Robert Porter (Sergeant): Difference between revisions

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[M/Sgt Robert Porter was a B-29 flight engineer with the 830th Bomb Squadron. He happens to be [[Loretta Proctor]]'s brother. He was interviewed by [[Stanton Friedman]].]


We flew these pieces. [Some officers in the crew] told us it was parts of a flying saucer. The packages were in wrapping paper, one triangle-shaped about two and a half feet across the bottom, the rest in smaller, shoebox-sized packages. [They were in] brown paper with tape. It was just like I picked up an empty package, very light. The loaded triangle-shaped package and three shoebox-sized packages would have fit into the trunk of a car.


 
On board were Lieutenant Colonel [[Payne Jennings (Colonel)|Payne Jennings]] [deputy commander of Roswell] and [[Jesse A. Marcel|Major Marcel]]. [[Captain Anderson]] said it was from a flying saucer. We got to Fort Worth, they transferred [the packages] to a B-25 and took them to Wright [Field]. When we landed at [Fort Worth], [[Payne Jennings (Colonel)|Colonel Jennings]] told us to take care of maintenance, and after a guard was posted, we could eat lunch. We came back, they told us they had transferred the material to a B-25. They told us it was a weather balloon. It WASN'T a weather balloon.





Revision as of 00:47, 10 January 2024

Robert Porter (Sergeant)
Name(s): Robert Porter
Occupation: Sergeant
Incident: [[The Roswell UFO Incident Main Page]]


[M/Sgt Robert Porter was a B-29 flight engineer with the 830th Bomb Squadron. He happens to be Loretta Proctor's brother. He was interviewed by Stanton Friedman.]

We flew these pieces. [Some officers in the crew] told us it was parts of a flying saucer. The packages were in wrapping paper, one triangle-shaped about two and a half feet across the bottom, the rest in smaller, shoebox-sized packages. [They were in] brown paper with tape. It was just like I picked up an empty package, very light. The loaded triangle-shaped package and three shoebox-sized packages would have fit into the trunk of a car.

On board were Lieutenant Colonel Payne Jennings [deputy commander of Roswell] and Major Marcel. Captain Anderson said it was from a flying saucer. We got to Fort Worth, they transferred [the packages] to a B-25 and took them to Wright [Field]. When we landed at [Fort Worth], Colonel Jennings told us to take care of maintenance, and after a guard was posted, we could eat lunch. We came back, they told us they had transferred the material to a B-25. They told us it was a weather balloon. It WASN'T a weather balloon.