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Lawmakers host whistleblowers, UFO investigators to press feds to come clean about space aliens

The Washington Times reports that lawmakers hosted whistleblowers and UFO investigators to press federal officials to come clean about alleged space-alien information.

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Washington Times

The Washington Times reports that lawmakers hosted whistleblowers and UFO investigators to press federal officials to come clean about alleged space-alien information.

The event shows how disclosure activism has moved into congressional-adjacent settings. Witnesses, investigators, and elected officials now share stages to demand records, briefings, and public answers.

The phrase space aliens is blunt, but the policy issue is broader: whether agencies have withheld information about UAP programs, crash-retrieval claims, or historical investigations from Congress and the public.

The credibility of the event depends on evidence beyond testimony. Strong follow-up would include documents, named programs, verifiable witnesses, and official responses to specific claims.

The report matters because it records the coalition behind disclosure pressure. Lawmakers are no longer only receiving UAP claims; in some cases they are actively creating public forums for them.