Whether you believe in extraterrestrials or not this is still an enjoyable read because you never see actual investigative journalism any more.
>A reach-out to the former General Counsel for Bigelow Aerospace, Jon Field JD of Las Vegas, NV, now in private practice, yielded some insight. In this instance, I was actually able to speak to a former Bigelow insider. I left a message for him with his receptionist eliciting his immediate call back. The message left was that the call was relative to Field's former affiliation with Bigelow Aerospace. I told him that I was contacting him to find out if he could explain, now that the company is dissolving, where the UFO debris may now reside? Does he know if it remains in a secure location and has it been transferred to another organization? Field wanted to know who I was "affiliated" with and absolutely refused to discuss the matter in any way, repeating, "I can't comment on that." I explained that the company is in dissolution and that as a citizen and taxpayer I have the right to know if the UFO debris given by the government to a private concern for storage is still secure, given that company is going defunct. I said to Field that if Bigelow is no longer the custodian contractor for the debris, we have a right to know who is the current custodian. Field did not disagree, only repeating in lawyerly fashion that he could not say anything. In exasperation, I simply appealed to him: where can I go from here, can he help me at all? I told him I don't want to bother people about this that shouldn't be bothered. He suggested contacting Robert Bigelow directly. I did not tell him that Bigelow has refused me any communication. When I asked Field who represents the company as Acting General Counsel or as retained outside counsel as the company dissolves (that is, who is the successor taking care of last remaining business matters), he said that he had no idea. I told him that I did not believe him. I cannot accept that he just up and left Bigelow Aerospace without any knowledge of how the legal function of the corporation would continue to operate without him. He said that he did not like the direction of the conversation and we parted.
"I told him I did not believe him". This should be part of every journalistic interview!
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