to] the people from outer space — the guys whose UFO it was… I had seen photographs of parts of the UFO that had inscriptions on it that looked like it was in an Arabic language — it was like a part number on each one of them. They were photographs in a folder that I just thumbed through.”