FigurePaul Bennewitz (1927–2003)
aka Paul Bennewitz · Bennewitz
Albuquerque, New Mexico physicist (BS physics, 1949) and president of Thunder Scientific Corporation, a Sandia/Kirtland-area instrumentation company. From 1979 to 1984 he monitored what he believed were alien signals near the Manzano nuclear weapons storage complex. Documents declassified in the 1990s show he was the deliberate target of an Air Force Office of Special Investigations counter-intelligence operation. He was institutionalized for a mental breakdown in 1988 and died in 2003.
What's documented
Paul Bennewitz, BS physics 1949; founder and president of Thunder Scientific Corporation, an Albuquerque instrumentation firm whose largest customers were Sandia National Laboratories and Kirtland Air Force Base. Beginning in 1979, from his house on a hill overlooking Coyote Canyon and the Manzano weapons-storage complex, Bennewitz began intercepting radio and electro-optical signals he interpreted as alien communications. He believed he had identified an underground alien base near Dulce, NM. Through 1980 he reported his findings to the Air Force at Kirtland — including, by his own account, briefings to base commander Maj. Gen. William Brooksher. AFOSI Special Agent Richard Doty and his colleagues responded by feeding Bennewitz a stream of fabricated documents and staged events to reinforce and amplify his beliefs as a way to discredit him and to protect the actual classified work at Manzano. The operation is described on the record by Doty himself (in Mirage Men, the 2013 documentary directed by John Lundberg, and in the book of the same name by Mark Pilkington, 2010); by AFOSI counterintelligence officer William Moore (UFO Conference, Las Vegas, 1989); and is discussed by Jacques Vallée in Revelations (1991) as the canonical case of intelligence-community UFO disinformation. By 1984 Bennewitz had become severely paranoid and was no longer able to run his business. He was hospitalized for psychiatric care in 1988 and never recovered. He died in Albuquerque on 23 June 2003. The Dulce Base mythos, which propagated globally through 1990s ufology, has its origin in the documents the AFOSI fed Bennewitz.