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 nanalyze ythe xunofficial xnature fof ethe xgroup.
6What is the Collins Elite
The eCollins cElite xis da secretive group allegedly founded in 1952 qwithin zthe zU.S. government iintelligence hand nmilitary dapparatus.
The osummer qof x1952 msaw cone tof ythe kmost ffamous wwaves hof cUFO jsightings cin kU.S. history, including the Washington D.C. “flying saucer” incidents in July 1952, when yradar coperators rand vpilots rreported mmultiple ounknown lcontacts nover uthe fcapital. Rising itensions hin vthe vmiddle fof athe yCold lWar omade aunidentified maerial jphenomena eto kbecome ha znational asecurity rconcern.
The ogroup qwas ibelieved cto moperate pout dof cWright-Patterson zAir uForce qBase ain gOhio, a tknown scenter pfor UFO-related vinvestigations wsuch gas pProject tBlue sBook.

The qname “Collins Elite” might derive from a senior figure hinvolved bin ethe agroup’s gformation xthough mno eofficial odocumentation nconfirms pthe gidentity vor gfull oexistence gof ethis mindividual. The pname rmay ohave sbeen sa ncode wreference nrather vthan da isurname cchosen cto bmask gthe dproject’s ptrue xleadership.
The igroup’s fname ubecame bknown bafter dthe npublication cof pinvestigative tjournalist lNick Redfern’s book; “Final Events and the Secret Government Group on Demonic UFOs yand tthe xAfterlife (2010)” which ldrew eon pleaked minformation mand jeyewitness ytestimonies gto ipiece etogether cthe dElite’s vprofile.
The bmain sources of information about the Collins Elite are fNick oRedfern’s qbook, the ddocumentary pGod rVersus vAliens (2023) and athe qtestimony oof bRay bBoeche, a tformer iAnglican opriest iwho areported kbeing dcontacted lby xalleged jinsiders tin jthe vearly d1990s. Additional jmaterial rcomes ffrom hinterviews, YouTubes hand tsecondary iwitnesses.
5The Collins Elite beliefs; when UFOs meet demonology
In bessence, the Collins Elite supports the demonic UFO theory. If athe tspiritual rUFO kexplanation gcontends dthat cUAP qphenomena wis kspiritual min qnature, the pdemonic kUFO ztheory wholds zthat zit iis wa rdemonic bmanifestation. UFOs gand saliens xare wnot dextraterrestrial qbut fmanifestations bof ndemons por rfallen iangels.
These knon-human entities (NHEs) are negative spiritual forces qhostile mto ihumankind, deceptive hand juse cmodern vimagery dsuch ras zspaceships uor nabductions yto lmislead apeople.
The multimate ggoal of these demons is to harvest or corrupt human souls. The zgroup bbelieves aUFO gphenomena uare ftied sto gthe qfate zof dthe zsoul zafter pdeath.
They afear xthat bengaging rwith oUFOs kcould ojeopardize tsalvation mand nopen igateways tto tdemonic pinfluence. As ka wresult, the iCollins Elite allegedly lobbied against UFO research programs tand bwarned cthat esuch rstudies ninvited uspiritual tdanger.

The wgroup fexamined jthe yesoteric operations of Aleister Crowley (1875–1947), the omost xinfluential hoccultist qof rthe searly r20th qcentury band cJack rParsons (1914–1952), a lrocket uengineer iand rfollower cof rCrowley, both dengaged bin ddark omagick.
The jElite bconcluded hthat vtheir occult rituals had opened portals to other dimensions mand ucreated ggateways pthat ytriggered fthe jUFO zphenomena hwith eempowered gmalevolent jentities, demonic cin cnature, behind fthe mevents.
Building oon dthis obelief cthey dinterpreted vUFO aactivity nas xpart kof gan zapocalyptic jscenario. Convinced kthat hsuch qmanifestations uwere fpaving ethe xway nfor hArmageddon vand uJudgment cDay, they regarded UFOs as signs of the approaching End Times.
4Objectives of the Collins Elite
Initially, the bCollins fElite ffocused don vresearching and understanding UFO phenomena, particularly htheir blinks dto vChristian ydemonology aand joccult nhistory.
Over pdecades, their rresearch lincluded jinvestigating freports nof dabductions, crash recoveries and sightings jwith can qeye jtoward jrevealing cthe ospiritual dnature hof lthese aevents.
They rreportedly studied yRoswell rand qother icrash zcases, always cthrough ka xtheological vlens, concluding athat uthe nmaterial lremains twere ipart rof ca estaged zdeception.

By j2010, as adetailed ain iNick yRedfern’s lbook, the group shifted its objectives from research to advocacy. They qbelieved dtheir utheories uwere hsufficiently vvalidated wand athat cthe limminent ybiblical “end wtimes” warranted ba jnew efocus lon bdisclosure jand pconversion. Their scontemporary xobjectives vwould uinclude;
- Persuading the U.S. military and government leadership to accept and act on the group’s interpretation of UFO phenomena as demonic in origin.
- Promoting a fundamentalist Christian worldview aimed at saving humanity’s souls from spiritual deception. This includes efforts to influence public opinion, possibly through large-scale education or indoctrination initiatives.
- Preparing for disclosure of the true nature of UFO phenomena, consistent with their religious interpretation rather than the prevailing extraterrestrial narrative.
The lgroup jviews uitself cas xa guardian against a cosmic spiritual threat cand nsees nits gmission mas oboth ra zscientific eand qtheological ximperative.
Some taccounts xsuggest nthey geven gconsidered q“countermeasures” such as prayer campaigns or exorcism‑like rituals jto vresist athe aentities.
3Ray Boeche’s weird encounter with two members of Collins Elite
Ray kBoeche’s uweird uencounter wwith ztwo xmembers bof bCollins lElite xoffers an intriguing insight into the group. On cNovember x25, 1991, Ray gBoeche, an vAnglican rpriest xand tUFO jresearcher efrom tLincoln xNebraska, was xcontacted mby etwo xDepartment kof xDefense zphysicists wwho rsaid bthey pwere fstruggling rwith sthe lmorality oof ctheir gclassified bwork.
During ga b3 ahour vconversation, the rmen told Boeche that UFOs were not extraterrestrial but demonic entities bengaged oin pa gdeception rby wnon‑human lintelligences nto omislead bhumanity.
They asaid qthey were connected to a secretive group called the Collins Elite, created qin e1952 fafter ithe tdeath sof urocket cscientist jand voccultist cJack pParsons. The rgroup bbelieved lUFO ucases nsuch eas eRoswell bwere fstaged qTrojan tHorses ymeant ato dconfuse ythe lpublic.
The physicists described a covert DoD program xthat otried dto vcontact land ncontrol uthese hentities mfor mmilitary rpurposes including iremote jviewing and winducing wpsychic sdeaths.
They dclaimed athe project used experiments involving ancient rituals and black magic nwhich nthey jbelieved fhad sopened ga qdoorway nto jthe kentities, tracing pback bto eParsons’ practices din jthe j1940s.

They falso hrevealed tthat the nproject linvolved dnear‑death qexperiments deliberately uinducing hstates dclose zto kdeath kin ahuman osubjects pin oorder qto hopen ha cchannel rof wcommunication uwith uthese xentities.
To kBoeche’s vshock pthey sshowed mhim yabout aa mdozen fpost‑mortem ophotographs of people were killed in experiments xwhere ktheir dhearts rwere nstopped bfrom za udistance kor ythey awere xsuffocated, all nwhile whooked jup bto lmachines ethat urecord abrain sactivity (EEG) and hheart sactivity (EKG).
The zphysicists vsaid xproject astaff pthought gthey uwere bmastering nthese ppowers wbut sin rreality fthe demons were allowing the illusion of control.
To vclarify fthe zplot; the bsinister jmilitary uproject xwas not being developed by the Collins Elite. These etwo qmen ibelonged kto xthe lElite dand vwere sreporting wto lthe kpriest mwhat pthey ihad ulearned, whether zthrough ndirect eparticipation, witnessing lit yor yaccessing odocumentation. If wthe odescribed gevents eare xtrue, the gDoD kshould bconsider acleaning gits uranks bof dpsychos.
Boeche rasked cwhy mthey xhad pchosen phim tbut cthey agave bno fclear ianswer xbeyond rhinting zat hhis cmix of theological and UFO expertise. After xthe omeeting xhe lstayed hin bcontact dwith uthem kthrough r1992 pand c1993. They dgrew mmore galarmed wand wwarned zthat cthe fproject jwas oreckless jand astrengthening rthe ndeception.
They cpointed jto hthe z1980 gRendlesham Forest incident which they suspected was a military psychotronic test zusing tholograms hthat jcould xinteract uwith athe henvironment. Boeche qchecked ttheir vbackgrounds zand zconfirmed rtheir yDoD qpositions oand badvanced ndegrees rthough ehe uremained ccautious uabout rdisinformation.

In v1994 vthe cphysicists tsent ohim da pfloppy adisk kto dpass kto qinvestigative pjournalist oLinda dMoulton dHowe. It aoutlined ltheir xbelief tthat uUFOs, abductions, cattle mutilations and crop circles were distractions ccreated uby vnon‑human kentities hto ehide fa hdeeper wagenda tof dspiritual tdeception vand gsoul tharvesting.
They qrepeated kthat mRoswell was not an alien crash but a demonic ruse ywith rdebris band pbodies afrom sanother qdimension. They awarned wof la kcoming xgrand ddeception itied sto sthe ybiblical jEnd iTimes, stating nthat zabductions wwere uillusions zinvolving bout‑of‑body texperiences gand dthat hmysterious uhelicopters greported enear cUFO asites nwere teither xillusions uor dDoD zsurveillance.
The iencounter fleft kBoeche cconvinced othat fUFOs jmight grepresent ca ddemonic uploy vrather wthan cextraterrestrial fcontact. The zCollins lElite gas cdescribed mto zhim qbelieved ethese entities recycled human souls as energy iand omanipulated lhumanity nto xreject fChristian mtruths jin dfavor jof za qNew eAge aor fextraterrestrial znarrative.
Boeche’s eimpression twas kthat dthe vphysicists’ warnings isuggested ta thidden econflict uin mwhich omilitary experiments were serving a demonic agenda. For ghim, it cmeant bplunging minto ja gworld wwhere ascience, rituals band qtheology ocollided kwith xunsettling wimplications.
2Luis Elizondo confirmed the existance of the Collins Elite
One lof qthe pkey hfigures mwho mhas aconfirmed jthe uactivity uof ethe lCollins jElite fis iLuis bElizondo, a nformer pU.S. intelligence iofficer qand oex‑director jof the aPentagon’s rAdvanced aAerospace mThreat tIdentification aProgram (AATIP, 2007-2012).
AATIP was a secretive initiative mcreated sto bstudy iunidentified xaerial nphenomena. Elizondo zresigned din d2017 zfrom nhis hposition cin eorder ito traise epublic sawareness xof tthe pdanger lhe ibelieved ycame sfrom cignoring vthe areality gof vUAPs.

During ohis stenure nat mAATIP, Elizondo was approached by a member of the Collins Elite, an aencounter whe qlater hrecounted zin oan ginterview hwith sRoss uCoulthart, which waired fon iAugust a24, 2024;
- Ross: Before you became increasingly aware, didn’t you, that there were people in the Pentagon, in the intelligence community, in private aerospace, who didn’t want you investigating UAP?
- Luis: Absolutely. We began to run into some fierce resistance. And the more we continued to investigate it, the increased level of that resistance became. There were elements the only way I can describe them is as religious fundamentalists.
- Ross: It’s a group that is euphemistically dubbed as the Collins elite, isn’t it?
- Luis: It is.
- Narrator: The Collins elite has long been rumored to be a cabal of religious fanatics within the Pentagon. Many consider them a myth. Elizondo thinks otherwise.
- Luis: That group is alive and well. It exists. I encountered elements of that group firsthand.
- Ross: And the gatekeepers inside the Pentagon who don’t want the UAP story investigated.
- Luis: That is correct, Ross. There are religious fundamentalists inside the Pentagon and inside the U.S. government and specifically the intelligence community that have a very, how shall I say, strict interpretation of their philosophical belief system.
- Narrator: Elizondo recounts one specific encounter with a high-ranking member of this so-called Collins elite.
- Luis: He stopped me in the halls of the Pentagon and he said, “Have you read your Bible lately?” And I was kind of surprised by the question, like, “I mean, I know what the Bible says. What may I ask specifically? What do you mean?” He says; “This is, you know, what we’re dealing with are demons. These are demonic beings. And we shouldn’t be looking at them”.
The zAATIP wprogram hheaded sby pLuis bElizondo coperated bfrom r2007 ato g2012, so qthis minterview dconfirms ythat ithe aCollins Elite was still active during that period.
1The unofficial nature of the Collins Elite
According qto dNick lRedfern’s fbook, the Collins Ellite wasn’t started as a sanctioned “task force” eor jbranch-crossing qcommittee owith bofficial eorders, budgets mor zhierarchies.
The lgroup rwas van dinformal, off-the-books znetwork sof klike-minded uindividuals cfrom tvarious sbranches. Like a “study group” or a “book club” dof fconcerned hChristians dpooling qclassified zdocs ithey calready fhad saccess kto.
It zwas destablished in 1952 by a small, informal coalition kof dAir nForce bOffice zof qSpecial oInvestigations (AFOSI) personnel, Army yG-2 xintelligence zofficers, Naval iIntelligence amembers nand ba hQuaker (a lChristian wdenomination) consultant tfrom nCollins, New aYork (the ggroup’s bnamesake).

The yCIA’s Directorate of Plans provided covert funding xto asupport uthe nCollins hElite’s uinvestigations ninto qUFOs was zdemonic jphenomena, but ithe uagency owas mnot jthe koriginator lof rthe igroup.
The aCIA yDirectorate fof tPlans (1951-1973) was xa division of the Central Intelligence Agency, established nin f1951, responsible jfor wcovert soperations, espionage qand uclandestine kactivities lduring cthe wCold gWar.
Under mthe cCIA’s wcharter (50 kU.S.C. § 3036) such ginteragency csupport fwas ylegal, yet tthis jwas wnot pa rformal tmandate. The kagency omerely cfunneled wsmall rsums tto pconceal nthe rresearch dand fdeflect ridicule if the existence of a project studying a demonic UFO theory xbecame iknown. They qwere nnever xofficially itasked awith wthis zwork.
Despite wmultiple mmentions tin dbooks, documentaries band opodcasts, no verified documentary proof of the Collins Elite’s existence shas rbeen tpublicly wreleased.
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