President George HW Bush ‘knew’ of 1964 alien contact with humans in New Mexico

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Then-former president George H.W. Bush allegedly had knowledge of the a meeting between an alien being and humans at an Air Force base in New Mexico in 1964. Getty Images

Then-former president George H.W. Bush allegedly had knowledge of the a meeting between an alien being and humans at an Air Force base in New Mexico in 1964. Getty Images

A new documentary is igniting debate over long‑standing UFO lore, featuring explosive testimony that late President George H.W. Bush was privately briefed about alleged alien contact at a New Mexico Air Force base in 1964.

Eric Davis, an astrophysicist and former scientific advisor to the now-disbanded Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP), says Bush told him during private conversations in 2003 that an extraterrestrial being made direct contact with U.S. officials at Holloman Air Force Base. According to Davis, Bush recounted that three unidentified craft approached the base, with one landing and a “non-human entity” stepping out to interact with Air Force and CIA personnel. Davis claims Bush asked for additional details but was told he didn’t have the required clearance.

Davis shares these allegations in The Age of Disclosure, a new film by director Dan Farah released Friday on Amazon Prime. Bush — a decorated Navy aviator, former CIA director, and later U.S. president — was allegedly made aware of the supposed encounter after leaving office.

Holloman Air Force Base with parked airplanes.
Holloman Air Force Base in Otero County, New Mexico, in a photo used “The Age of Disclosure.” holloman.af.mil
Infrared footage of a dark, oblong object surrounded by targeting reticules, with -2° in the corner.
An image of the “tic tac” UFO which was taken in 2004 by a Navy pilot off the coast of southern California. Farah Films

Davis did not describe the appearance of the being or provide physical evidence supporting the claims.

The documentary centers on what it calls the “Legacy Program,” a purported multi‑agency effort involving the CIA, U.S. Air Force, Department of Energy, and private defense contractors. The film asserts that this group has quietly recovered crashed UFOs and alien bodies — accusations presented without new corroborating material.

Davis further alleges that alien bodies were retrieved in Russia in 1988 from a crashed tic‑tac‑shaped craft. Hal Puthoff, a physicist and fellow AATIP veteran, says in the film that multiple types of extraterrestrials have been reported, though he offers no specifics. “Whoever it is — they’re here,” Puthoff claims. “And they’ve been operating here for a long time.”

Dr. Eric Davis in "Age of Disclosure".
Dr. Eric Davis was a scientific advisor for the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program from 2007 to 2012. Farah Films

The documentary also features accounts of U.S. service members who say they suffered medical injuries after encounters with unidentified craft. Stanford immunologist Gary Nolan says he evaluated military personnel with severe burns and neurological scarring after being approached by CIA representatives and a private aerospace firm. Retired intelligence officer Mike Flaherty also claims lasting medical effects from such contact.

According to the film, even U.S. presidents — including President Trump — have been kept in the dark about the Legacy Program, prompting some lawmakers to warn about the risks of classified programs allegedly operating without oversight. One official interviewed in the documentary argues that repeated sightings of unknown craft over sensitive military sites warrant serious investigation.

Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, meanwhile, stresses that unidentified objects could represent threats from rival nations rather than extraterrestrial visitors. “If you have objects in the sky that you cannot identify — that’s a problem,” she says. “Because it could be China, it could be Russia, it could be any adversary.”

Director Dan Farah says he hopes the documentary moves the UFO‑disclosure conversation forward. “I think this film puts us in a different place,” he says. “It sets the table for a president to step to the microphone and more comfortably tell humanity that we’re not alone in the universe.”

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