1 minute read
Chapter
too. For Bosco, Hunrath was to be his vessel, so to speak. Supposedly, Hunrath’s mind was immediately flooded with all manner of technical and science-based imagery designed to help him create his very own weapons of mass destruction. With that, Bosco retreated to the shadows of the bedroom, opened the window, climbed out, and vanished into the night!
Hunrath was now a man on a mission—hence the quick decision to move to California. It was this encounter in the bedroom which convinced Hunrath to pack his belongings and get on the road. Quickly.
Advertisement
Controversy dogged Hunrath and Wilkinson big-time in their new city. They were visited on several occasions by agents of the FBI—the police, too. The neighbors complained of late-night banging in Hunrath’s apartment—as if someone was constructing something in the dead of night. Perhaps it was that aircraft-destroying device that Hunrath was under the orders of Mr. Bosco to create. Hunrath was not at all intimidated, though. He denied that anything strange was going on. And he promised to keep the noise down—a promise he all but instantly broke.
When Wilkinson got a visit, however, he freaked out. All he wanted to do was find the truth about UFOs, and now the Feds were on his tail. Hunrath told him to develop a backbone. It didn’t work.
Telepathic Powers and a Man from Space
Now it’s time to take a look at the connections between Hunrath and Wilkinson and the aforementioned George Hunt Williamson—who was already “known” to the FBI because of rumors that he was smuggling ancient priceless artifacts across the US–Mexico border into the United States and then selling them for a tidy price.
Williamson was a curious character. He used several different names, including Michael d’Obrenovic and Brother Philip. Born in Chicago in 1926, he became entranced by the world of the unexplained before he was even a teenager. And when flying saucers exploded on the scene in the summer of 1947, it was all but inevitable that Williamson would dive into the controversy headfirst without looking back.