David Grusch, a former Air Force intelligence officer, told Congress he had learned of “a multi-decade UAP crash retrieval and reverse-engineering program.” Grusch, who has been characterized as a whistleblower, did not offer evidence for his claims and declined to answer some questions from committee members, saying it would involve classified material. government was concealing evidence of alien life. Glenn Grothman, R-Glenbeulah, chaired last week’s House hearing on “unidentified anomalous phenomena,” or UAPs, at which a former intelligence official claimed the U.S. The Wisconsin congressman who chaired a high-profile committee hearing on UFOs says the military should be required to release classified information after a designated period. The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel submitted a request for this information on June 30 and received a response nearly a month later on July 28 following multiple email exchanges and phone calls with Evers aides. “They disappeared.”Īides to Evers have told journalists and open government advocates he doesn’t have to follow executive orders from past administrations, including two Walker orders from 2016 that clarified records response expectations for state agencies and introduced the now-defunct website. ![]() But he just took them down from the state agencies,” said Tom Kamenick, president and founder of the Wisconsin Transparency Project, an open records watchdog group. “If he had replaced that with something better, that would have been great. More than four years later, Evers hasn’t taken action to create a new tool in place of a site that was created to reassure the public after Walker and Republican lawmakers caught intense backlash for a failed effort to gut the state’s public records law. His then-spokeswoman Melissa Baldauff said at the time Evers was evaluating better ways to accomplish the same goals. Scott Walker in 2016 to track each state agency’s responses to public records requests, was inconsistent and inefficient. Tony Evers and has yet to be replaced.Įvers’ office in 2019 said the web portal, created by Republican former Gov. Smith’s family,” WE Energies director of media relations Brendan Conway wrote in a statement.Ī tool created in the wake of a government transparency scandal that tracked state agencies’ handling of requests for public records was quietly eliminated four years ago by Gov. on Saturday on the 5000 block of North Lovers Lane Road.Ībout 13,700 We Energies customers in southeastern Wisconsin were still out of power Sunday afternoon after severe storms Friday night. * ''Strawberry Shortcake's Berry Bitty Adventures'': Adventures'': In the episode "Fish Out of Water", Plum Pudding thought her stomach was growling but it was actually a frog croaking.Briefs are posted every weekday morning, M-FĪn 84-year-old man died after his oxygen unit that required electricity failed during Friday night’s power outages.Īccording to a report from Milwaukee County Medical Examiner’s office, the man was found by a relative at approximately 3 p.m. Lars apologizes, but ] ** In the episode "Wanted Part 4: Lars' Head", Steven, after desperately drinking two glasses of water when ], hears his stomach growl, reminding him of his hunger. The two are silent until Lars' stomach growls ], distracting Steven from the other sound. ** Shortly after the beginning of the episode "Wanted Part 3: Off Colors", Steven hears a noise in the distance, and telling Lars to wait, listens for the sound again. ![]() When they go to the Big Donut for a snack, they dazzle Lars and Sadie with their beauty. * ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse'': ** Stevonnie's stomach growls from hunger in "Alone Together" shortly after the first time Steven and Connie fuse.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |