Welcome to the world of the 10 bonus secret insiders—individuals who allege they’ve peeked behind the curtain of clandestine space initiatives, extraterrestrial tech, and shadowy government projects. Below, we rank ten of the most talked‑about figures, from alleged aircraft engineers to famed astronauts, each with a story that pushes the boundaries of belief.
10 Edgar Fouche

We’re all aware that the F‑117A Nighthawk stealth fighter was kept under wraps until the Gulf War revealed its existence. Yet a self‑identified insider claims Lockheed’s Skunk Works division has birthed aircraft far surpassing even the Nighthawk. One such craft, dubbed the SR‑74 (distinct from the SR‑71), allegedly can cruise at speeds exceeding Mach 18.
Edgar Fouche asserts he served on a black‑budget venture called Project Aurora, delivering multiple aircraft that defy conventional aeronautics. His lineage is equally fascinating: on one side he descends from the British Rothschild clan, and on the other he traces back to Joseph Fouche, a figure who supposedly undermined Napoleon’s empire to benefit European aristocracy.
According to Fouche, his credentials have been rigorously vetted; his claims extend beyond advanced conventional planes. He maintains involvement in the development of the TR‑3B “Flying Triangle,” a vehicle he says was reverse‑engineered from captured extraterrestrial craft. Supposedly, U.S. contractors seized a massive spherical antigravity device that once powered an interstellar vessel. When activated, it reduced the mass of surrounding material by roughly 90 percent. Lacking a proper containment method, engineers encased the device inside a flat triangular frame.
Triangular UFOs with glowing central spheres rank among the most frequently sighted aerial phenomena. If Fouche’s testimony holds, such sightings may not be alien at all, but rather the product of human ingenuity.
9 Milton William Cooper

In 1991, Milton William Cooper released Behold, A Pale Horse, chronicling his stint on the Intelligence Briefing Team for the commander‑in‑chief of the U.S. Navy’s Pacific Fleet. A devout Christian, Cooper felt compelled to disclose what he knew despite repeated attempts by shadowy operatives to silence him—a struggle that culminated in his death during a 2001 shoot‑out with police.
Cooper’s book alleges that President Eisenhower forged a secret treaty with extraterrestrials in 1954. Eisenhower, initially reluctant to compromise national security, was forced after alien‑backed Nazi UFOs buzzed the Capitol in 1952, revealing the United States lacked the firepower to confront such foes.
He argued that extraterrestrial influence has since infiltrated the deepest layers of the military‑industrial complex, driving America’s increasingly interventionist and hegemonic posture to the detriment of domestic quality of life. Yet, insiders claim a recent schism within that complex has sparked a resurgence of patriotism and resistance against anti‑American, anti‑human clandestine forces.
Cooper also called out alternative media firebrand Alex Jones as a fraud over a decade before Jones’s recent controversies, suggesting Cooper may have been right about the manipulative forces at play.
8 David Adair

David Adair’s tale reads like a science‑fiction novel. A prodigious teen, he was recruited by the military to develop rockets before even graduating high school. Along this trajectory, he befriended Operation Paperclip scientist Wernher von Braun and encountered secrets far beyond ordinary comprehension.
After proving his rocketry expertise, Adair was allegedly escorted to a covert underground facility beneath Groom Lake, Nevada. He reports that the base stretches dozens of stories deep, housing innumerable chambers and sealed hangars.
Within this subterranean complex, Adair claims he was led to a massive extraterrestrial structure—a propulsion device that was, astonishingly, partly biological and essentially alive. He describes interfacing telepathically with this organic power source, receiving visions of advanced civilizations across the cosmos, and learning that its creators existed between eight and nine billion years ago, making them the first space‑faring race.
7 Mark McCandlish

Mark McCandlish alleges that a shadow government deliberately suppresses inventors who crack the code of free‑energy. He also claims a captured Nazi UFO was once displayed at a high‑level military convention, and that contractors have been producing mind‑bogglingly advanced remotely piloted aircraft for decades, all without public awareness.
McCandlish’s narratives are largely sourced from a network of insiders rather than his own experiences. He asserts that humanity has unlocked superluminal travel, with half‑mile‑long UFOs occasionally leaping into wormholes over the Pacific Ocean. He also corroborates Edgar Fouche’s testimony regarding Lockheed’s secret aircraft and has even released detailed blueprints of an alleged alien reproduction vehicle (ARV).
6 Jacob

“Jacob” is among the most enigmatic figures in the insider community. He reportedly approached esoteric researcher David Wilcock in the early 2000s, claiming to serve as a liaison between the Rothschild family and extraterrestrial civilizations.
The anonymous insider asserts he has visited over 200 off‑planet locations and encountered more than 400 distinct extraterrestrial species, most of which communicate via telepathy. Positive interactions with benevolent beings reportedly induce overwhelming feelings of love and protection, sometimes causing loss of consciousness, while encounters with malevolent entities can inflict psychic trauma lasting days or weeks.
Corey Goode, another well‑known insider, describes a harrowing exchange with a fifth‑density Draco royal—a stone‑white, 4.3‑meter tall reptilian being with vestigial wings. According to Goode, the Draco’s pupils dilated wildly as it mentally assaulted his consciousness, an experience Jacob likens to “mental rape.” Jacob has pledged never to reveal his true name, though he hints that full disclosure of suppressed technologies might one day compel him to step into the light.
5 Boyd Bushman

On his deathbed, former Lockheed Martin scientist Boyd Bushman purportedly disclosed everything he knew about secret programs involving extraterrestrial bodies and artifacts. He claimed participation in a rabbit‑hole of alien encounters, UFO battles over American airspace, and the reverse‑engineering of alien spacecraft.
To bolster his credibility, Bushman presented photographs of an alleged extraterrestrial corpse. Skeptics quickly dismissed the images as an alien doll sold at Walmart, branding Bushman a senile charlatan. Yet, his narrative may be more nuanced.
It is plausible that powerful entities pre‑emptively seed popular culture with fictionalized versions of real disclosures, thereby painting genuine whistleblowers as delusional. Perhaps the “alien doll” was deliberately mass‑produced to mimic the physiology of an actual extraterrestrial, ensuring that any genuine testimony would be dismissed as fanciful fabrication.
4 Phillip J. Corso

In 1998, Colonel Phillip J. Corso shocked the world with his bestseller The Day After Roswell. He recounted, from a direct eyewitness perspective, how the Roswell crash’s extraterrestrial technology was quietly harvested by the military‑industrial complex, spawning a wave of revolutionary inventions.
Corso argued that reverse‑engineered alien tech gave rise to the microchip, thereby underpinning modern computers, smartphones, televisions, and countless other devices. He also claimed that LED lights, Kevlar, lasers, fiber optics, night‑vision gear, and even cling‑wrap trace their origins to extraterrestrial sources.
Most crucially, Corso warned that the most transformative technologies—free energy, antigravity, and advanced healing methods—have been deliberately concealed from the public, used to grant humanity a hidden presence in space far beyond what is officially acknowledged.
Whether or not Corso’s assertions are factual, the rapid surge in technological prowess during the latter half of the 20th century aligns with his theory of alien‑derived breakthroughs.
3 Captain Mark Richards

According to his wife, Jo Ann Richards, Captain Mark Richards languishes in jail for a crime he insists he didn’t commit. She contends that he was framed to hide his extensive knowledge of secret space programs, shadow governments, and extraterrestrial contact.
Richards allegedly engaged in clandestine extraterrestrial diplomacy from childhood. In one encounter, he reportedly conversed with an intelligent reptilian entity resembling a velociraptor, yet capable of forming coherent English sentences.
Corey Goode has reported similar beings—reptilian creatures inhabiting the Earth’s inner honeycomb, some sporting feathered crests. While Goode acknowledges their intelligence, he warns that these “raptors” are extremely dangerous, echoing Richards’s cautions about their potential threat.
2 Arthur Neumann

Arthur Neumann, once known by the alias “Henry Deacon,” mystified the UFO community with tales of portal travel, extraterrestrial contact, and a shadowy cabal manipulating world events. A former physicist at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Neumann claimed that free‑energy breakthroughs had been discovered but deliberately suppressed, as releasing such technology would undermine mass enslavement.
Eventually, Neumann stepped into the public eye, appearing at a UFO convention and revealing his true identity. Shortly thereafter, he vanished without a trace, fueling speculation about his fate.
Unlike many self‑promoting insiders, Neumann never pursued book deals, product lines, or fame. He appeared driven solely by a genuine concern for humanity’s safety, urging disclosure of concealed truths. While some dismiss him as delusional, the consistency across multiple independent testimonies suggests a pattern that warrants serious consideration.
1 Buzz Aldrin

At first glance, Buzz Aldrin seems an unlikely candidate for secret‑space‑program insider status. As a celebrated NASA astronaut with a four‑decade public career, his name is synonymous with lunar exploration. Yet, over the years Aldrin has made several cryptic statements that hint at deeper knowledge.
The most compelling clue emerged from a 2009 C‑SPAN interview where, while discussing his passion for sending humans to Mars, Aldrin remarked that a feature of Mars’s moon Phobos would interest “xenoarchaeologists” more than “xenogeologists.” He then described an artificially constructed monolith on Phobos—an object unmistakably visible in flyby photographs, casting a long shadow and standing upright on the moon’s surface.
Speculation abounds that Aldrin may have traded his silence for fame, wealth, and continued insider access. Some point to a magazine cover where Aldrin circles his thumb and forefinger around his right eye—a gesture allegedly used by members of a covert cabal to signal allegiance.
If Aldrin indeed struck a deal to keep the majority of his knowledge under wraps, he could be among the first to alert humanity when full disclosure finally erupts.

