Jacques Vallee - Revelations - Alien Contact and Human

Page 166 of 292

Page 166 of 292
Jacques Vallee - Revelations - Alien Contact and Human

Page Content (OCR)

apartment? prophecies. 148 REVELATIONS pressed by questions from reporters or civilian investigators, Prevost would often retire to his bedroom for a few minutes and come back with the answer. Was he calling someone who was hiding in Salomon's A new scenario began to evolve. What if someone had become interested in the UFO subject and decided to conduct a test using the Travis Walton experience as a model? It would not be very difficult to pick a suitable group of witnesses—especially if they were marginal elements in the sociologically ideal milieu of a New Town—young people with low credibility, who already had a profile known to the law enforcement authorities. What if this someone, acting under a very wide umbrella of author- ity, had carefully staged the abduction of one of the protagonists? Who was the man who, according to my most recent information, met Franck secretly three times, always on a Saturday night at 11:00 P.M.? He wore an expensive business suit, drove a black BMW with license plates from the north of France. He took Franck to a cafe every time, and they spoke for several hours. The role of hypnotist Daniel Huguet is also intriguing in this regard. Huguet had visited the Pontoise region a few months prior to the main events. And he had worked with Guieu in the Gamma-Delta affair, performing the hypnotic regression on the witness. As part of his testi- mony, Gamma-Delta predicted that a major UFO event would happen in France on November 26, 1979. It was the sensational validation of this prediction that convinced Guieu and his group to act very quickly as soon as the Pontoise case was reported. In the subsequent investiga- tion, however, Franck was ignored by the hypnotist, who instead con- centrated his efforts on Prevost, who became the focus of a series of revelations well-suited to the creation of a new cult: contact with an entity with elongated eyes, messages of universal love and salvation Prevost went on to start a small sect and later an FM radio station, but he failed to acquire a substantial following. I am unfortunately bound to secrecy about some of the important steps in the investigation, but I can report that the human kidnapping