Mexican Congress Holds Second Hearing On ‘1,000 Year-Old Alien Corpses’

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On Tuesday, Mexico’s Congress once again held a hearing on a pair of purported “1,000-year-old alien corpses” that were first presented to them in September.

According to journalist and UFOlogist Jaime Maussan, who led the first hearing and testified under oath, one-third of the corpses’ DNA is “unknown” and not part of “our terrestrial evolution.”

“These specimens are not part of our evolutionary history on Earth. These aren’t beings that were found after a UFO wreckage,” Maussan said. “They were found in diatom (algae) mines, and were later fossilized.”

Shortly after the initial hearing, scientists, including Rafael Bojalil-Parra, research reinforcement director at Metropolitan Autonomous University (UAD) in Mexico City, called it “complete nonsense.”

So what was Maussan doing back in Mexico’s Congress, still talking about his “alien corpses?”

Well, apparently, he was there to try and prove that the bodies aren’t fake.

According to José de Jesús Zalce Benitez, the director of the Health Sciences Research Institute of the Secretary of the Navy, tests proved that the “alien” bodies had not been assembled or manipulated by piecing together unrelated animal or human bones.

“[The bodies] belong to a single skeleton that has not been joined to other pieces,” he claimed after the initial hearing.

This time, Jaime Maussan enlisted several more doctors to back up his claims.

“They’re real,” Anthropologist Roger Zuniga of San Luis Gonzaga National University in Ica Peru told Reuters.

“There was absolutely no human intervention in the physical and biological formation of these beings.”

Zuniga also presented a letter signed by 11 researchers from his university agreeing with his assessment.

“None of the scientists say [the study results] prove that they are extraterrestrials, but I go further,” Maussan said during this latest hearing.

The “alien corpses” presented by Maussan, however, are thought to have been proven fake years ago.

Video from the French TV show 66 Minutes, taken in 2018, shows what appears to be eerily similar remains that were debunked as being made up of a “hodgepodge of human and animal bones.”

When asked about it, Zuniga said those “alien corpses” were probably fake, but these new ones? They are definitely real.

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Before settling down at BroBible, Douglas Charles, a graduate of the University of Iowa (Go Hawks), owned and operated a wide assortment of websites. He is also one of the few White Sox fans out there and thinks Michael Jordan is, hands down, the GOAT.