
Did a White Plains Researcher Get Too Close to the Truth About UFOs?
Leon Davidson lived in White Plains, New York, and had the kind of résumé that made him hard to ignore. A scientist, engineer, and sci-fi writer, Davidson worked with IBM, Union Carbide, and even contributed to atomic research during one of the most secretive chapters in American history.

But behind the credentials and career highlights was a man obsessed with one question — and it had nothing to do with corporate tech or energy.
Why was the U.S. Government so desperate to convince the public their UFO story was final and truthful, when all he was doing was asking fair questions? And what did they know that they weren’t saying? Davidson didn’t just wonder — he went looking. What he found, and how the government responded, is the kind of story that doesn't fade with time. It lingers in the shadows of declassified documents and unanswered questions.
Did a White Plains Researcher Get Too Close to the Truth About UFOs?
Gallery Credit: Lou Milano
This is what they do. What they've always done. The U.S. government has historically gone to extraordinary — sometimes disturbing — lengths to control the UFO narrative. They’ve discredited witnesses, buried evidence, and intimidated researchers. They denied the existence of Area 51 for decades. They claimed Project Mogul was responsible for Roswell. They told military pilots to stay silent after mid-air encounters. Now, with the term "UAP" replacing "UFO" and official task forces formed under pressure, the story is evolving — but the pattern remains. Silence the voice. Control the narrative. And hope the public forgets. But people like Leon Davidson don’t just vanish. They leave a trail. You just have to follow it.
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