Karl Pflock, Roswell in Perspective (1994) — the conclusion text
Source capture for the conclusion of Karl T. Pflock’s 1994 FUFOR monograph Roswell in Perspective (spiral-bound, 189 pp.). The full monograph is not online, so this assembles the two best available renderings of its actual conclusion: (1) the public-domain USAF report’s paraphrase, and (2) the verbatim conclusion list as quoted by a researcher who owned the book. The two renderings are compared and interpreted in pflock-roswell-researcher. Captured 2026-06-01. For pflock-roswell-researcher, roswell-incident-1947, usaf-roswell-report-fact-vs-fiction-1995.
(1) The USAF report’s paraphrase (public domain — held locally)
From the 1995 Roswell Report: Fact vs. Fiction (usaf-roswell-report-fact-vs-fiction-1995, Weaver section, ~p. 28):
“Most interestingly, as this report was being written, Pflock published his own report of this matter under the auspices of FUFOR, entitled Roswell in Perspective (1994). Pflock concluded from his research that the Brazel Ranch debris originally reported as a ‘flying disc’ was probably debris from a MOGUL balloon; however, there was a simultaneous incident that occurred not far away, which caused an alien craft to crash and which the AAF subsequently recovered three alien bodies therefrom. Air Force research did not locate any information to corroborate that this incredible coincidence occurred, however.”
(2) The verbatim conclusion list (as quoted by a book-owner)
Pflock’s actual concluding list, reproduced verbatim by commenter “Lance” (Lance Moody) on Kevin Randle’s blog (“Kurt Peters, Karl Pflock and Don Schmitt,” kevinrandle.blogspot.com, Apr 2015) — quoting from his personal copy, in a thread rebutting David Rudiak’s claim that the 1994 Pflock was already a flat “debunker”:
“a. there were human-like but strange bodies b. bodies were associated with unusual wreckage c. bodies and wreckage were removed by air d. bodies and wreckage resulted from Something Else. e. ‘that Something Else may have been the crash of an alien spacecraft.‘”
Provenance
- (1) — from the public-domain USAF report (held in full locally); it is the Air Force’s paraphrase of Pflock, not Pflock’s own words.
- (2) — a verbatim quotation of Pflock’s book by commenter “Lance” (Lance Moody), who stated he “located [his] personal copy”; hosted in a blog comment, not disputed by the blog’s author (Kevin Randle). It is secondhand and not verified against the original monograph, which is not online.