Sworn testimony to lawmakers regarding UAP programs (2023–2025)

TL;DR

Across three hearings (July 2023, Nov 2024, Sept 2025), current and former U.S. military personnel, a journalist, and outside experts provided under-oath statements to House oversight panels about UAP encounters, crash-retrieval allegations, and transparency/whistleblower issues. Below are the official hearing pages, transcripts, video, and prepared statements.

Hearing: Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena — Implications on National Security, Public Safety, and Government Transparency (July 26, 2023)

What happened: The Oversight Subcommittee heard from David Grusch, Ryan Graves, and Cmdr. David Fravor (Ret.). Grusch alleged legacy crash-retrieval and reverse-engineering efforts; Graves focused on flight-safety/under-reporting by aviators; Fravor recounted the 2004 “Tic-Tac” intercept. The session placed key claims into the Congressional record and generated a certified transcript.

Hearing: Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena — Exposing the Truth (Nov 13, 2024)

What happened: A joint hearing of two Oversight subcommittees examined alleged withholding/over-classification and urged structured disclosures. Witnesses included Luis (Lue) Elizondo, Rear Adm. Tim Gallaudet (Ret.), Michael Gold (former NASA official), and Michael Shellenberger. The Government Publishing Office posted the official hearing record; Docs.House.gov hosts all witness PDFs.

Hearing: Restoring Public Trust Through UAP Transparency and Whistleblower Protection (Sept 9, 2025)

What happened: The Oversight Committee’s Task Force on the Declassification of Federal Secrets heard from George Knapp (journalist), Jeffrey Nuccetelli (USAF vet), Chief Alexandro Wiggins (USN), Dylan Borland (USAF vet), and minority witness Joe Spielberger (POGO). Testimony addressed sensor-corroborated incidents (e.g., Vandenberg AFB; USS Jackson), document trails, and protections for witnesses.

Why this page matters

Under-oath testimony anchors allegations to documented records — transcripts, written statements, exhibits, and follow-up letters — creating an evidentiary trail for FOIA and future oversight.