UFO Whistleblower Overdosed Before Set to Testify

The mysterious list of dead and missing scientists and aerospace experts continues to grow as news emerges that an Air Force veteran who agreed to testify before Congress about UFO programs died of what was called an “accidental drug overdose” just months before the hearings.
THE New York Post Saturday reported learning of the death of Matthew James Sullivan, 39, who died at his home in Falls Church, Virginia, on May 12, 2024, from a “lethal mixture of alcohol, alprazolam, cyclobenzaprine and imipramine,” according to the Northern District Chief Medical Examiner’s Office.
Alprazolam is an anti-anxiety medication, while cyclobenzaprine is a muscle relaxant and imipramine is a children’s medication used to treat anxiety and bedwetting. These are all prescription drugs.
According to a letter obtained by the tabloid from New York and California, Sullivan’s death is a “serious concern” to Rep. Eric Burlison (R-MO), with the congressman referring the death to the FBI due to what he called “national security implications.”
“Mr. Sullivan’s death was a local Virginia medical examiner’s case, and the manner and circumstances of his death raise important questions as he prepared to testify before Congress,” read the April 16 letter to FBI Director Kash Patel. “The sudden and suspicious circumstances surrounding his death raise significant concerns about possible foul play and the safety of others involved in this case.”
The FBI said in a statement that Sullivan’s death could be investigated alongside other missing or deceased U.S. scientists and experts, numbering between 10 and 12, depending on official titles.
Many had access to highly classified government secrets.
Burlison says Sullivan could very well be number 13 on the list, explaining his concerns in an interview with Fox News.
“While we do not comment on specific incidents, the FBI is leading efforts to seek links to missing and deceased scientists. We are working with the Department of Energy, the Department of War, and our state and local law enforcement partners to find answers,” the FBI said, according to the Job.
As detailed in his obituary, Sullivan earned a Bronze Star for his valor in Operation Enduring Freedom and went on to serve in several top-secret positions, including with the Air Force Intelligence Agency, the National Air and Space Intelligence Center, and the National Security Agency.
THE Messages continuation of the report:
Sullivan carried “the burden that falls on a select few in this country to really understand what’s going on,” retired Maj. Gen. David Abba, who served as director of special programs and later director of the Defense Department’s Special Access Program central office, said at the funeral.
Sullivan was part of a so-called legacy UFO program — the U.S. government’s Accident Recovery Program — that operated for decades in the shadows of several executive agencies, sources said. The post office.
Anonymous sources also told the Job that Sullivan had “personally seen UFOs” that the federal government had recovered and would reveal the legacy program during the congressional hearing scheduled for November 2024.
Other UFO whistleblowers have reported facing threats to their safety after providing information.
David Grusch, an Air Force and intelligence community veteran who made national headlines when he testified before Congress in 2023, wrote a letter the previous year to the Intelligence Community Office of Inspector General (IC OIG) in which he faced retaliation after reporting evidence of UFOs, now referred to by the federal government as UAPs, or unidentified aerial phenomena.
Grusch testified that the United States was in possession of UAP and non-human “biological products.”
“A version of Grusch’s letter was sent to the IC OIG and included information regarding Sullivan’s death,” the Job sources reported saying.
The agency told the tabloid: “IC OIG cannot confirm or deny the existence of any ongoing or potential investigations. »
Contributor Lowell Cauffiel is the author of the New York Times bestselling true-crime novel House of secrets and nine other mystery novels and non-fiction titles. See lowellcauffiel.com to find out more.




