Word
from the Admiral
On
July 8, 2015, investigator and former Navy pilot, Steve
Murillo was asked to make a phone call (by request of Alex
Mistretta) to Admiral Sackett. In respect to the Admiral,
the means to track him down are not going to be published
so he is not inundated with calls but he was located. (We
please ask, there are researchers currently corresponding
with him, and we would prefer that no one track him down
to ask for additional answers as this unfolds.) The following
is the update from Mr. Mistretta:
I
asked Steve Murillo, head of UPARS, to speak with Admiral
Dean R Sackett this morning. Steve is a former Navy pilot.
Admiral Sackett was gracious enough to take the call, but
steered away from the UFO question. Admiral Dean R Sackett
said I only saw Ice. He did agree to check out
the pictures though email however, so we will see. This
obviously doesnt prove anything in either direction.
These could certainly be a hoax, or these are the real deal
and Admiral Sackett is sticking to his security oath. Which
incidentally, if thats the case, he has every right
to do. Or these pictures are the real deal, and have no
relationship with the Trepang submarine USS 674. There were
apparently another sub in the region around the same time.
Ill put up that info as I progress in this investigation.
Thank you John Greenewald, Steve Murillo, and also Richard
Carlson for some valuable assistance, by the way.
On
July 12th, 2015, another updated was released by Alex Mistretta,
working with Steve Murillo:
Steve
spoke with the Admiral Dean R Sackett and I have been in
touch with John Klika, both named by the source who released
the pictures as principal participants in this saga. Both
men were indeed on the Trepang SSN 674, in March of 1971
in the Arctic. Admiral Sackett denied seen anything unusual
while onboard the Trepang. He gracefully took two phone
calls from Steve and checked out the pictures that we sent
him privately. He could not identify what was in the pictures.
John Klika also confirmed that he was also on the Trepang
in March of 1971, but told me that neither himself or anyone
else saw anything unusual while in the Arctic. He found
the investigation interesting reading, and doesnt
know what the pictures represent. I believe them. I feel
confident in saying the Trepang was not involved in the
taking of the photographs. The photographs remain a mystery,
no doubt. This investigation is far from over. The veracity,
or lack off, of the photographs themselves is partly removed
from the location and said provenance. They may be authentic
and highly unsual, or they may be more mundane objects that
in time I will identify. Furthermore, there is the issue
of provenance, which is unknown. Are they really from the
Arctic, and from an American sub? On the later point, there
was another sub in the region, just a month before the Trepang,
and that is the USS Skate USN 578. Ergo, the investigation
continues.
The
Black Vaults Fact Checking
by John Greenewald, Jr.
When
I first read about these photographs, I was very intrigued.
I felt they needed a closer investigation, and Alex has
been doing a great job pursuing the truth, whatever it may
be, behind them. Although his investigation is ongoing,
I wanted to add some independent points of clarification
and verification to the story above. I was very happy to
see many of the facts did pan out, which means if it is
a hoax, whoever did it definitely thought it out before
hand.
Rear
Admiral Dean Reynolds Sackett FACT
Rear
Admiral Dean Reynolds Sackett, Jr.
The
inclusion of Rear Admiral Sackett in the story seems to
pan out. He commissioned the USS Trepang. According to NavSource
online:
Rear
Admiral Dean Reynolds Sackett, Jr comes from Beatrice, Nebraska
where he grew up and attended high school. In 1952, he entered
the U.S. Naval Academy, graduating with distinction in 1956.
He also received a Master of Science Degree in Engineering
from George Washington University. He completed a full career
of 34.5 years in the U.S. Navy, retiring in 1991 as a Rear
Admiral. His assignments included tours in destroyers and
nuclear submarines in the Navys nuclear power program.
He commissioned, as Commanding Officer, the Trepang (SSN-674)
[14 August 1970 to 7 December 1973]. He also served as Commanding
Officer of the Howard W. Gilmore (AS-16) [11 June 1976 to
15 May 1978], a nuclear capable repair ship.
Location
of USS Trepang FACT
Alleged Location of the USS Trepang was between Iceland
and Jan Mayen Island. This is the general vicinity,
which is confirmed that the Trepang was in the area using
verifiable sources.
After
searching around a bit, I was able to verify that the USS
Trepang, as indicated being between Iceland and Jan Mayen
Island, was in fact, in the region at the time. As verified
by Hullnumber,
which chronicles the location of naval vessels:
Following
local operations out of New London, Conn., Trepang proceeded
to the Arctic early in 1971. From 22 February to 22 March,
the nuclear attack submarine operated beneath the northern
ice cap, conducting extensive tests to provide data for
her weapons systems, as well as carrying out scientific
experiments concerning the movement, composition, and geological
history of the cap itself.
Shipmate
John Klika FACT
I
can also confirm, there was a shipmate by the name of John
Klika on the USS Trepang as well. According to the ship
roster, also on Hullnumber,
you will find:
Ship
mate John Klika is confirmed to have been on the ships
roster.
(Click for larger version)
Ship
Logs / Roster
I
was also able to track down the official roster and ship
logs for the U.S. Trepang for this time frame.
Download:
U.S.S.
Trepang Roster and Crew List
Possible
Explanations
NAVY
Target Practice / Weapons Systems Test
When
I first saw these, I noted there was something very Zeppelin-like
about some of the photos, but, unlike the actual Zeppelins,
it did not have a carrier for the occupants.
However,
after some research, it is possible these were naval target
balloons, and the USS Trepang was conducting a weapons test
of some kind. As indicated and referenced/sourced above,
From 22 February to 22 March [1971], the nuclear attack
submarine operated beneath the northern ice cap, conducting
extensive tests to provide data for her weapons systems,
as well as carrying out scientific experiments concerning
the movement, composition, and geological history of the
cap itself.
I
searched the Library of Congress, and came up with a few
examples of Balloon Carriers. They do have a resemblance.
Here are the examples (it should be noted that the balloons
in these photographs were photographed between 1910-1915
a considerable time difference between this case and these
photographs. Could the same technology have been used more
than 50 years later?):
A
view of the H.M.S Canning and its observation balloon.
CREDIT: National Geographic.
Title:
British Naval Balloon Carrier Creator(s): Bain News Service,
publisher
Date Created/Published: [between ca. 1910 and ca. 1915]
Title:
British Balloon ship Creator(s): Bain News Service, publisher
Date Created/Published: [between ca. 1910 and ca. 1915]
Title:
On British Balloon ship Creator(s): Bain News Service,
publisher
Date Created/Published: [between ca. 1910 and ca. 1915]
It
is possible that the object(s) in the photos above, are
a type of weapons system test target, and the photographs
are of the results of their shoot down.
Declassified Documents
Shortly
after this story broke, I filed Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) requests to the military for documents on the Trepang,
its location during the time of this event, and crew
manifests.
The
first documents received were from the U.S. NAVY, and included
the Trepangs Command History from January 1971
January 1972.
DOWNLOAD:
USS
Trepang Command History: January 1971 January 1972
[6 Pages, 0.5MB]
Although
I still have open FOIA requests to other agencies, you can
see by this document that the USS Trepang was involved in
weapons tests, and seems to coincide with the theory these
could be some type of Naval targets used for practice.
Periscope
While
looking at the high resolution version of the photos, you
can see the definitely indicators of the Periscope. For
example, this photograph (unrelated to this case, but used
as an example):
Mercuur
seen through the periscope of Dolfijn. Norway, between 5
and 7 Apr 2003.
As most periscope shots this photo is taking with a standard
digital camera which is held
in front of the eye piece of the scope. (Photo: © Official
Dolfijn website).
You
can clearly see in the UFO Photos above, the
cross hairs of the periscope, along with the
indicator lines. Here is an example above, and they are
seen in nearly every photograph. Although this does not
prove it was a weapons test, and the object was a target
balloon, it could support both sides of this story (ie:
taken from a submarine, and taken while the submarine was
submerged.)
You
can clearly see the periscope indicators and cross
hairs in the photographs.
About
the USS Trepang
USS Trepang (SSN-674) entering Portsmouth Naval Shipyard,
Kittery, Maine.
According
to Wikipedia:
USS
Trepang (SSN-674), a Sturgeon-class attack submarine, was
the second ship of the United States Navy to be named for
the trepang, Holothuroidea, a marine animal having a long,
tough, muscular body, sometimes called a sea slug
or a sea cucumber, found on coral reefs.
The
contract to build Trepang was awarded to the Electric Boat
Division of General Dynamics Corporation in Groton, Connecticut,
on 15 July 1966 and her keel was laid down there on 28 October
1967. She was launched on 27 September 1969, sponsored by
Mrs. Melvin R. Laird, the wife of United States Secretary
of Defense Melvin R. Laird, and commissioned on 14 August
1970 with Commander Dean R. Sackett, Jr., in command.
Trepang
was decommissioned on 1 June 1999 at Bremerton, Washington,
and stricken from the Naval Vessel Register the same day.
Her scrapping via the Nuclear-Powered Ship and Submarine
Recycling Program at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in Bremerton
was completed on 7 April 2000. Components of Trepang,
including mess tables, crew bunks, and engineering, were
used in the Fast Attacks and Boomers: Submarines in
the Cold War exhibit at the Smithsonian Museum of
American History from 2000-2003.
Source:
http://www.theblackvault.com/casefiles/arctic-ufo-photographs-uss-trepang-ssn-674-march-1971/ |