Jeremy Corbell has announced that he and investigative journalist George Knapp are actively monitoring UAP videos to prevent them from disappearing. The effort appears designed to preserve visual documentation of unidentified aerial phenomena at a time when such material faces potential loss or suppression.
Corbell, a documentary filmmaker whose work has appeared on Netflix and Hulu, and Knapp, an Emmy-award-winning investigative reporter for KLAS TV and regular host of Coast to Coast AM, are collaborating on WEAPONIZED, a multi-platform investigative series. The project features exclusive interviews, previously unseen footage, suppressed documents, and original recordings related to UFOs, paranormal phenomena, and related subjects. The series includes conversations with government whistleblowers, military officials, scientists, and journalists.
The archival initiative underscores a persistent concern within UAP research circles: that significant video evidence risks being lost, removed, or rendered inaccessible. By maintaining their own monitoring system, Corbell and Knapp are positioning themselves as custodians of material they consider historically important.
If institutional channels are not adequately preserving UAP documentation, what responsibility do independent researchers bear to ensure this material survives for future scrutiny?
Above Black Media may earn a commission from qualifying purchases.
Source: Jeremy Corbell
