Roswell Officer Speaks From The Grave:
Taped Confession of ET Recovery Revealed
(originally published Dec 2012)
A Lieutenant Colonel and Press Officer at Roswell Army Air Field (RAAF) in 1947 left a testament to the reality of fallen ET in a rare audio recording that was meant to be heard after his death. A portion of it is revealed here publicly for the first time.
It is in this taped message that Walter Haut (a decorated bombardier and Purple Heart recipient) first openly acknowledged his personal witness to an alien-piloted craft found on the desert floor in New Mexico. And people who knew Walter well have now come forward about what he said about the matter very early on -- and why he did not release all of this information until the winter of his life.
Walter would of course go on to sign a notarized declaration in December 2002 of his full knowledge of the Roswell incident as a piloted, extraterrestrial event. This was famously reported in mainstream media based on the publication of the bestseller Witness to Roswell, and the work of the book’s authors Tom Carey and Don Schmitt.
But it was four years before this, in 1999, that Walter Haut admitted for the first time to someone outside of a small circle what he knew about the entirety of the Roswell event. And he allowed it to be recorded.
Like the notarized affidavit, Walter did not wish this 1999 recorded confession released until some point after his death, which occurred in 2005 at age 83. This enabled him to honor his oath during his life to the ultimate secret: the recovery and retrieval of beings not from earth.
A Walter Redux
As Press Officer at RAAF in July of 1947, Walter Haut composed the famous press release that was dictated to him by Colonel William Blanchard, Base Commander and close personal friend. Walter was made to state that the "flying disc" reported crashed near Roswell earlier was now known to be merely an errant weather balloon, initially confused as something more. The release was carried in the Roswell papers and the world over.
In December 2002, Walter elected to come clean for history about what really happened. In an affidavit (see below right), he revealed that none of the press reports he was made to distribute were true. Walt said that there was in fact a small craft that was piloted, which had crashed. He saw it and the debris and one of the extraterrestrial beings.
This announcement made headlines and brought Roswell back in the news like never before in the preceding 60 years that the crash had occurred.
A Snippet of the Actual Haut Recorded Confession
In 1999, pioneering New Mexico researcher Wendy Connors interviewed Walter in-person for the record about Roswell. She was tenacious in her questioning. She was accompanied by one of her associates at the time, Dennis Balthaser. Wendy is now in poor health and has graciously and generously entrusted me with access to her years of research materials, now in the care of an archivist located in the Pacific Northwest. In the interview, tape running, Wendy Connors asks Walter about his knowledge of any beings that may have been associated with the craft that fell at Roswell. Walter hesitatingly replies to her:
"To the best of my remembrance there was one body."
"It was a relatively small body, comparable to, oh, maybe to an 11 year old or a 10 year old child."
"It was pretty well beat up."
He then seems to pause as if he had said too much and pulls back:
"I cannot give you (illegible) to be honest anything other than that."
Walter Haut's
2002 affidavit
(click to open)
In other parts of the tape (hopefully to be released in its entirety at a later date), Haut does say just a bit more. He speaks of the childlike body having been partially covered by a tarp. He also speaks of having personally witnessed the craft wreckage from the crash stored in a hangar at the base after the crash and offers details on this. He makes mention that the bodies may have been taken to Lovelace Clinic afterwards. Here is a 26 second snippet of the recording, in MP3 format:
What Walter Privately Hinted to Others
Walter Haut
Very little known is that Walter did give hints to the ultimate secret that he had held - to a very select few.
Robert Shirkey was the Base Operations Officer at RAAF in 1947. Before he passed, Shirkey told his son that in 1989, Walter personally confessed to him that he had personal knowledge that the object that crashed in the desert could only have been from another world, and that he had seen it.
Lloyd E. Nelson was a PFC who clerked for Haut in the RAAF Public Information Office in 1947. He remembers Walt coming into their office at the time and showing to him small pieces of wreckage debris including an I-Beam that was small and had writing on it. He was also shown a ceramic type piece of material that appeared broken off. Both Walter and Officer Jesse Marcel, who was also confirmed as being at the site, told Nelson to say nothing.
This confirms details of Haut's much later signed confession in 2002. In the early 2000s, Nelson called Walter to find out more about the material. Nelson says, "To my dismay, Walter would not confirm to me anything. He knew that I was there but he would not admit it, not even to me."
Base Finance Officer Richard C. Harris told Roswell researcher and author Kevin Randle in the mid-1990s that Haut did know about the bodies from the crash having been stored in the base hangar. He knew this because Haut asked Harris at the time of the event if he would like to see them. Harris, apparently not wishing such a sight, did not.
Fred Wilcox (a civilian employee at Roswell Army Air Field in 1948) was an acquaintance of Haut. In 2000, Wilcox said that in 1955 a mutual female friend of theirs told him that Walt had confided in her privately that he was actually at the crash scene and that there were alien bodies.
Why Walter Didn't Talk Until the End
Walt's wife "Pete" Haut said that for years after the crash incident, Haut received visits from an Air Force Intelligence officer who he knew from his days in the service. Pete states, "Anytime that there was a 'flap' about UFOs in the news anywhere in the country, he would show up. He would always manage to talk about how the Air Force had explained away this sighting or that."
Towards the end of his life, Haut himself said that he would receive regular phone threats for many years after the incident. He said to one researcher, "There were so many calls I lost track of them -- about 20 years of it." One of these calls was from the retired Colonel son of a late General who told Haut, "Lieutenants should know how to keep their mouths shut."
Among Walter's personal effects were found Christmas cards from the former CIC of intelligence at Ft. Worth, TX, Milton Knight. One of the cards read, "I still say that there were no bodies at Ft. Worth."
Walter's Truth Finally Revealed
We hear in his own words here (with more to follow) that Walter admits his personal witness to the ET reality of Roswell. And we see here that others from his far past were privileged to know his secret. This shows that Walter Haut was not in any way "coached" about his 2002 affidavit, as some critics suggest. It shows that he was of sound mind and that he offered the final secret of the found bodies willingly, if not reluctantly.