Computer hacker Gary McKinnon, whose extradition to the US was blocked, will not face charges in the UK, bringing to an end a 10-year legal battle.
Director of Public Prosecutions Keir Starmer QC said the chances of a successful conviction were "not high".
Janis Sharp, Mr McKinnon's mother, said the news was "amazing" and she was grateful the case was "all over now".
Mr McKinnon, 46, admits accessing US government computers but says he was looking for evidence of UFOs.
The US Department of Justice said it would continue to collaborate with the UK government on a "wide range of shared concerns".
Mr Starmer announced the decision not to prosecute some three months after Home Secretary Theresa May stopped Mr McKinnon's extradition.
Most readers of "Mysterious Universe "will, I am sure, be well aware of the strange and seemingly never-ending affair of Gary McKinnon, the British man who faces potential extradition to the United States - and possibly significant prison time - for hacking NASA in search of secret UFO data. Although the McKinnon affair has generated copious amounts of interest and debate within the media - and even at the highest levels of the British Government, too - few realize that McKinnon was not the first to embark upon such a hazardous path.
As an experienced hacker of numerous computer systems, including those of NASA and the United States' Department of Defense, a young Welshman named Matthew Bevan took the decision back in 1994 to uncover the long-rumored "crashed UFO" secrets of Wright Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton, Ohio. Stressing that Wright-Patterson was "a very, very easy computer system to get into," Bevan was utterly amazed to uncover astonishing information relating to a super secret project to design and build a truly extraordinary flying machine of UFO like proportions."The files," Bevan said, "very clearly referred to a working prototype of an anti-gravity vehicle that utilized a heavy element to power it. This wasn't a normal aircraft; it was very small, split level, with a reactor at the bottom and room for the crew at the top."Having accessed and carefully digested the fantastic information, Bevan duly exited the Wright-Patterson computer banks and began to doggedly search just about here, there and everywhere for the alien answers that he sought, including the less than secure computer systems of NASA itself. Bevan had got into the systems, he had carefully read the files, and he had then made good his escape, all without any form of detection whatsoever.Or, so Bevan had assumed was the case. History, however, has shown that Bevan's initial assumptions were very wide of the mark. For approximately two years there was nothing but overwhelming silence. Then, on a particular morning in 1996, everything suddenly changed drastically in the life of Matthew Bevan. At the time when things began to go distinctly awry, he was working for an insurance company in Cardiff, Wales, and on the day in question he was summoned down to the managing director's office.On entering the room, Bevan was confronted by a group of men in suits who seemed to practically ooze intimidation. Bevan recalled what happened next: "One of the men outstretched his hand and I shook it."Matthew Bevan?" the man asked."Yes," replied Bevan.The man identified himself as being with Scotland Yard's Computer Crimes Unit: "I'm placing you under arrest for hacking NASA and Wright Patterson Air Force Base.'" Bevan was in deep trouble. On being taken to Cardiff Central Police Station, the line of questioning became decidedly curious and worthy of an episode of "The X-Files": "What does the term "Hangar 18" mean to you?" Bevan was immediately asked, in stern and intimidating tones."That's a hoarding place for alien technology," he replied, in a quite matter of fact fashion.Bevan's recollections of that exchange were more than eye-opening. "Throughout the interview, they kept coming back to "Hangar 18": Did I see anything on the Wright Patterson and the NASA computers? Did I download anything? Well, when they asked me if I saw anything, I said: 'Yes, I saw emails talking about an anti-gravity propulsion system.'"Needless to say, this did not go down too well, at all, with Scotland Yard's Computer Crimes Unit. Bevan correctly realized that he was in very hot water with the authorities, and a date was subsequently set for a hearing at London's Bow Street magistrate's court. But: it was not just Bevan, his defense, and the prosecution who were present at the trial. There was also a man present representing the interests of the U.S. Government and NASA.A curious exchange occurred when the man took the stand - as Bevan remembered only too well. "As the hearing continued, the prosecution asked him what the American Government thought about my motives regarding my hacking at NASA and at Wright Patterson."The man replied: "We now believe that Mr. Bevan had no malicious intentions and that his primary purpose was to uncover information on UFOs and "Hangar 18".'"Bevan said: "Well, everyone had a bit of a laugh at that point, even the judge; however, when the prosecution asked: 'Can you confirm if "Hangar 18" exists or if it's a myth?' the man said: 'I can neither confirm nor deny as I'm not in possession of that information.'"The final outcome of the affair was that the case against Bevan completely collapsed.The magistrate overseeing the matter stated in no uncertain terms that a jail sentence was utterly out of the question, and that any financial punishment he might be able to impose upon Bevan would be meager in the extreme. Coupled with the fact that neither NASA nor the American Government as a whole was willing to divulge any and all information concerning the contents of the material on the Wright Patterson computers to the British court, and the cost of prosecuting the case was perceived as being as high as 10,000 a day, the prosecution grudgingly elected to offer zero evidence.Bevan was, much to his deep satisfaction, a free man. And: he was a very lucky man, too.The total failure to secure a successful conviction - even a minor one - in the Bevan affair both frustrated and angered NASA and the U.S. Government. And the very fact that American authorities flatly refused to reveal to the British court the precise nature and content of the files and the data that Bevan had hacked into, made it all but inevitable that the judge would have no choice but to completely dismiss the case.The U.S. Government, however, was most definitely not prepared to make that same fatal mistake again when Gary McKinnon hacked into certain NASA computer systems in search of UFO data in the early 2000s- as both history and the still-ongoing saga has graphically demonstrated.
WHAT DID GARY MCKINNON REALLY FIND?
In what US prosecutors have called the biggest military hack of all time, Scottish hacker, Gary McKinnon says it was all done in an effort to end secrecy regarding UFOs and Free Energy technology. McKinnon has been accused of hacking into computer systems belonging to NASA,the US Army, US Navy, Department of Defense, and the US Air Force. He is fighting extradition to the United States to be held on trial, and if extradited faces spending the rest of his life in prison, but were his efforts in vain, or did he really find something.In all of his interviews, McKinnon talks about two UFO related finds. He told the Guardian newspaper that he thought what he found was so important that he tried to barter with the government. When first caught he was offered the chance to take a plea bargain and get a three to four year sentence. He turned the offer down to get a lesser sentence, threatening to release everything he found if they didn't give him a better deal. Unfortunately for Gary, the US government wasn't too worried about his revelations. Now he faces spending a 70 year sentence in a US prison, where they don't serve tea and crumpets.
McKinnon was inspired by physician Dr. Steven Greer's Disclosure project. Greer had brought together a number of very credible witnesses to testify in front of the Washington National Press Club that they had knowledge of the existence of Extraterrestrial visitation and that it was being hidden from the public. One of the witnesses said they knew that pictures from space were being altered at NASA's Johnson's space center; UFOs were allegedly being taken out of pictures. McKinnon hacked into Johnson's systems and said he found a high definition picture of a large cigar shaped object over the northern hemisphere. He said that he was so shocked by the picture that he didn't think to immediately save it. He also said that the file size was so large that is was difficult to view it on his computer. Eventually his connection was lost, and so was the picture.The most shocking find to McKinnon, the one he thought would be his ace in the hole negotiating with the US government, was what he found hacking into the systems of US Space Command.MCKINNON SAYS HE FOUND A LOG THAT LISTED NON-TERRESTRIAL OFFICERS. HE DOESN'T BELIEVE THAT THESE WERE ALIENS, BUT HE BELIEVES THIS TO BE EVIDENCE THAT THE US MILITARY HAS A SECRET BATTALION IN SPACE. Some of these logs were ship to ship transfers, but he says he was usually smoking pot when he hacked, so that prevented him from remembering the names of the ships. McKinnon told the" Guardian": "I was smoking a lot of dope at the time. Not good for the intellect."
There are rumors that he has talked about the names of two of the ships he saw on the transfer logs, the names of the ships being the USSS "LeMay" and the USSS "Hillenkoetter". Typically Navy ship names just have two S', an acronym for United States Ship, however there are three S' here, presumably standing for United States Space Ship. The names of the ships are also significant.General Curtis LeMay was friends with retired Air Force Reserve Major General and former U.S. Senator from Arizona, Barry Goldwater. Goldwater believed there was a UFO cover-up deep within the government, and suspected that his friend LeMay knew about it. There were rumors that there was UFO evidence being held in a secret room at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base called the blue room. Goldwater told the media several times that when he asked LeMay about this room, LeMay got upset and told him, "Not only can't you get into it but don't you ever mention it to me again." Open Minds magazine will have an article going more into depth on Goldwater in the second issue.
The second ship's namesake, Admiral Roscoe Hillenkoetter, was the first director of the CIA, and was also a member of a UFO researchorganization, the National Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena (NICAP). In 1960 the "New York Times" reported that Hillenkoetter had sent a letter to Congress that included this statement: "Behind the scenes, high-ranking Air Force officers are soberly concerned about UFOs. But through official secrecy and ridicule, many citizens are led to believe the unknown flying objects are nonsense."Although Hillenkoetter fought for the end of UFO secrecy, he eventually stopped commenting on the matter. Alleged secret documents that were leaked to UFO researchers, list Hillenkoetter as a member of the infamous Majestic 12 group, an organization rumored to have been made up of high ranking military officers and civilians that was supposedly created by President Truman to initially manage the UFO issue.However, the fact that McKinnon really released the names of these ships is also alleged, thus far there are no source for these rumors.
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