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Leonard H. Stringfield
Leonard H. Stringfield
from Wikipedia

Leonard Stringfield (1920–1994) was an American ufologist who took particular interest in crashed flying saucer stories. [1]

Key Information

Stringfield was director of Civilian Research, Interplanetary Flying Objects (CRIFO), and published a monthly newsletter, ORBIT. In 1957 he became public relations adviser for the civilian UFO group, National Investigations Committee On Aerial Phenomena (NICAP), under the direction of Donald Keyhoe, a friend since 1953. From 1967 to 1969, Stringfield served as an "Early Warning Coordinator" for the Condon Committee. During the 1970s, he wrote a number of books about alleged recoveries of alien spaceships and alien bodies.

In 1978, Stringfield served as UFO research adviser to Grenada Prime Minister Sir Eric Gairy. Privately, Stringfield worked as Director of Public Relations and Marketing Services for DuBois Chemicals, a division of Chemed Corporation, Cincinnati. He self-published "Status Reports" on alleged UFO "crash-retrievals" until his death. He died of lung cancer December 18, 1994, after long illness.[1]

Publications

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  • Inside Saucer Post...3-0 Blue: CRIFO Views the Status Quo: A Summary Report (1957)
  • Situation Red, Fawcett Crest Books 1977 (PB), ISBN 0-449-23654-4
  • Retrievals of the Third Kind: A case study of alleged UFOs and occupants in military custody (1978), presented as a speaker at the Ninth Annual MUFON Symposium in Dayton, Ohio, July, 1978. (Unofficially: Status Report I)[2]
  • The UFO Crash/Retrieval Syndrome: Status report II: New Sources, New Data (1980)
  • UFO Crash/Retrievals: Amassing the Evidence: Status Report III (1982)
  • The fatal encounter at Ft. Dix-McGuire: A case study: Status Report IV (1985)
  • UFO Crash/Retrievals: Is the coverup lid lifting?: Status Report V (1989)
  • UFO Crash/Retrievals: The Inner sanctum : Status Report VI (1991)
  • UFO Crash/Retrievals: Search for Proof in a Hall of Mirrors: Status Report VII (1994)

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Leonard H. Stringfield (December 17, 1920 – December 18, 1994) was an American ufologist who focused on investigating claims of UFO crash retrievals by entities. During the 1950s, Stringfield collaborated with the , reporting UFO sightings under a special code designation, and later directed for major civilian UFO research groups from to 1970. He authored books such as Situation Red: The UFO Siege (1977) and produced a series of self-published "Status Reports" from the late onward, aggregating second-hand accounts from alleged military and intelligence sources describing recoveries of alien craft and occupants, though these narratives provided no empirical proof and relied heavily on anonymous testimonies. Stringfield's work, while influential in circles for pioneering the crash-retrieval hypothesis, has been critiqued for lacking verifiable data, with his sources often untraceable and susceptible to fabrication or exaggeration inherent in hearsay-based inquiry.

Early Life and Background

Birth and Education

Leonard H. Stringfield was born on December 17, 1920, in , . Stringfield grew up in , where he completed high school in 1939. No records indicate pursuit of higher education, with his early career involving roles such as advertising manager at DuBois Chemical Company in prior to deeper engagement in ufology.

World War II Service

Stringfield enlisted in the United States Army Air Corps on July 9, 1942, at Patterson Field in , and was assigned serial number 15300961. He attained the rank of and served in the , which operated primarily in the Southwest Pacific Theater, conducting aerial combat and support missions against Japanese forces from bases including those in and the . Stringfield worked in (S-2) and capacities within a specialized unit of the , contributing to operational security and reconnaissance efforts amid the final stages of the Pacific campaign.

Entry into UFO Research

Founding of CRIFO

In early , Leonard H. Stringfield founded Civilian Research, Interplanetary Flying Objects (CRIFO) in , , as a nonprofit civilian organization dedicated to systematically collecting, analyzing, and publicizing reports of unidentified flying objects, independent of military oversight. Motivated by his prior UFO sightings during service and a perceived need for investigation amid official secrecy, Stringfield, then a public relations executive in the residing in Mariemont, structured CRIFO to solicit accounts via mail and coordinate with local observers. The organization's inaugural publication, the CRIFO Newsletter (Volume I, Number 1), debuted in April 1954, priced at 25 cents per issue and distributed to an initial subscriber base that rapidly expanded due to word-of-mouth and media mentions. This mimeographed bulletin emphasized empirical data from sightings, radar tracks, and photographs, while critiquing government withholding of information; by mid-1955, circulation exceeded 2,300 paid subscribers, including military personnel and scientists. CRIFO soon supplemented the newsletter with the monthly ORBIT bulletin, which aggregated global reports and promoted standardized reporting protocols to enhance data reliability. CRIFO's early operations relied on Stringfield's and volunteer field investigators, establishing it as one of the first dedicated UFO entities and setting a model for subsequent groups by prioritizing verifiable eyewitness testimonies over . The group ceased active publication around 1957, after which Stringfield transitioned to roles with larger organizations like NICAP.

Cooperation with U.S.

In 1953, Leonard H. Stringfield established Civilian Research, Interplanetary Flying Objects (CRIFO) as a civilian organization dedicated to UFO investigation and reporting. During this period, CRIFO collaborated with the U.S. by forwarding sighting reports and evidence to official channels, including the Air Technical Intelligence Center (ATIC) at . Stringfield liaised directly with personnel, submitting physical samples such as metallic fragments and "angel hair" residues for analysis, which were subsequently identified as terrestrial materials like ferro-chromium and Bemberg . By September 1955, Stringfield's home was designated the first civilian "UFO reporting post" by the Air Defense Command Filter Center in , with his telephone line secured for transmitting coded reports under the designation "3-0 Blue." Through this mechanism, Stringfield relayed specific sightings to authorities, including a luminous object observed on August 5, 1955, and an initially unidentified trajectory on September 8, 1955, later attributed to the star . CRIFO's efforts positioned it as a supplementary intelligence conduit, akin to a "Pentagon-in-miniature," processing reports from subscribers that included Air Force-affiliated individuals under anonymity provisions. On March 16, 1956, John A. Samford, Director of , expressed formal appreciation to Stringfield for CRIFO's contributions to the UFO reporting program, acknowledging the value of civilian-submitted data in augmenting official investigations. Stringfield continued submissions to ATIC, including three photographs and five negatives of an alleged UFO on November 7, 1956, which were analyzed but not returned, as confirmed in a May 14, 1957, letter from Major T. J. Connair Jr. He also visited ATIC facilities on August 13, 1957, to discuss investigative protocols. This cooperative phase, spanning 1953 to 1957, involved Stringfield receiving a special code for priority reporting, though responses often remained guarded, citing under directives like JANAP 146, which imposed penalties for unauthorized disclosure by military personnel.

Core Research Focus: UFO Crash Retrievals

Development of Retrieval Hypothesis

Stringfield's formulation of the retrieval hypothesis occurred during the mid-1970s, marking a pivot from his earlier emphasis on sighting reports and Air Force cooperation toward claims of systematic government recovery of crashed unidentified flying objects. This shift was driven by purported disclosures from confidential military and intelligence sources, whom he described as insiders involved in or privy to retrieval operations, including transport of wreckage and biological remains to secure facilities such as Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. These accounts, often conveyed under promises of anonymity due to alleged oaths of secrecy, suggested operational protocols for rapid response teams and compartmentalized storage, forming the core causal mechanism Stringfield proposed: extraterrestrial craft failures leading to deliberate human intervention rather than mere observation. By 1977, Stringfield had begun compiling initial case summaries, influenced by cross-corroboration among informants who independently referenced similar crash sites and recovery logistics, such as those involving intact or damaged disc-shaped objects. He argued that the pattern of denials by official bodies, juxtaposed against consistent informant details, supported a hypothesis of active retrievals over hoax or misidentification, though he acknowledged the evidential challenges posed by classification barriers. This reasoning prioritized testimonial convergence as proxy evidence, given the absence of public artifacts. The hypothesis gained public articulation in Stringfield's April 5, 1978, document Retrievals of the Third Kind: A Case Study of Alleged UFOs and Occupants in Military Custody (revised July 20, 1978), which outlined retrieval as a recurring phenomenon tied to UFO propulsion vulnerabilities during or maneuvers. He presented an expanded version at the (MUFON) Symposium on July 29, 1978, framing it as an extension of classifications to include post-crash human-alien interactions. Subsequent status reports through the refined the hypothesis by integrating additional testimonies, claiming over two dozen sources by the early , but emphasized methodological caution in vetting via source backgrounds and detail consistency rather than forensic proof. These self-published works, while pioneering in retrieval-focused , relied heavily on unindependently verifiable oral histories from sources Stringfield vetted personally, raising questions about potential embellishment or shared within military subcultures.

Key Informant Testimonies and Cases

Stringfield amassed testimonies from over 25 informants, predominantly officers, intelligence personnel, and contractors with access to classified programs, whom he vetted through background checks and cross-verification of details. These sources, granted anonymity to protect against reprisals, described systematic retrieval operations involving crashed discoid crafts and recovery of non-human biological remains, often transported to secure facilities like . Stringfield emphasized the informants' reluctance to come forward due to oaths of secrecy and fear of ridicule, yet noted consistencies in descriptions of rapid-response teams, electromagnetic interference at sites, and hierarchical cover-ups. A notable case from Status Report IV involved an alleged 1978 encounter at Fort Dix-McGuire AFB, . An informant, a military policeman on patrol, claimed to have observed a short, luminous entity approaching a runway; after it ignored commands and was fired upon by another officer, the body emitted a foul and was secured by a specialized retrieval unit before being airlifted, reportedly to Wright-Patterson for analysis. The account aligned with independent reports of unusual activity at the base that night, though official explanations attributed sightings to a or flares. Multiple informants referenced storage at Wright-Patterson's Hangar 18, including one who described viewing nine preserved humanoid bodies in deep-freeze chambers under illuminated glass, alongside intact and fragmented saucers from prior crashes. Another source detailed participation in a 1953 retrieval near , , where a damaged craft yielded metallic samples resistant to conventional cutting tools and small, gray-skinned occupants showing signs of rapid decomposition. Stringfield documented these in chronological appendices across reports, arguing the uniformity—such as crafts' seamless construction and occupants' uniform physiology—pointed to extraterrestrial origins rather than hoaxes or misidentifications. Testimonies often highlighted operational protocols, including site to mitigate radiation-like effects and compartmentalization to limit . One intelligence-linked alleged involvement in a 1947 New Mexico recovery predating Roswell publicity, with bodies exhibiting atypical blood chemistry incompatible with terrestrial biology. While Stringfield presented these as evidence of a long-term retrieval program, the claims rested solely on verbal accounts without corroborating artifacts, and skeptics noted potential for or amid Cold War secrecy.

Publications and Public Outreach

Major Books

Stringfield's Situation Red: The UFO Siege, published in 1977 by Doubleday, compiles reports of UFO sightings and encounters from civilian witnesses, emphasizing documented cases of close-range observations and alleged official suppression by the U.S. Air Force. The book argues for the reality of UFO incursions as a "siege" on , drawing on Stringfield's prior investigations and presenting theories on occupant phenomena and government responses. From 1978 onward, Stringfield self-published a series of seven UFO Crash Retrievals Status Reports, focusing exclusively on alleged recoveries of crashed unidentified craft and biological remains by teams. The initial volume, Status Report I: Retrievals of the Third Kind (1978), originated as a paper delivered at the (MUFON) Symposium, outlining a of purported UFOs and occupants held in custody based on informant accounts from and sources. Subsequent reports built on this foundation with accumulating testimonies: Status Report III: Amassing the Evidence (c. 1982) detailed additional crash incidents and patterns in retrieval operations; Status Report IV: The Fatal Encounter at Ft. Dix/McGuire (c. 1985) examined a specific alleged 1978 event involving a recovered ; Status Report VI: UFO Crash/Retrievals: The Inner Sanctum (1991) explored deeper implications of occupant recovery programs. The final Status Report VII: Search for Proof in a (1994) addressed verification challenges, including potential and the elusive nature of physical evidence amid informant claims of compartmentalized operations. These reports, distributed through UFO networks, represented Stringfield's core contribution to crash retrieval documentation, prioritizing anonymous whistleblower narratives over public sightings. A comprehensive edition compiling all reports appeared posthumously in 2019.

Status Report Series

Beginning in 1978, Leonard H. Stringfield self-published the first of seven "Status Reports" dedicated to documenting alleged UFO crash retrieval operations, drawing from interviews with over two dozen informants including , intelligence officers, and civilians claiming insider knowledge. These reports, spanning from 1978 to 1994, presented unverified testimonies without endorsement, emphasizing patterns in accounts of downed extraterrestrial craft, recovery teams, and humanoid remains while highlighting challenges like source reluctance due to oaths of secrecy or fear of reprisal. Stringfield's methodology involved cross-referencing narratives to identify consistencies, such as recurring descriptions of disc-shaped vehicles and biological entities, but he repeatedly noted the absence of tangible artifacts, attributing this to compartmentalized handling. The inaugural report, UFO Crash Retrievals: Status Report I - Retrievals of the Third Kind, issued on April 5, 1978 (revised July 20), focused on early cases implying occupant recoveries, framing them as "third kind" encounters involving direct evidence of extraterrestrial presence. Subsequent installments built cumulatively: Report II explored the "crash retrieval syndrome" through new sources recounting psychological and logistical barriers to disclosure; Report III amassed evidence from additional witnesses, including pre-World War II incidents; Report VI, published in 1991, delved into "inner sanctum" operations suggesting deep-black programs; and Report VII examined verification hurdles amid potential , likening the investigative landscape to a "hall of mirrors." Collectively totaling approximately 590 pages in later compilations, the series avoided , prioritizing transcription and cautious over , with Stringfield arguing that the volume and thematic alignment of independent accounts—spanning crashes from the onward—demanded institutional scrutiny despite evidentiary gaps. Informants' credentials, often tied to verifiable service records, lent circumstantial weight, though Stringfield acknowledged risks of fabrication or error inherent in reliant oral histories. Distributed initially through UFO networks like MUFON, the reports influenced retrieval-focused inquiry by shifting emphasis from sightings to alleged physical recoveries, though they yielded no declassified corroboration.

Reception, Achievements, and Criticisms

Recognition in UFO Community

Leonard H. Stringfield garnered recognition in the community as a foundational figure in the study of alleged UFO crash retrievals, with his systematic collection of and informant testimonies establishing him as a key innovator in the subfield. Organizations such as the (MUFON) have highlighted his decades-long dedication, from the 1950s through his death in 1994, crediting him with coining the term "UFO crash retrieval" and amassing evidence that influenced subsequent researchers. His work was disseminated through self-published Status Reports (1978–1994), which detailed over 100 cases and became reference points for ufologists examining government non-disclosure. Stringfield's prominence was evidenced by invitations to present at major conferences, including the Ninth Annual MUFON UFO Symposium on July 29, 1978, where he delivered "Retrievals of the Third Kind: A Case Study of Alleged UFOs and Occupants in Custody," drawing on accounts of recovered craft and biological remains. He held roles in prominent groups, serving as NICAP's director of from 1957 to 1970 and contributing to broader civilian UFO advocacy. In 1978, he advised Prime Minister on UFO research initiatives presented to the , underscoring his perceived expertise among international advocates. Posthumously, his archived files have been preserved and referenced by MUFON, affirming his enduring status as a meticulous, low-profile pioneer whose emphasis on firsthand sources shaped retrieval hypothesis development.

Skeptical and Scientific Critiques

Skeptical investigators, including members of the Committee for the Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP), have criticized Stringfield's crash retrieval hypothesis for its dependence on unverified oral testimonies from anonymous military sources, lacking any physical artifacts, documents, or independently corroborated evidence to substantiate claims of recovered extraterrestrial craft or occupants. Prominent skeptic highlighted this evidential void in analyses of specific cases promoted by Stringfield, such as the 1941 Cape Girardeau incident, where accounts derived from hearsay—such as a granddaughter's recollection of her grandfather's unproduced photograph of a crashed and bodies—failed to yield corroborative details or material proof despite decades of scrutiny. Klass noted structural similarities between this narrative and the 1947 Roswell debris descriptions, suggesting possible post-hoc fabrication influenced by later UFO lore rather than independent recollection. Scientific critiques further emphasize methodological flaws in Stringfield's approach, which prioritized informant networks over empirical validation, rendering testimonies susceptible to confabulation, embellishment, or deliberate disinformation within UFO research circles. Stringfield himself acknowledged these challenges in his 1991 work UFO Crash/Retrievals: Search for Proof in a Hall of Mirrors, describing the pursuit of evidence as navigating deceptive reflections without tangible resolution, yet skeptics argue this self-described "hall of mirrors" underscores the absence of falsifiable data, contravening scientific standards that demand reproducible proof for extraordinary assertions of government-held alien technology. Folklorists and psychologists have interpreted such retrieval narratives, including those aggregated by Stringfield, as evolving modern myths functioning to explain unknowns through anthropomorphic alien motifs, rather than literal historical events supported by forensic or archaeological traces. Broader , as articulated in reviews of UFO claims, dismisses crash retrievals due to the improbability of interstellar craft failures without corresponding , seismic, or radiological signatures detectable by global monitoring networks, alongside the failure to produce any reverse-engineered technologies despite alleged multi-decade programs. Critics like Klass contended that the persistence of these stories owes more to among proponents than to withheld evidence, with no peer-reviewed studies validating Stringfield's corpus amid routine debunkings of associated cases through prosaic explanations such as misidentified aircraft debris or experimental projects.

Death and Legacy

Final Years and Passing

In the early , Leonard H. Stringfield continued his independent UFO research, focusing on compiling informant accounts of alleged crash retrievals and producing updated "Status Reports" that detailed claims of recovered extraterrestrial craft and occupants held in military custody. These reports, building on his earlier work, emphasized patterns in testimonies from purported insiders, though Stringfield noted the challenges of verification due to secrecy oaths and lack of . Stringfield, who had transitioned to private research after stepping down from organizational roles in 1972, maintained his commitment to documenting these cases amid ongoing health decline. He authored or prepared materials for Status Report VII, titled Search for Proof in a Hall of Mirrors, which explored evidentiary hurdles in retrieval narratives and was among his final outputs. Stringfield died of cancer on December 18, 1994, in , , one day after his 74th birthday. He was buried at Rest Haven Memorial Park in . His passing left a collection of unpublished and posthumously circulated materials that influenced later UFO researchers examining retrieval hypotheses.

Influence on Subsequent UAP Investigations

Stringfield's series of Status Reports on UFO crash-retrievals, spanning from 1978 to 1994, pioneered a dedicated focus on alleged recoveries of extraterrestrial craft and occupants, compiling accounts from over 70 purported incidents worldwide drawn from and informants. This informant-centric approach, emphasizing anonymous testimonies from insiders rather than public sightings, provided a template for later ufologists pursuing evidence of classified reverse-engineering programs, thereby embedding the retrieval hypothesis within broader UAP research paradigms. His investigations intersected with enduring intelligence networks, as evidenced by references in modern congressional scrutiny of UAP matters. In a November 13, 2024, written testimony to the U.S. House Oversight Committee, journalist detailed how Stringfield, in the 1970s, elicited from a source named Thompson information on UAP recoveries originally conveyed by officer Weaver—illustrating Stringfield's role in early documentation of whistleblower chains that persisted into subsequent decades. This connection highlights how his methodical sourcing influenced the traceability of retrieval narratives in later probes. Stringfield's emphasis on physical evidence from crashes, including alleged non-human biologics, prefigured themes in 21st-century UAP disclosures, where whistleblowers have alleged multi-decade government programs mirroring his documented cases. For example, accounts in his reports of recovered craft and entities have been paralleled by 2023 testimonies before claiming similar recoveries, prompting retrospective analyses that position his work as a foundational, if unverified, precursor to contemporary investigations despite the absence of declassified corroboration.

References

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