James W. Moseley (born August 4, 1931
in New York
City
) is an American ufologist.
He has exposed UFO hoaxers and perpetrated fraud in his career,
and, according to
Jerome Clark, has
"entertained just about every view it is possible to hold about
UFOs, without ever managing to say anything especially interesting
or memorable about any of them."
Biography
Moseley was born to a military family; his father,
George Van Horn Moseley, would
attain the rank of Major General in the U.S. Army.
Moseley attended
Princeton
University
for two years. Despite earning good marks,
he dropped out to pursue interests and hobbies, including
archeology.
He became interested in UFOs following the
1947 claims of pilot Kenneth Arnold
, but his interest deepened following the 1948 death
of U.S. Air Force pilot Thomas Mantell
in pursuit of a UFO.
In July, 1954, Moseley co-founded
Saucer News, a
periodical remembered for its unorthodox, "freewheeling" (Clark,
2002) style.
Saucer News only occasionally featured
serious UFO research; Moseley was among the first to publicize
evidence against the claims of leading "
contactee"
George
Adamski. In 1953 he investigated the
Ralph Horton flying saucer
crash.
Saucer News was sold to
Gray
Barker in 1968. Moseley became a regular lecturer on UFOs for
several years and organized an annual convention. In 1970, he
founded a newsletter that went by several titles until Moseley
settled on
Saucer Smear in 1981. He produces the
newsletter irregularly, and mails it free-of-charge to about 200
friends and associates.
Saucer Smear typically has a
joking, gossipy tone.
Moseley reports (Story, 1980; Clark, 2002) that he has accepted,
then rejected, a number of explanations for UFOs. In roughly
chronological order, he considered the
extraterrestrial hypothesis; a
secret weapon/aircraft hypothesis,
psychic/supernatural/interdimensional hypotheses in the vein of
John Keel or
Jacques Vallee; deep
skepticism; and
agnosticism.
In 1984,
Moseley established an antiques store in
Key West,
Florida
. Moseley co-wrote a memoir With
Karl T. Pflock,
entitled
Shockingly Close to the Truth! (2002).
The "Straith" hoax letter
Moseley was long suspected of having co-created a phony 1957 letter
as a
prank against Adamski. After years of
denying the charges, evading the subject, and hinting at
responsibility, Moseley admitted to the hoax in 1985 (Clark, 2005;
Moseley and Pflock, 2002).
In 1957, Barker acquired some blank U.S. Governmental letterhead
stationery and envelopes from a friend. During an alcohol-fueled
weekend, Moseley and Barker wrote seven letters, each using this
official letterhead. Five of the letters were jokes to friends;
only two of the letters were outright hoaxes, the Adamski letter
and one to Moseley's father.
The letter to Adamski was signed by the fictional "R.E.
Straith",
a representative of the non-existent "Cultural Exchange Committee"
of the U.S.
State Department
. Straith wrote that the U.S. Government knew
that Adamski had actually spoken to extraterrestrials in a
California desert in 1952, and that a group of highly-placed
government officials planned on public corroboration of Adamski's
story.
Adamski took great pride in the Straith letter, and publicized its
contents.
FBI
agents investigated the letter, and, since none of
the claims were genuine, asked Adamski to stop publicizing the
letter. Adamski refused.
FBI agents also questioned Barker and Moseley about the matter, but
no criminal charges were filed.
Moseley has been quoted (Clark, 2002) as stating that he committed
multiple UFO "hoaxes", but the incidents are not detailed by
Clark.
Ralph Horton crash case

Horton and the "flying saucer"
Moseley investigated the
Ralph Horton flying saucer
crash after finding it in the flying saucer file of the
Atlanta
Constitution. Moseley called the airport and confirmed
that the object was a device used by the Air Force to determine
wind velocity and direction. It was sent up attached to a balloon
and tracked by radar, since radar beams were reflected by the
object. Horton retrieved the object from where he had discarded it,
and gave it to Moseley. Moseley lost the object. He laments that if
he had held on to the object, then it might have been he instead of
Pflock that cracked the
Roswell UFO
Incident .
References
- Story, Ronald J. (editor) and J. Richard Greenwell (consulting
editor), The Encyclopedia of UFOs, Garden City: Doubleday
& Co, 1980, ISBN 0-385-13677-3
External links