© 1994 -1995 by J. Andrew Kissner All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, in any form, without written permission of the author. Reprinted in 2005-2006 as a Real X-Files series by Earthfiles.com with author's written permission.

[ Editor's Note: In the mid-1990s, I was approached by former Las Cruces, New Mexico State Representative, Andrew Kissner. He told me about his official research into UFO crashes and retrievals in New Mexico, and his off-the-record conversations with military and intelligence operatives from White Sands Missile Range, the Naval Research Lab and other government agencies. Rep. Kissner had assembled many old newspaper articles and government documents leaked to him.
Former Rep. Kissner asserted that in the late 1940s to early 1950s, there was an American government policy to shoot down unidentified aerial discs. But the discs retaliated. Many of our pilots died, which forced an end to our "shoot down" policy. ]
Part 1
Prologue
By J. Andrew Kissner, August 1995
In a democracy, the people must be aware of and learn fundamental truth. Without this knowledge, others are empowered to make decisions for the people secretly with little regard to the checks and balances of constitutional government. It is evident that most United States decision makers involved with this phenomenon have not been elected to public office.
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December 8, 2005 Berkeley, California - This past summer on the 4th of July at the British Royal Society Summer Exhibition Program, geologist Silvia Gonzalez, Ph.D., from Liverpool's John Moores University, announced that what appear to be human footprints in volcanic rock near Puebla, Mexico, were 40,000 years old. Puebla is about 1.5 hours by car southeast of Mexico City. The date was determined from Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) of "some baked particles incorporated into the ash." Dr. Gonzales and her colleagues had first discovered the prints in 2003 and hypothesized that early hunters walked near a lake there across freshly deposited ash from volcanoes that are still active in the region. The ash mixed with rain and water which over time turned to rock. 

