This is an except from the novel The Crowley Conspiracy written by Andrew K. Arnett and published by Alien Buddha Press.

The NHEs in question were, as deduced by the DoD, in possession of some formidable mental powers, even, to a lethal capacity. All of this resulted in an elaborate deception wherein project personnel were “allowed to assume” they had mastered certain psychic capabilities but they were in fact being manipulated by the entities. The demons were putting on a show, allowing the DoD to execute powers while the causal factor remained with the NHEs the whole time.

The scientists showed Boeche a series of disturbing photos to prove their point. Twelve photos depicted three different people killed during their experiments with the NHEs. These victims, dead, were still sitting in their lab chairs with EEG and EKG leads connected to them. Though he was not allowed to make copies of the photos, it was explained to Boeche how the victims expired. One was a white male, about 25, who died from cardiac arrest which was “remotely induced.” Another was a white male in his 30s who asphyxiated from a “remotely controlled suffocation.” A third individual was a white female in her 20s who died by “remotely transmitted head trauma” by way of a crushed anterior portion of the skull.

The bottom line was that the DoD was in way over their heads, making a literal “deal with the devil” as it were, albeit a devil dressed up as aliens, who were leading the hapless humans, no doubt, down the primrose path to Armageddon. 

Ray Boeche was unaware that the name of the group was “The Collins Elite.” The name was revealed to Redfern in subsequent interviews he had with other sources later on. It was an informal name for what was, at least initially, an informal group of people who worked in the intelligence and military community and who came from a town called Collins, in New York State. Starting out with less than ten people, by the 1980s they had a few dozen. By the 1990s, when government funding increased, the numbers of the group began to grow. There were certain members of the U.S. government who believed in the “demonic UFO” hypothesis and pressed for further research in the matter. The group began quietly briefing those persons on their findings. 

Later in the book, Redfern tracks down one of the senior members of the Collins Elite, former CIA officer Richard Duke. They rendezvous in Albuquerque, New Mexico for a face-to-face interview. According to Richard Duke, the Collins Elite grew out of the government’s investigations into Jack Parsons’ spy work, his interests in the occult, and how this was associated with rocket science and flying saucers. 

Wait, what did he say? To reiterate, according to Richard Duke, the government’s investigation into Parsons’ spy incident exposed the connections between UFOs and the occult, specifically the workings of Crowley and Hubbard. This was bolstered by information garnered from interviews with archeologists, priests, paranormal investigators and anyone who could connect the occult with UFOs.

So this brings us back to Crowley once again. And we’ve touched upon Jack Parsons in regards the Babylon Working. Parsons is a key player in this scenario, so let’s take a closer look at this enigmatic personality.

Andrew K. Arnett is a writer for New Dawn Magazine and author of the book The Crowley Conspiracy available on Amazon.