UFO researcher and author Nick Redfern talked about his work uncovering how the entire UFO research community has been monitored by U.S. Intelligence Agencies dating back to the 1940's. In the era before UFO investigators, the media covering flying saucers were watched by agencies such as the FBI, he noted. The Men in Black phenomenon, in which UFO witnesses were questioned by mysterious agents, were actually military and CIA personnel in many cases, added Redfern, who said that 'MIB' activity occurred in the U.K. as well as the U.S.
Surveillance of well-known figures of the 1950s contactee movement, such as George Adamski, George Van Tassel and George Hunt Williamson also took place. Through the Freedom of Information Act, Redfern was able to retrieve the FBI files on these contactees, and found that they contained factual accounts of interviews and conferences rather than evaluations of their claims. According to Leonard Stringfield, an early investigator of UFO crashes, some of the people involved in the contactee movement were actually plants used by agencies to infiltrate the UFO community. Redfern believes that government and military surveillance of those involved with UFOs continues, and that people need to be aware of this, so a stand can be taken against it.
He also discussed the case of the U.K.'s Matthew Bevan, who hacked into the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base's computer in the mid 1990's in an attempt to discover UFO secrets. Reportedly he found files similar to craft descriptions made by Bob Lazar.
Space Update
Coast to Coast Science Advisor Richard C. Hoagland appeared during the first half-hour to comment on various space issues.