UFO-Alien Database
Advertisement
GreenewaldJr

John R. Greenewald, Jr.

John Raymond Greenewald, Jr. (born April 17, 1981 in Tarzana, California, USA) is a researcher and author, best known for appearing in UFO Files (2004), Secrets of the Freemasons (2006), and The Universe (2007).[1]

GreenewaldJr

John R. Greenewald, Jr.

John Raymond Greenewald, Jr. (born April 17, 1981 in Tarzana, California, USA) is a researcher and author, best known for appearing in UFO Files (2004), Secrets of the Freemasons (2006), and The Universe (2007).<ref>IMDb, John Greenewald Jr.</ref>

GreenewaldJr

John R. Greenewald, Jr.

John Raymond Greenewald, Jr. (born April 17, 1981 in Tarzana, California, USA) is a researcher and author, best known for appearing in UFO Files (2004), Secrets of the Freemasons (2006), and The Universe (2007).<ref>IMDb, John Greenewald Jr.</ref>

GreenewaldJr

John R. Greenewald, Jr.

John Raymond Greenewald, Jr. (born April 17, 1981 in Tarzana, California, USA) is a researcher and author, best known for appearing in UFO Files (2004), Secrets of the Freemasons (2006), and The Universe (2007).&lt;ref>IMDb, John Greenewald Jr.&lt;/ref>

Background[]

Piper Maru

Piper Maru aired 9 Feb 1996&lt;ref name=top10/>

Apocrypha

Apocrypha aired 16 Feb 1996&lt;ref name=top10/>

Greenewald took an interest in United States government research at the age of fifteen.&lt;ref name=Amazon/> Season 3 of The X-Files produced some of the best episodes with captivating characters such as Cancer Man and Krycek. Two of the best episodes that first aired in 1996 was Piper Maru when it was revealed that Krycek was under the influence of the 'black oil alien', followed by the next episode Apocrypha where Krycek is confined to an abandoned missile silo in North Dakota.&lt;ref name=top10>nerdinfinite.com, Top 10 Episodes: The X-Files Season 3&lt;/ref>

The real word "Apocrypha", from Ancient Greek ἀπόκρυφος (apókruphos, “hidden, obscure”), means something, primarily a writing, that is of doubtful authorship or authority.&lt;ref>Wiktionary, Apocrypha&lt;/ref>

The influence of early X-File episodes helped Greenewald to later formulate his Movie script hypothesis which he uses to debunk the Wilson UFO Leak.&lt;ref>Wikipedia, Hill Refutations&lt;/ref>

The Black Vault[]

The Black Vault is considered the largest private online collection anywhere in the world, compiled by John Greenewald, Jr.&lt;ref>gaia.com, Exposing the FOIA with John Greenewald, Sept 2016&lt;/ref>

Since 2005, Greenewald has accumulated almost 2 million pages of declassified US documents petitioned through the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).&lt;ref name=Amazon>Amazon books, About Jr., John, Greenewald&lt;/ref> The documents that were released to Greenewald regard UFOs, Operation High Jump, John F. Kennedy, United States Atomic Energy Commission, &lt;sup>[ AEC-94 ]&lt;/sup> and Cold War era Area-51 aircraft.

The response of the United States to the requests for information, that are in Greenewald's online archive, is information that the US can neither confirm nor deny.&lt;ref>Wikipedia, Glomar response&lt;/ref>

However, due to the sensitive nature that circumstantially exists for some of the subjects, Greenewald is obligated to debunk all of the documents that has been released to him, for his own protection.

References[]

&lt;references/>

Resources[]

The Black Vault[]

The Black Vault is considered the largest private online collection anywhere in the world, compiled by John Greenewald, Jr.<ref>gaia.com, Exposing the FOIA with John Greenewald, Sept 2016</ref>

Since 2005, Greenewald has accumulated almost 2 million pages of declassified US documents petitioned through the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).<ref name=Amazon>Amazon books, About Jr., John, Greenewald</ref> The documents that were released to Greenewald regard UFOs, Operation High Jump, John F. Kennedy, United States Atomic Energy Commission,<sup>[ AEC-94 ]</sup> and Cold War era Area-51 aircraft.

The response of the United States to the requests for information, that are in Greenewald's online archive, is information that the US can neither confirm nor deny.<ref>Wikipedia, Glomar response</ref>

However, due to the sensitive nature that circumstantially exists for some of the subjects, Greenewald is obligated to debunk all of the documents that has been released to him, for his own protection.

References[]

<references/>

Resources[]

The Black Vault[]

The Black Vault is considered the largest private online collection anywhere in the world, compiled by John Greenewald, Jr.<ref>gaia.com, Exposing the FOIA with John Greenewald, Sept 2016</ref>

Since 2005, Greenewald has accumulated almost 2 million pages of declassified US documents petitioned through the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).<ref name=Amazon>Amazon books, About Jr., John, Greenewald</ref> The documents that were released to Greenewald regard UFOs, Operation High Jump, John F. Kennedy, United States Atomic Energy Commission, <sup>[ AEC-94 ]</sup> and Cold War era Area-51 aircraft.

The response of the United States to the requests for information, that are in Greenewald's online archive, is information that the US can neither confirm nor deny.<ref>Wikipedia, Glomar response</ref>

However, due to the sensitive nature that circumstantially exists for some of the subjects, Greenewald is obligated to debunk all of the documents that has been released to him, for his own protection.

References[]

<references/>

Resources[]

The Black Vault[]

The Black Vault is considered the largest private online collection anywhere in the world, compiled by John Greenewald, Jr.[2]

Since 2005, Greenewald has accumulated almost 2 million pages of declassified US documents petitioned through the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).[3] The documents that were released to Greenewald regard UFOs, Operation High Jump, John F. Kennedy, United States Atomic Energy Commission,[ AEC-94 ] and Cold War era Area-51 aircraft.

The response of the United States to the requests for information, that are in Greenewald's online archive, is information that the US can neither confirm nor deny.[4]

However, due to the sensitive nature that circumstantially exists for some of the subjects, Greenewald is obligated to debunk all of the documents that has been released to him, for his own protection.

References[]

Resources[]

Advertisement