Timmensdorfer, Germany UFO Crash
Timmensdorfer, Germany, 1961
While stationed at NATO's Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers, Europe, Robert O. Dean, retired Army command sergeant major, had cosmic clearance to the NATO document "Assessment: An Evaluation of a Possible Military Threat to Allied Forces in Europe." He secretly recorded notes on this classified material, in particular the autopsy of the aliens captured at Timmensdorfer. Upon retirement, he presented his findings to the public and is actively trying to gain public access to this NATO document.
Source: "Inside the Military UFO Underground", Vol. 16, No. 7, April 1994, pp. 48-59 by A.J.S. Rayl. Subject: An Interview with Robert O. Dean
The appendix that really got to me was titled 'Autopsies.' I saw pictures of a 30-meter disc that had crashed in Timmensdorfer, Germany, near the Baltic Sea in 1961. The British Army, according to the report, got there first and put up a perimeter. The craft had landed in very soft, loamy soil near the Russian border and so hadn't destructed, but one-third of it was buried in. We and the Russians, who also quickly showed up, had both tracked it.
Inside, there were 12 small bodies, all dead. There were pictures of the bodies, which looked like the beings known as the 'grays,' being laid out and then put on stretchers and loaded into jeeps, and autopsy photos, too. Some of the little grays appeared to not be a reproductive-capable species. The autopsy guys concluded, according to the report, that it looked as if they had been cut out of a cookie cutter--clones with no alimentary tract. They did not ingest or process food as we know it, nor did it appear that they had any system for elimination.
The craft itself was cut up like a pie into six pieces, put on lowboys and hauled off. Scuttlebutt was that it was given to the Americans and flown to Wright-Patterson Air Force base in Ohio. I looked at these pictures and couldn't believe it. My skin got cold and I thought, My God. I had never really believed we were all alone in the universe, but this was hard to swallow.