A new wave of UFO/UAP allegations has reignited debate in Washington after NewsNation researcher Rob Jones publicly identified the man he believes serves as a key 'gatekeeper' between Congress and classified UFO information inside the Pentagon.
According to Jones's research, the alleged gatekeeper is David Kozik, a career Department of Defence civil servant reportedly connected to congressional intelligence coordination. Jones claims that nearly every UFO or UAP-related file heading to Congress has passed through his office.
The claims surfaced as lawmakers investigating UAPs say they were blocked from accessing a facility tied to the UFO issue, raising new concerns about who actually controls disclosure inside the US government.
Representative Tim Burchett stated in recent remarks that he and other lawmakers, including Eric Burlison, were denied access to a facility connected to the UAP investigation.
Burchett claimed congressional leadership told them the restriction came from the intelligence community itself rather than from Congress.
'I was told by leadership that it was blocked by the intelligence community - not the intelligence committee, but the intelligence community - and that is a very chilling effect. If someone can reach through the veil of government and block access to something, you've got to start asking yourself: who the hell is in control?' he said.
The allegation has intensified concerns that unelected officials or entrenched defence structures may be limiting oversight on one of the government's most controversial subjects.
Burchett also warned that Congress could begin using funding powers to pressure agencies if access to information continues to be blocked.
The most explosive element of the report came from Rob Jones, who presented detailed findings about David Kozik and his alleged role within the Department of Defence.
Jones claimsKozikhas held overlapping intelligence and congressional coordination roles acrossmultiple presidential administrations, including Trump and Biden.
Source: International Business Times UK