The black pyramid was determined to be some type of a power generation system. NARRATOR: For decades, government and military insiders have shared their extraterrestrial encounters with Linda Moulton Howe. And through her<i> Earthfiles</i> podcast, Linda has been able to get their stories out to the public without exposing their identities.
A man who heard my July 2012<i> Coast to Coast AM</i> broadcast about the underground dark pyramid in Alaska called and told me that his once military pilot father had secretly flown in a civilian Huey helicopter to the underground pyramid site between Nome and Mount Denali. He said his father was told that the black pyramid was more secret than the Manhattan atomic bomb project in World War II. Linda Moulton Howe learned how to cultivate sources, protect sources.
And, as a result, people would share information with her, sensitive information, that they didn't know what else to do with. DOLAN: People go to her, they trust her. A lot of these military guys-- they really single her out.
They know she's very, very smart, very dogged in her persistence. And she will track a story down to its conclusion. HOWE: I have had so many people who have come to me from military backgrounds, from classified backgrounds, and they had to show me IDs 'cause I've made that clear.
If you want to talk to me from a military point of view, you must at least show me a DD214 and ID. NARRATOR: Linda has gained incredible insight from the whistleblowers who have shared their stories with her over the years. And in one instance, the account of a military insider led to the discovery of a previously unknown phenomenon.
In her regular half-hour science segment on Art Bell's<i> Dramland,</i> Linda conducts an interview with former Air Force First Lieutenant Robert Salas, who tells an incredible story. NARRATOR: Salas was stationed at the Malmstrom Air Force Base in Montana and was in a charge of a launch control facility when, on March 24, 1967, multiple Air Force personnel witnessed a large UFO appear over the Minuteman missile system. ROBERT SALAS: All of a sudden.
. . (alarm blaring) .
. . we hear these horns go off, a lot of horns, which.
. . we knew what that meant: that it was a problem.
So we looked over at the board. This was a bank of lights. And the missiles started going from operational to no-go in seconds.
We lost all ten right in rapid succession while this object was still up there. NARRATOR: The information shared by Lieutenant Robert Salas struck a chord with Linda, as she had heard a very similar account nearly two decades earlier from her own brother. In November of 1975, late at night, the phone rang.
It was my brother. He was in the U. S.
Air Force stationed at Malmstrom Air Force Base in Montana on a Minuteman missile site. Everybody-- including him-- see 300-feet diameter, estimated, orange fluorescent light. It was right over one of the Minuteman missiles.
So, I have that as a personal experience with my own brother.