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The tale surrounding the “1,000-year-old alien corpses” that were first revealed to Congress in Mexico in September 2023 by journalist Jaime Maussan continues to grow.
These “non-human alien corpses,” according to Maussan, supposedly have DNA that is “not from any known species” and do not have traditional human fingerprint patterns.
He has had numerous medical experts, including a paleontologist, three forensic medical examiners, a former Colorado prosecutor and current defense attorney, some filmmakers, and the director of the Health Sciences Research Institute of the Secretary of the Navy in Mexico all vouch for him and his claims.
Now Jaime Maussan claims that these “alien corpses” have what he believes to be communication devices that were made in part with a rare metal known as osmium embedded in their bodies.
“I believe this is a device for communication. I don’t really know how it works, but the experts will have to go in depth to understand why they put this inside the body,” the Mirror reports Maussan said.
“My guess is this was for health, to communicate something or a kind of cellular phone. The metal is made of osmium, which is used for telecommunications and satellites in the space field. It is very rare. It’s not easy to find and it’s very, very expensive and besides it’s very toxic. For a human to have that inside them could create a big injury in the body or probably could kill the body.
“So it’s difficult to understand why they did it. If you are going to create a hoax like this, are you going to put a very rare metal inside?”
Meanwhile, as Maussan continues his quest to find the “truth” about the corpses, multiple scientists have branded the “alien corpses” as fakes, internet sleuths have attempted to debunk his claims, and the government of Peru has launched a criminal probe wanting to know how Maussan came into possession of these specimens.