Montauk: Monsters, Mayhem and Madness

By Bill Knell

The carcasses of two odd-looking creatures have washed up on or near the shores of Montauk Point, Long Island, New York over the past year. The first resembled an over-sized dog with an unusual number of teeth. It had the look of some extinct saber-tooth animal, was dubbed the ’Montauk Monster’ and was found months ago. The second Montauk Monster was discovered on May 6, 2009, by a couple walking along the shores of Founders Landing Park in Southold.

The latest carcass appeared to be very similar to the original creature, but this one has a beak. Like the other, it was photographed and quickly became an item of fascination on the internet. Most scientists and veterinarians scoff at the idea of monsters washing ashore on the south shore of Long Island. They claim that both creatures are likely the carcasses of dead dogs.

Each year tens of thousands of tourists head to Montauk and The Hamptons for tourism, fishing, summer residence or just a day at the beach. Many bring their dogs. Some of the pets escape from their owners, while others are abandoned. Either way, the area is not exactly a stray dog-friendly area. Motorists on the Long Island Expressway and other major roadways often strike animals trying to cross in front of them. Strong tides at the beaches can easily drag a dog going for a swim out to sea.

While Suffolk County and most of the towns in the Montauk area have workers that regularly pick up the carcasses of dead animals, some people that find them tend to dump them in a creek, drainage ditch or other area that could eventually carry them out into the Atlantic Ocean. Skeptics claim that some are bound to end up on the beach before they get a chance to be carried out to sea. They would become bloated, almost unrecognizable and would likely be fed on by birds and small animals.

Despite the simple logic that Skeptics use to explain away the Montauk Monsters, logic and even rationality tend to fail when it comes to what happens on Long Island. If you live on the island, you’re constantly under the influence of historical places, legendary tales, paranormal hotspots and a huge Government Contractor presence. I grew up there and lived in Nassau County which has more than its share of historical places, haunted houses, frightening legends and UFO sightings. But if you want lots more, just head out east to Suffolk.

Route 110 is roughly the Nassau - Suffolk County dividing line. At 110 and the Long Island Expressway you have the Mount Misery area. It’s the highest point on Long Island, home to a Revolutionary War skirmish and near to the Bethpage Village Restoration. Among the many historic buildings at the Restoration is the Noon Inn. Before being moved there from East Meadow, it was already one of the most historic buildings on the Island (and one of the most troubled). With stories of murder, bootlegging and ghosts sticking to the place like glue, it was kind of a Bed and Breakfast from hell.

Mount Misery got its name from stories about an Insane Asylum that existed there during the colonial days of Long Island during the 1700s. Farmers living around the Asylum heard moans and screaming from the mentally-disturbed people housed there throughout the day and into the night. Their miserable existence and cries for help gave the place its name. But that was just the beginning of its reputation.

A mad axe killer that walked around with a basket of heads around the turn of the last century stalked people on the Mount and some still claim to see him. A military hospital that existed on the Mount during World War Two attracted a lot of negative attention after it closed. Lights inside the hospital flashed on and off. Strange voices were heard as people passed near it. Fearful that someone would wander in to look for ghosts and get hurt, authorities eventually tore the place down. UFOs are seen on the Mount on a fairly regular basis and some are said to have landed there. Even the legendary Mothman, a winged creature with thick fur and glowing red eyes, made an appearance.

Head south on Route 110 and you’re a stone’s throw from Mary’s Grave. It’s near an old tree in the back of a modern cemetery. A Nun allegedly hung herself there years ago and people say she still haunts the place. Go further south and you’ll run right into the Amityville Horror House on Ocean Avenue. Unless you’ve been hiding in a closet for thirty years you know about that. Had north on 110 and you can visit Walt Whitman’s house. Don’t forget to look for his ghost which many say they’ve seem in the area.

If you go further north, you end up in Huntington Station where there are tons of ghost and UFO sightings. Some of the older homes in that area are said to be haunted and many eyewitnesses claim to have seen UFOs hovering above the area during the late night and early morning hours. If you are more scientifically minded, you can travel a bit further south and east to nearby Cold Spring Harbor Labs and get your genes spliced or have their resident researchers perform bizarre experiments on you.

While all these weird places may seem like a hard act to follow, they can’t hold a candle to the stories and legends that come out of the technical community on Long Island. There was a guy named Jim who worked for an electronics company in Suffolk County during the 1970s. He told some friends that he was going away in about a week and would not be coming back. The following Monday he didn’t show for work.

After a few days, his friends went to check on him and found the door to his house and all the windows locked from the inside. Perplexed, they summoned the police. Officers broke in his door. Although no one was inside, they found a twenty-four volt battery with cables leading to nowhere in a large room. The cables were burnt on the opposite end and looked as though they had been connected to something. Where did he go?

When it comes to all the weird eastern Long Island stories and legends, most are hard to track down or verify as true. One is not. It’s a story that is stranger than all the others, but one that comes with a long list of witnesses and a fascinating trail of evidence. It’s the story of the Montauk Project and Camp Hero. A story that takes place in an area that may be the capital and center of all the weirdness and strange happenings you could ever imagine.

It was during my first visit to the historic Montauk Lighthouse that I noticed the huge radar dish which immediately identifies the Montauk Base. I must have been about eight years old and remember asking my parents about the monstrous structure. My father said it was part of a system to detect incoming enemy aircraft or missiles. As a retired Air Force Officer, he would know about that. However, I’m certain that he had no idea what future (or past) events would give that base such an infamous reputation.

I grew up with plenty of friends that ended up working in the Long Island technical community. During the days of the Cold War, those jobs were everywhere if you qualified. Part of qualifying sometimes meant having a parent or other relative already on the inside. David was a good example. His father worked for the government or government contractors since the days of the Second World War. That helped David put his engineering degree to good use for the same company where his dad worked until his death a few years back.

I thought I had a good working knowledge of the Philadelphia Experiment up until 1987. After years of researching it and speaking with second and third hand witnesses, I was about to get a bit closer. David asked me to come and give a lunchtime talk about UFOs for his coworkers. His company sponsored these midday events once a month for employees who cared to attend. It was all about lessening stress in a very stressful work environment.

After discussing UFO reports and sightings on Long Island for about fifty minutes, I asked if anyone had comments or questions. There were plenty. Most came from people that had seen UFOs themselves. For some reason, there weren’t many skeptics in the room. One guy asked me about the Philadelphia Experiment. In turn, I asked if everyone in the room was interested enough in the subject for me to spend another twenty or thirty minutes talking about it? They were.

I gave the group a kind of thumbnail sketch about the infamous World War II Navy project, then proceeded to explain how a simple program to degauss battleships and protect harbors turned into a massive project to make Navy Ships invisible. I explained how there was credible evidence to believe that scientists and engineers working out of Princeton under Einstein had actually made a ship invisible and opened a sort of space time portal during a series of experiments.

The experiments took place in the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard and along the east coast of the United States. The trial and error process saw a test crew placed aboard a yet to be commissioned battleship escort vessel for sea trials of the new technology. A technology which didn’t always work correctly costing lives and creating more questions than answers.

David called later that night to thank me for speaking at the lunchtime event. He said everyone that came to the event talked about it for the rest of the day and those that didn‘t attend, wish they had. I thanked him and admitted that I came away with as much information as I had imparted in terms of UFO sightings. After some friendly chatter, he invited me to his house on Saturday and said he had wanted to discuss something about my investigations. He asked if I would come alone and I agreed.

Saturday arrived and found me standing at David’s door around two in the afternoon. He opened the door and invited me in. My friend looked spent. I sat down in his living room and waited while he ran down to the basement to get something. He reappeared moments later with a large lockbox, opened it and handed me an old photo album. I asked him if I could run my cassette player. Knowing I was terrible at taking notes, he agreed. I would have to turn it off when he told me. Then he dropped the bomb.

“I wanted to tell you about my father, ah, after he passed away. It was, ah, ___. I didn‘t know anything about it before that.” David stated. “I was worried about getting both of us in trouble, you know? Now I want someone else to know, ah, somebody. I guess it‘s your lucky day.” I began looking at the album. “My dad was at Princeton in 1940,” he continued. “When you, ah, presented that information about the Philadelphia Experiment, I know he was involved with, ah, something at that time.” He had my full attention.

“_____ (the family lawyer) gave me this lockbox. He didn’t want any responsibility. He didn’t have the key. It was at home hanging on a hook in the closet, you know? _____ instructed me to open the box at home.”

I looked through the album while David spoke and noticed a number of photos of his Dad with Navy Officers. Before I could ask where they were taken, I recognized the Philadelphia Naval Yard Hospital in a couple of the pictures. By 1987, I visited that area a half dozen times.

“Ah, I opened the box and ___. There was a note on top of a photo album and journal. He didn‘t want anyone to know about all this. I think he would want you to know. I don’t know. He was protecting me. I haven’t told anyone, _____. If mom knew, she never said.” David’s mom passed away from cancer when he was just fifteen.

At that point he asked me to shut off the recorder and I complied. It was making him really nervous. David removed a small and very old leather bound journal from a fireproof lock box. While removing the cloth from around it, he told me to keep everything quiet. The idea was to point me in the right direction, but keep his father’s information of the radar screen. I was fine with that and honored that agreement for as long as requested. He began to fill in the blanks.

His dad was a gifted engineer and had a knack for designing complicated machines and electronic devices. Radio and electronics were a hobby for him, but he was better at those things than most professionals. I assume both talents came in handy for the Philadelphia Experiment.

David asked me to listen while he read from the journal. It was a diary that his father kept during the early 1940s. He carefully chose sections that could be read, ignored others and explained that there were things he couldn’t share with me. I understood and was grateful for what he was willing to reveal.

He read about ten hand-written pages. Although no names or specifics were mentioned, the diary did note that he was at Princeton working on a project special project during World War II. He was one of several young prodigies personally recommended by Albert Einstein and engaged by the Navy. They were developing a system of magnetic detection devices to protect our harbors against infiltration by ships and submarines. These would be part of a multi-faceted system which would include radar, hydrophones, magnetic detection devices and more. That was what they told him.

Everything changed when he arrived at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard. The group from Princeton was told to develop a system which would demagnetize ships and make them radar invisible. David skipped over a lot. When he resumed reading, his father was in the middle of an experiment with one of the moored ships. There were no crew members on board, just several carefully chosen junior officers that acted as caretakers.

During the process of testing equipment, there was an accident. It looked as though one of the junior officers was electrocuted. He accidentally touched an open circuit while standing in the middle of an area filled with electronics and powerful magnetic fields. The power was shut down and he fell to the floor. When the technicians got to him, he had a pulse and didn’t look burned. The young Officer was sent to the Naval Shipyard Hospital.

The junior officer was back with a clean bill of health a few hours later. David’s father and another member of the team spotted him and headed over to see if he was alright. Before they could reach him, the young man entered a hatchway and vanished around a corner. The engineers didn’t think much about it at the time because it was easy to lose sight of people inside a ship.

Several hours later, everyone was ready to call it day. The young officer was no where to be found. Despite a careful search through that ship and others in the area, he could not be located. The next day there was a more comprehensive search which turned up nothing. David’s father and his associate were extensively questioned as were others that saw him enter the hatchway, but no blame was pointed in their direction. Those in charge already seemed to know what happened to him.

The Navy was satisfied that the junior officer didn’t voluntarily vanish, was not a spy and probably fell overboard as a result of a belated reaction to the electrocution. That was the official position. It was more likely that the young man melted into the ship’s superstructure or floated off into some ethereal realm. That situation was repeated on a larger scale during other attempts to test Philadelphia Experiment technologies.

David stopped reading and stared blankly at me. I didn’t really know what to say. Sensing I was at a loss for words, he told me that this was the first and last time he would be able to share this information with me. I passed the photo album back to him; he placed the journal on top of it and carefully locked everything up in the box. I left with a million more questions than answers.

Sadly, David passed away a few years ago. His death was the tragic result of an auto accident and was completely unexpected. With no will or preparations in place, I asked his surviving relatives about any photo albums or a diary belonging to his father they might have found. They seemed genuinely surprised and said that no such items were found among David‘s possessions. I thought it wise not to pursue the matter. His death ended my agreement to keep the information he provided to myself.

A year after David’s stunning revelation I met several people with similar stories. They were Al Bielek, Preston Nichols and Duncan Cameron. All three claimed involvement with projects once headquartered at the Montauk Air Force Station. These projects used technologies developed from the Philadelphia Experiment and involved invisibility, time travel, mind control, remote viewing and psychic war fare. After a lot of phone work, Bielek, Nichols and Cameron agreed to meet a small of group of people assembled to evaluate their claims and film their testimony.

Their revelations about the Montauk Air Force Station were stunning and their attention to detail was amazing. I listened to them for almost twelve hours and ended up with a good four hours of solid information non film. One of the people who came there with me was a technical writer with a great deal of government project experience. I asked him to evaluate the information and render an opinion. When the session was over, he went home and didn’t call me for several days. When we finally touched base, he said that he was not able to sleep. He believed their story and it really troubled him. Without going in to detail, he said that it answered a lot of questions about strange things he came across over the years.

That presentation had the same affect on me and everybody else that was there. I wanted more, but before taking another step I needed to visit the closed base for myself. When I was able to sneak in, what I saw really blew me away. There was more than enough circumstantial evidence to believe their stories. As a UFO researcher with many years of experience, I try to remain as objective as possible and am not just some true believer.

I present some slides from my visits to the base and explanations of how they relate to the information from the three witnesses on my DVD, The Worldwide UFO Cover-Up. Their filmed testimony and much morecan be viewed on my DVD Set, The Truth about the Philadelphia Experiment. My six DVD Set, Project Montauk, focuses mainly on what happened at Montauk and includes other witnesses as well as the original three. My book, THE UFO GUY, is also a treasure trove of the weird things I experienced and learned about while growing on Long Island. All these items are available at http://www.theufostore.com

 

Anyone familiar with the goings-on in and around the Montauk area is not surprised by what happened at the base and continues to happen around town. That includes the discovery of unknown or out of place animals. In 1914 a Zebra was found wondering along a small road just outside of town. None had been reported as missing from any nearby zoos or wildlife collections. In 1938 a large bird was observed as nesting in some trees near the town. The bird was later described as being as large as a pick-up truck. It vanished, but left a huge nest behind. And then there are the recently discovered carcasses labeled as the Montauk Monsters. The area seems to be some sort of paranormal power place where anything can happen and usually does.

Montauk is part of a peninsula jutting out from the far eastern end of Long Island. For its size, the place is home to many influential people and a lot of unusual phenomenon. I have personally investigated UFO sightings, abductions, animal mutilations, physical evidence cases and unexplained events there on many occasions. Bruce Willis rented a home in the area during the 1980s. He was concerned about the many UFO Abductions reported in the area after watching an episode of my cable show about Long Island UFO activity. He wasn’t alone.

Three helicopter pilots that regularly fly through the skies over Montauk reported seeing strange lights on multiple occasions around the same time. I met with them in another part of the Island and they described seeing orange balls of light, a very common type of UFO sighting and one often connected with the UFO Abduction phenomenon. One of the pilots called me back a week later and asked for another meeting. He didn’t feel comfortable discussing his entire experience while the others were present.

That pilot recalled being in his helicopter and watching the orange balls of light dance around his aircraft. The next memory he had was of waking up in his car with the motor running. The car was parked in front of his house (he lived alone). He turned off the engine and went inside. After checking a kitchen clock, he realized that six hours of time were missing from his memory.

Since he didn’t use alcohol or drugs, he thought maybe he was ill. The next day he went to the hospital to see if he had a stroke or something. After a battery of tests, they told him there was no evidence of any physical problems. Just in case they were wrong, he stayed on the ground for the next week and reported the situation to his boss. His boss suggested that they report the situation to the FAA. They did some kind of investigation, but did not find him at fault or ground him.

After watching the two-part episode of my cable show featuring an in-depth interview with Budd Hopkins (author of Missing Time and other books related to UFO Abductions), he was certain that something more happened than just a few hours of lost memories. As a result, we met and discussed the situation at length. It turned out that he had memories of being visited by what appeared to be friendly talking animals and dead relatives as a child. Despite the odd claims, he never appeared to be delusional or mentally disturbed in any way. UFO Abductors often appear as friendly animals, imaginary friends or deceased relatives to children they abduct.

People living or staying in the Montauk area during the tourist season have described all sorts of odd experiences. Normally mellow people get disoriented, tense and start arguing (and they aren’t even married!). Others report being asked unusual questions by people with Government IDs connected with agencies that do not exist. Many have reported seeing unmarked aircraft over Montauk that occasionally fly dangerously low over buildings and even buzz cars. This leads people to believe that Montauk is probably home to a number of clandestine government operations.

Stories of secret projects on Long Island didn’t begin with Montauk. They go back over one hundred years and begin with tunnels allegedly built by Nicola Tesla. These underground passageways have been described as everything from tiny in certain areas to labyrinth-sized in others. They begin at Tesla’s experimental Wardenclyffe facility (built in 1901) in the Shoreham area and extend outward. Officially, they are supposed to be just a few hundred feet long and a merely a foot wide. However, a number of people report exploring these tunnels when they were temporarily opened back in the 1960s.

The tunnel entrances and exits were being prepared for permanent closure and were sealed shortly afterward. According to those witnesses the underground passageways are huge and go on for miles in all directions. Tesla may have built these tunnels as energy collectors. Some contained huge copper wires connected to what looked like some sort of capacitors and ran in a wide circle to and from Wardenclyffe and other areas. Tunnels identical to these have been reported as far west as Middle Island, in a number of other areas and all the way to the south shore. Based on the way everything was set up, this was not an energy distribution system. If not, what kind of energy was Tesla trying to collect?

After Wardenclyffe, Tesla was suddenly interested in things like interplanetary communication and particle beam weapons. The special energies or power he appeared to seek on Long Island must have inspired him. These forces may still exist today and might be related to the time travel experiments at Montauk. I believe that the Philadelphia Experiment opened a time or energy portal that may extend back over a hundred years. That portal was created when the USS Eldridge became invisible and traveled through time and space.

Evidence of this comes in the form of an odd and modern looking warship that was spotted off the south shore of Long Island and in other places before and after World War I and during World War II. And there’s more. If these energies exist, they would play havoc with the environment from a temporal standpoint. That may already be happening.

Montauk is a place where whole areas of trees just vanish. Others grow in a slanting position towards the direction of the base. Huge rocks and heavy objects appear to move from one place to another by themselves.

Eyewitnesses claim to see friends and neighbors in two places at once. Others say they have walked along the streets in Montauk and surrounding towns and seen themselves walking on the other side of the street at the same time. UFOs and glowing lights are seen in the skies and just under the surface of the waters that surround it. Montauk and Camp Hero always seem to be at the center of everything strange. Psychics and those sensitive to unseen forces claim to detect unusual energy fields. It’s also a base located on land with a long and varied history.

Montauk exists on a peninsula at the far eastern end of Long Island. Originally the home of the Montauk Indians, the area was occupied by Native Americans for some 4,500 years. The land in Montauk was purchased from the Indians during the 1600s. Although they continued to live there for another two hundred years, the Indians were eventually relocated. Enter government interest in the area for its strategic value.

George Washington ordered troops into Montauk during 1776 and commissioned the building of the lighthouse in 1795. After that, Federal installations and troops have been a constant presence since the time of the Civil War. Soldiers, sailors, planes and blimps were kept there during the First World War. Already a federal installation with big guns installed in 1938, the facilities were vastly improved when Fort Hero was built on the oceanfront property during the Second World War. The Navy used land west of Fort Hero for everything from training to a secret submarine base.

The Army decided to disguise the base after it seemed possible that German ships might get close enough to attack the base. They camouflaged the 16 inch guns and built a number of small buildings including some resembling houses, stores and a church. The idea was to make the place look like any other small coastal village when seen from the sea or air. The idea of using the Montauk base in a covert way was born.

From an official standpoint, Fort Hero was deactivated sometime shortly after the Second World War ended. However, it was kept in good repair for use as a summer training facility for the Army Reserve and renamed Camp Hero. Sometime around 1950, Camp Hero became a multi-use facility. The Army used it for training purposes; the Air Force established a presence to track incoming objects; the Navy and Marines had a presence that remains unexplained. According to some eyewitnesses, construction began that altered the 16 inch gun bunkers and created underground housing, sleeping quarters and fallout shelters.

By the end of 1957, Camp Hero was officially in the hands of the Air Force and renamed Montauk Air Force Station. In 1958 the sage radar system was installed. The huge radar dish that we’re all used to seeing was brought online in 1962 and remained active until 1980. Oddly enough, it was just around that time that a new influx of technology and talent (along with a number of Marines to guard the place) arrived at the base.

Some of the original federal property surrounding the base was sold off, but the most valuable oceanfront area remained part of the base. Portions of the base property were donated by the federal government to New York State. However, it remained undeveloped park land for years before being opened to the public for visits. That happened ten years after I began presenting the untold story of the Montauk Base in my seminars.

Today, not all the facilities or areas of the Montauk Base are open or available for public use. The bunkers and remaining buildings are sealed, while others were demolished. New York State uses some of the property for their own purposes. They have had everything from maintenance sheds to motor pools to office areas there for years. Some sections of the base are still under federal control and remain off limits including a section filled with large communication arrays.

While selling off or giving away land, someone was doing a lot of building beneath the base from the 1970s through the early 1990s. Faced with the reality of suburban sprawl and the need to remain where they were, those in charge of the Montauk Project obviously opted to hide in plain sight by going underground. When I visited the base during the 1990s, equipment and building supplies were everywhere. However, nothing above ground seemed to be under construction. The dull thump of underground work could be felt as you walked through the base at that time. This was nothing new for me.

When I first visited the Montauk facility in the late 1980s, there were clearly signs that the base was still very active. Office buildings had desks and chairs that seemed fairly new. The lights and phones worked. Heat flowed through above ground pipes and water was available to flush toilets in the restrooms. The smell of freshly prepared food emanated from vents that were originally designed to provide air for the gun emplacement bunkers. The former PX building looked like a modified cafeteria with hundreds of military-style meal trays carefully stored on racks inside.

The base was patrolled by men that were obviously Marines dressed as fisherman. I say Marines because I found Marine emblems displayed on the inside of buildings throughout the base. These very tall and fit guys wandered through the base. They walked up and down the beach and near the bluffs from the lighthouse to just west of the base. If you were spotted by them, they would politely suggest that you be would safer staying in the public areas of the lighthouse to the east. If you didn’t leave, they would be less polite and summon the local or State Police.

Whether Montauk is still active remains to be seen. If it is, those in charge are unlikely to make the same mistakes that lead the witnesses like those which have contacted me to do so again. Anyone working in secret areas of the base nowadays will not be brainwashed techies or human test subjects previously exposed to secret technologies. They’ll be dyed in the wool government operatives that are unlikely to come forward with any information.

Although there are a number of other facilities around the Country being used in a similar manner, Montauk seems to be the focal point for whatever has evolved from the original time travel, psychic warfare, remote viewing and mind control experiments. Today’s Montauk Project would properly be very difficult to describe in everyday terms. That’s why I felt a need to create a sequel to The Truth about the Philadelphia Experiment DVD Set.

As the person who filmed the original testimony of Preston Nichols, Al Bielek and Duncan Cameron, I felt obliged to provide more. That was not an easy thing to do. I wasn’t just the first person to film these witnesses; I was also the first researcher to bring their story to the world. Let’s face it; the original story is a hard act to follow and is just a sampling of the larger volume of information I have uncovered about secret technologies and their development. What pleases me most about the original information provided on VHS and DVD is that time has proven it to be true. I expect the same will happen with the new and more complete revelations.

A recent example of how correct those three original witnesses were involves their revelations about the planet Mars. They spoke about using the Montauk Project technology to visit underground areas on Mars and move about in secret caves. Their statements matched information presented during an episode of Science Report, a British Television Series that aired during the 1970s. That episode was titled, Alternative Three.

According to the critically-acclaimed Science Report, the U.S. Space Program was further along than people thought. The show revealed that landings on Mars had been a regular event since the 1960s. It also laid out the plan to transport important and innovation people with technical backgrounds to Mars. The excuse for all this was the coming environment chaos caused by pollution, over-population and industrial excess. However, I felt there was a less philanthropic force at work and the Montauk Survivor statements seem to back that up.

More than a few people laughed at the premise of Alternative Three and the statements by Al, Preston and Duncan about Mars. However, thanks to NASA probes and studies of Mars, they are not laughing as hard as they used to. Scientists now tell us that they have found evidence of entrances to huge underground caves on Mars. They also say that huge blocks of ice and perhaps even water exist just under the Martian surface. In short, just about everything needed to build a self sustaining underground environment for humans already exists on Mars.

Government manipulation of time and meddling with people’s memories makes it difficult to draw a clear picture of what has happened and continues to happen through the Philadelphia Experiment and the Montauk Project. That information seems strange and convoluted to anyone unfamiliar with the world of secret government projects and technologies. However, that doesn’t make it any less true.

If scientists and skeptics want us to judge individual reports about unexplained events like the discovery of the Montauk Monsters using the bigger picture, than Montauk has one that would blow away most people. It’s a puzzle not easily solved and one which does not lend itself to being conveniently brushed off by those that do not believe or cannot accept what happens there.

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