The UFO files are beginning to roll out.
Americans still have some questions.
And a UFO expert said, “I plan on LIVING. Not suicidal at all.” Two days later, he was dead.
As Swamp Digest reports:
When police arrived, Wilcock turned the gun on himself and pulled the trigger, ending his life.
Before this suicide, Wilcock posted on social media that he wasn’t suicidal and that he planned “on living” while acknowledging the existence of God.
“I plan on LIVING. Not suicidal at all,” Wilcock wrote in the social media post. “Just concerned about what happens when you prove God is real,” Wilcock wrote.
Two days before his death, Wilcock posted a livestream where he addressed President Trump’s comments about the ten missing scientists connected to the government’s research into UFOs.
The deaths began with the 2023 passing of NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory physicist, who was a specialist in research into comets and asteroids, Michael David Hicks.
“People are disappearing. Scientists are going missing. The President himself is looking into this. It’s a little bit scary,” Wilcock said on his livestream.
President Trump promised answers when reporters questioned him about the missing scientists.
“I hope it’s random, but we’re going to know in the next week and a half,” Trump told reporters before going on to say that “some of them were very important people.”
On the livestream, Wilcock also expressed a desire to live and called every day on earth “a gift.”
“I’m excited to be here, you know, every day that I have on earth is a gift and a blessing, and I’m very grateful for that, because frankly, people are disappearing. Scientists are going missing….It’s a little bit scary,” Wilcox added.
Wilcock admitted that he “had a rough week,” but once again expressed a desire to live telloing viewers, “You guys knew that I might still show up even though it was last minute and I’ve had a really rough week. Like, you know, that’s kinda like every week, but somehow we keep on making it through all of this.”
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt echoed President Trump and promised an investigation that left “no stone unturned” to unravel the mystery of the missing scientists.
“In light of the recent and legitimate questions about these troubling cases, and President Trump’s commitment to the truth, the White House is actively working with all relevant agencies and the FBI to holistically review all of the cases together and identify any potential commonalities that may exist’ Leavitt wrote on X.
“No stone will be unturned in this effort, and the White House will provide updates when we have them,” Leavitt added.





