[0:03:18 - 0:03:25] Dr. Eric
Wang. Unlike Stansell,
Wang left almost no trace in public records, despite having his name and name in the world.
[0:03:50 - 0:03:56] The mystery of Dr.
Wang was picked up in the 1980s by UFO researcher William Steinman.
[0:03:57 - 0:04:10] After months of searching, he finally found a clue. In obituary, in an old issue of a mechanical engineering magazine, it turned out that Dr. Eric H.
Wang, born in 1906, had originally come from Vienna.
[0:04:27 - 0:04:37] Steinman discovered that
Wang immigrated to the US before World War II, lectured at the University of Cincinnati, and eventually became head of the Department of Special Studies at Wright Patterson.
[0:04:37 - 0:04:44] In 1956,
Wang's department was relocated to New Mexico to the Sandy Laboratories Complex at Curtlyn Air Force Base.
[0:04:45 - 0:04:56] Steinman hit another dead end, and despite being warned off this trail, he took a different approach. He tracks down Dr.
Wang's widow, Maria, and that's when things took a turn.
[0:04:57 - 0:05:06] Maria
Wang confirmed that her late husband had worked on classified projects at Wright Patterson, projects that involved technologists.
[0:06:14 - 0:06:29] But if Maria
Wang's claim was true, and Kissinger had worked with her husband before he died in 1960, that would have placed Kissinger at the center of the most secretive program in history before he had even entered public office. That is a huge claim.
[0:33:34 - 0:33:40] So another UFO crash retrieval was tied to Sandial Labs where Dr.
Wang worked and where Kissinger is connected.
[0:58:06 - 0:58:13] So whether Kissinger was exactly what Maria
Wang described to Bill Steiman on the phone, I think it's very possible.