[0:43:29 - 0:43:36] and you have all these aerospace corporations, many of which you've named in your book
Lockheed Northrop, you know, BAE, all these sorts of, you know, companies,
[0:46:14 - 0:46:22] is at
Lockheed Skunkworks, and he said I could say high level that we spoke. Really nice guy, cool guy. He's a good dude.
[0:51:13 - 0:51:22] The
Lockheed Martin wanted to divest itself from this material at a specific facility that's known to me that I provided to the Inspector General.
[0:51:22 - 0:51:38] And the idea was if they made a catcher's mitt, a security catcher's mitt for this shit, you know, most serious set possible, the contractor and the other government customer, which was the Central Intelligence Agency, for that specific
Lockheed material.
[0:52:00 - 0:52:10] But going back to that transfer with
Lockheed, basically the CIA said fuck you to DIA and
Lockheed. And it was totally killed.
[0:52:20 - 0:52:31] So OSAP was actually set up to transfer a UFO held by
Lockheed Martin to a special access program to get some outsider civilian scientist eyes on it.
[0:54:52 - 0:55:02] The person involved in transferring this UFO to ASAP was VP of
Lockheed Martin Space Systems Advanced Technology Center, a guy named Jim Ryder.
[0:55:02 - 0:55:21] ASAP was originally intended to skip out big, low aerospace facilities in Las Vegas due to a UAP material divestment plan proposal to ASAP leadership by
Lockheed Martin Space Systems Vice President, Dr. James Ryder.