
September 26, 1996: Roswell UFO Crash - Dr. Jesse Marcel Jr.
The Art Bell Archive · Arthur William Bell III
July 15, 20232h 53m
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Show Notes
Dr. Jesse Marcel Jr. shares his firsthand account of the night his father, a military intelligence officer, woke him at 2 a.m. to examine debris from the 1947 Roswell crash. Marcel recalls three types of material spread across their kitchen floor: lightweight metallic foil, dark bakelite-like fragments, and small I-beams inscribed with mysterious violet-purple geometric symbols that defied identification as any known language.
Art Bell presses Marcel on key details, from the infamous photograph staged with a weather balloon in General Ramey's office to the military's claim that the writing was merely decorative tape from a toy manufacturer. Marcel firmly rejects these explanations, noting his father's training in radar targets and aircraft identification made him uniquely qualified to distinguish the debris from any conventional material. He also clarifies that the self-restoring foil depicted in the Roswell movie was something he never personally witnessed.
Now a practicing physician in Montana, Marcel reflects on how the incident shaped his lifelong passion for astronomy and cosmology. His calm, unembellished testimony offers a rare window into the Roswell event from someone who touched the evidence with his own hands nearly fifty years earlier.
Art Bell presses Marcel on key details, from the infamous photograph staged with a weather balloon in General Ramey's office to the military's claim that the writing was merely decorative tape from a toy manufacturer. Marcel firmly rejects these explanations, noting his father's training in radar targets and aircraft identification made him uniquely qualified to distinguish the debris from any conventional material. He also clarifies that the self-restoring foil depicted in the Roswell movie was something he never personally witnessed.
Now a practicing physician in Montana, Marcel reflects on how the incident shaped his lifelong passion for astronomy and cosmology. His calm, unembellished testimony offers a rare window into the Roswell event from someone who touched the evidence with his own hands nearly fifty years earlier.