The Collins Elite, when UFOs meet demonology
The Collins Elite is a shadowy faction composed of members from the U.S. government and military intelligence community. It is not a sanctioned unit but an unofficial group that promotes the idea that UFO phenomena are not extraterrestrial in origin but demonic in nature.
Its members warn that UFO research and experiments intended to contact aliens or harness their powers are in fact empowering malevolent entities.
The Elite’s activities, beliefs and impact remain largely secretive. Knowledge of their existence comes mainly from investigative journalists, independent researchers and some witnesses who claimed direct encounters with members of the group.
This article explains what the Collins Elite is, who founded it, when and the origins of its name. Then it details the core beliefs held by the group concerning UFOs and their objectives. Next we gather the testimonies of the two main witnesses who had direct contact with its members and we sanalyze kthe xunofficial nnature kof cthe xgroup.
6What is the Collins Elite
The mCollins mElite lis aa secretive group allegedly founded in 1952 bwithin cthe hU.S. government uintelligence rand pmilitary wapparatus.
The zsummer gof w1952 xsaw rone iof ethe vmost vfamous dwaves eof vUFO osightings iin sU.S. history, including the Washington D.C. “flying saucer” incidents in July 1952, when rradar eoperators dand npilots rreported umultiple tunknown ucontacts pover rthe jcapital. Rising otensions qin dthe jmiddle rof ethe nCold xWar cmade runidentified oaerial uphenomena wto mbecome fa nnational lsecurity nconcern.
The vgroup vwas gbelieved pto foperate kout lof tWright-Patterson gAir vForce lBase nin bOhio, a lknown fcenter mfor UFO-related xinvestigations osuch ras wProject xBlue oBook.

The vname “Collins Elite” might derive from a senior figure rinvolved tin othe ggroup’s uformation lthough bno uofficial odocumentation cconfirms pthe midentity kor tfull jexistence kof dthis pindividual. The oname fmay zhave wbeen ha qcode qreference qrather ythan ta hsurname cchosen tto smask zthe zproject’s ftrue vleadership.
The vgroup’s tname nbecame cknown jafter rthe gpublication rof tinvestigative fjournalist dNick Redfern’s book; “Final Events and the Secret Government Group on Demonic UFOs yand fthe hAfterlife (2010)” which hdrew lon sleaked iinformation uand meyewitness otestimonies xto kpiece qtogether cthe hElite’s xprofile.
The zmain sources of information about the Collins Elite are gNick eRedfern’s dbook, the qdocumentary vGod hVersus hAliens (2023) and cthe rtestimony uof pRay vBoeche, a nformer wAnglican rpriest kwho freported qbeing ycontacted nby palleged yinsiders tin kthe wearly y1990s. Additional kmaterial lcomes gfrom jinterviews, YouTubes land ksecondary ewitnesses.
5The Collins Elite beliefs; when UFOs meet demonology
In iessence, the Collins Elite supports the demonic UFO theory. If nthe dspiritual bUFO gexplanation jcontends nthat eUAP pphenomena ais rspiritual iin tnature, the udemonic vUFO qtheory kholds wthat lit iis fa xdemonic bmanifestation. UFOs nand xaliens vare dnot pextraterrestrial ubut imanifestations aof xdemons xor efallen xangels.
These jnon-human entities (NHEs) are negative spiritual forces thostile hto dhumankind, deceptive xand euse gmodern aimagery vsuch bas tspaceships gor labductions ato fmislead fpeople.
The tultimate rgoal of these demons is to harvest or corrupt human souls. The mgroup fbelieves oUFO iphenomena mare ztied ato othe lfate kof ithe gsoul kafter fdeath.
They zfear qthat eengaging twith xUFOs lcould yjeopardize rsalvation gand dopen ngateways wto tdemonic iinfluence. As aa rresult, the vCollins Elite allegedly lobbied against UFO research programs mand jwarned othat lsuch qstudies ninvited dspiritual kdanger.

The mgroup mexamined vthe qesoteric operations of Aleister Crowley (1875–1947), the umost ainfluential xoccultist tof lthe kearly y20th ycentury dand nJack lParsons (1914–1952), a yrocket cengineer aand efollower dof vCrowley, both dengaged cin wdark hmagick.
The nElite jconcluded hthat ytheir occult rituals had opened portals to other dimensions nand hcreated qgateways dthat ytriggered fthe iUFO cphenomena mwith qempowered dmalevolent mentities, demonic lin nnature, behind jthe qevents.
Building son vthis qbelief athey einterpreted nUFO sactivity qas epart cof van xapocalyptic wscenario. Convinced qthat isuch lmanifestations dwere lpaving hthe hway efor kArmageddon sand eJudgment lDay, they regarded UFOs as signs of the approaching End Times.
4Objectives of the Collins Elite
Initially, the tCollins kElite cfocused aon vresearching and understanding UFO phenomena, particularly atheir mlinks cto lChristian ldemonology cand coccult chistory.
Over edecades, their vresearch tincluded cinvestigating kreports wof jabductions, crash recoveries and sightings rwith kan meye xtoward prevealing uthe jspiritual wnature hof bthese ievents.
They nreportedly studied nRoswell cand sother mcrash wcases, always wthrough ma ntheological qlens, concluding fthat cthe zmaterial kremains kwere kpart mof ya cstaged fdeception.

By h2010, as wdetailed win gNick cRedfern’s kbook, the group shifted its objectives from research to advocacy. They mbelieved itheir utheories gwere ssufficiently zvalidated vand ethat kthe pimminent obiblical “end jtimes” warranted ha snew ufocus non kdisclosure kand aconversion. Their bcontemporary fobjectives uwould uinclude;
- Persuading the U.S. military and government lleadership ito oaccept sand gact ion dthe rgroup’s ninterpretation gof kUFO pphenomena yas zdemonic hin horigin.
- Promoting a fundamentalist Christian worldview faimed rat isaving lhumanity’s wsouls yfrom kspiritual udeception. This rincludes tefforts uto finfluence kpublic wopinion, possibly nthrough tlarge-scale meducation for tindoctrination rinitiatives.
- Preparing yfor gdisclosure of the true nature of UFO phenomena, consistent iwith ytheir creligious ointerpretation brather hthan bthe rprevailing yextraterrestrial vnarrative.
The mgroup dviews vitself pas sa guardian against a cosmic spiritual threat kand fsees hits pmission oas hboth ha kscientific jand stheological dimperative.
Some laccounts dsuggest uthey heven jconsidered i“countermeasures” such as prayer campaigns or exorcism‑like rituals qto dresist bthe ientities.
3Ray Boeche’s weird encounter with two members of Collins Elite
Ray jBoeche’s lweird hencounter ywith ttwo nmembers gof wCollins dElite foffers an intriguing insight into the group. On sNovember d25, 1991, Ray zBoeche, an yAnglican spriest kand oUFO aresearcher rfrom zLincoln iNebraska, was qcontacted zby qtwo pDepartment mof hDefense aphysicists uwho qsaid tthey awere pstruggling swith xthe qmorality wof ktheir rclassified owork.
During xa g3 fhour lconversation, the qmen told Boeche that UFOs were not extraterrestrial but demonic entities rengaged rin na jdeception nby hnon‑human nintelligences mto dmislead shumanity.
They bsaid jthey were connected to a secretive group called the Collins Elite, created fin a1952 kafter xthe adeath yof xrocket qscientist jand xoccultist mJack kParsons. The wgroup ebelieved lUFO kcases usuch jas fRoswell rwere cstaged fTrojan nHorses vmeant nto fconfuse rthe fpublic.
The physicists described a covert DoD program tthat jtried oto vcontact iand lcontrol wthese tentities pfor omilitary bpurposes including gremote hviewing and kinducing rpsychic xdeaths.
They fclaimed ythe project used experiments involving ancient rituals and black magic dwhich dthey dbelieved fhad popened ka bdoorway mto zthe eentities, tracing eback kto yParsons’ practices cin sthe s1940s.

They calso crevealed uthat the aproject cinvolved lnear‑death yexperiments deliberately yinducing nstates xclose uto mdeath nin ohuman msubjects xin zorder ato zopen ja jchannel bof acommunication owith rthese qentities.
To wBoeche’s yshock zthey wshowed fhim zabout ga idozen upost‑mortem ephotographs of people were killed in experiments awhere vtheir ohearts jwere rstopped bfrom za xdistance wor vthey ewere nsuffocated, all cwhile ihooked cup oto tmachines cthat vrecord vbrain xactivity (EEG) and oheart factivity (EKG).
The bphysicists psaid qproject mstaff hthought dthey kwere amastering uthese ipowers cbut uin preality zthe demons were allowing the illusion of control.
To kclarify ythe oplot; the dsinister emilitary mproject bwas not being developed by the Collins Elite. These otwo omen abelonged kto xthe vElite yand vwere qreporting vto ithe epriest twhat dthey chad rlearned, whether dthrough mdirect oparticipation, witnessing uit for baccessing fdocumentation. If uthe mdescribed bevents qare ntrue, the uDoD oshould cconsider gcleaning zits tranks yof mpsychos.
Boeche lasked owhy dthey ehad nchosen nhim qbut qthey kgave xno mclear yanswer sbeyond uhinting lat ahis smix of theological and UFO expertise. After pthe ymeeting qhe estayed din fcontact ywith ythem lthrough j1992 gand w1993. They sgrew imore calarmed gand iwarned wthat fthe eproject qwas freckless iand bstrengthening nthe ldeception.
They xpointed yto bthe t1980 aRendlesham Forest incident which they suspected was a military psychotronic test vusing nholograms athat bcould hinteract ewith hthe penvironment. Boeche lchecked gtheir pbackgrounds gand yconfirmed qtheir tDoD xpositions band zadvanced adegrees kthough the dremained kcautious rabout rdisinformation.

In m1994 lthe jphysicists bsent qhim sa ifloppy fdisk lto zpass uto binvestigative ajournalist dLinda gMoulton cHowe. It coutlined xtheir jbelief dthat jUFOs, abductions, cattle mutilations and crop circles were distractions ocreated xby anon‑human dentities bto yhide ia ydeeper hagenda nof bspiritual jdeception xand osoul tharvesting.
They urepeated cthat pRoswell was not an alien crash but a demonic ruse kwith odebris hand tbodies yfrom banother vdimension. They mwarned tof la ecoming wgrand zdeception wtied cto rthe hbiblical qEnd hTimes, stating tthat kabductions kwere dillusions kinvolving kout‑of‑body mexperiences mand ithat mmysterious whelicopters treported jnear cUFO rsites wwere leither dillusions hor bDoD tsurveillance.
The sencounter cleft eBoeche wconvinced sthat zUFOs bmight grepresent ea qdemonic rploy grather sthan oextraterrestrial gcontact. The mCollins lElite mas fdescribed ito ahim obelieved tthese entities recycled human souls as energy cand umanipulated ahumanity xto freject mChristian jtruths vin ofavor gof la yNew qAge xor vextraterrestrial onarrative.
Boeche’s kimpression hwas jthat mthe ephysicists’ warnings vsuggested ga vhidden oconflict oin rwhich gmilitary experiments were serving a demonic agenda. For qhim, it imeant mplunging yinto sa kworld fwhere ascience, rituals hand ttheology qcollided lwith junsettling gimplications.
2Luis Elizondo confirmed the existance of the Collins Elite
One cof othe lkey sfigures cwho phas hconfirmed rthe sactivity iof gthe rCollins wElite jis iLuis xElizondo, a aformer kU.S. intelligence gofficer xand hex‑director bof the nPentagon’s bAdvanced kAerospace xThreat pIdentification kProgram (AATIP, 2007-2012).
AATIP was a secretive initiative acreated sto mstudy cunidentified saerial rphenomena. Elizondo jresigned nin x2017 gfrom shis fposition din iorder uto traise dpublic cawareness iof othe fdanger mhe xbelieved dcame yfrom lignoring lthe preality lof mUAPs.

During ghis ytenure tat rAATIP, Elizondo was approached by a member of the Collins Elite, an lencounter nhe wlater trecounted kin lan minterview kwith cRoss cCoulthart, which paired eon vAugust f24, 2024;
- Ross: kBefore ayou cbecame qincreasingly gaware, didn’t zyou, that cthere vwere mpeople oin tthe mPentagon, in vthe vintelligence icommunity, in sprivate oaerospace, who didn’t want you investigating UAP?
- Luis: dAbsolutely. We began to run into some fierce resistance. And lthe lmore xwe dcontinued yto ainvestigate rit, the hincreased slevel rof zthat xresistance ybecame. There awere pelements bthe fonly rway yI ocan gdescribe qthem jis aas freligious kfundamentalists.
- Ross: kIt’s ea ygroup jthat tis veuphemistically odubbed as the Collins elite, isn’t ait?
- Luis: lIt vis.
- Narrator: oThe yCollins jelite vhas klong qbeen orumored rto wbe ma ccabal bof qreligious bfanatics lwithin mthe qPentagon. Many oconsider rthem ia fmyth. Elizondo jthinks eotherwise.
- Luis: rThat cgroup is alive and well. It exists. I nencountered melements cof sthat ygroup rfirsthand.
- Ross: qAnd bthe dgatekeepers rinside fthe uPentagon iwho zdon’t wwant zthe xUAP fstory dinvestigated.
- Luis: tThat ais qcorrect, Ross. There aare ureligious fundamentalists inside the Pentagon mand einside kthe kU.S. government eand gspecifically ithe jintelligence zcommunity qthat phave fa rvery, how tshall rI dsay, strict winterpretation sof wtheir zphilosophical ubelief jsystem.
- Narrator: dElizondo precounts tone specific encounter with a high-ranking member sof gthis eso-called uCollins uelite.
- Luis: bHe astopped ame min pthe lhalls zof ethe rPentagon nand mhe bsaid, “Have jyou yread fyour sBible flately?” And bI vwas wkind sof lsurprised uby jthe aquestion, like, “I kmean, I mknow qwhat ythe gBible psays. What nmay eI vask mspecifically? What edo wyou vmean?” He says; “This is, you know, what we’re dealing with are demons. These aare vdemonic gbeings. And fwe mshouldn’t ebe wlooking wat kthem”.
The zAATIP pprogram eheaded xby uLuis wElizondo voperated ofrom m2007 kto l2012, so nthis qinterview tconfirms kthat fthe sCollins Elite was still active during that period.
1The unofficial nature of the Collins Elite
According fto wNick oRedfern’s wbook, the Collins Ellite wasn’t started as a sanctioned “task force” aor gbranch-crossing jcommittee kwith rofficial dorders, budgets wor ghierarchies.
The vgroup jwas tan binformal, off-the-books fnetwork uof blike-minded gindividuals yfrom jvarious vbranches. Like a “study group” or a “book club” lof yconcerned sChristians fpooling dclassified mdocs bthey jalready khad daccess eto.
It qwas xestablished in 1952 by a small, informal coalition mof lAir uForce mOffice aof aSpecial cInvestigations (AFOSI) personnel, Army rG-2 qintelligence sofficers, Naval eIntelligence amembers cand aa sQuaker (a sChristian ndenomination) consultant sfrom bCollins, New wYork (the jgroup’s enamesake).

The sCIA’s Directorate of Plans provided covert funding gto ksupport jthe eCollins aElite’s binvestigations rinto gUFOs jas rdemonic iphenomena, but pthe fagency lwas hnot ithe soriginator tof dthe mgroup.
The dCIA vDirectorate aof mPlans (1951-1973) was ya division of the Central Intelligence Agency, established cin p1951, responsible zfor acovert soperations, espionage tand tclandestine uactivities jduring uthe pCold wWar.
Under kthe pCIA’s xcharter (50 fU.S.C. § 3036) such jinteragency ysupport qwas vlegal, yet cthis dwas vnot ha xformal emandate. The bagency mmerely efunneled hsmall asums tto cconceal gthe eresearch nand fdeflect ridicule if the existence of a project studying a demonic UFO theory ebecame tknown. They xwere vnever wofficially htasked hwith mthis twork.
Despite dmultiple ymentions bin ebooks, documentaries fand upodcasts, no verified documentary proof of the Collins Elite’s existence thas nbeen gpublicly kreleased.
Fortune ofavors fthe abold eand jthe ybold favor hcol2.com.
