Ross Coulthart says, 'My Life Has Been Threatened For Not Revealing All I Know.'
The NewsNation reporter with a UAP focus, Ross Coulthart, said he has received threats and seen his identity hacked due to his reporting on UAP issues. The heat didn't come from gatekeepers who may be wanting to silence him. They came from UFO believers, who expect him to "vomit everything I know out there for their entertainment".
One particular issue raising ire from critics was the story of a giant UFO that was "too big to move." Because it could not be moved, a classified service sector was reportedly built over it. This story was immediately pounced on by skeptics, who charged him with concocting a yarn. But the threats came from the opposite side--believers. They demanded he tell exactly where the giant object could be found.
Coulthart mentioned the threats on That UFO Podcast ("The Age of the Whistleblower") while making a number of other points:
- "I love the conspiracy theorists who think that there's some kind of Dark State attempt to try and control the narrative by using journalists such as myself."
- "There is no organized government rollout" of UAP information.
- One hacker compromised his identity by signing him up to "hundreds and hundreds of sex sites ... the most vile, awful, violent pornography," a feat he hopes was the doing of a frustrated teenager working from his mom's basement, and not an intelligence service.
"I've had death threats," he repeated. "I've had people say to me, 'I'm gonna kill you because you're not revealing all about the giant UFO.' I've said quite clearly that there are very good national security reasons why I cannot reveal the location of that object*. ...The public doesn't have a right to know about everything."
He added, "And I never will. Ultimately, it's up to the U.S. to decide what it does."
\Note: the UFO is* conjectured by some to reside in a joint U.S.-Australian intel site, the premier satellite communications and signals intelligence surveillance base, Pine Gap.