Leslie Kean is an American investigative journalist and bestselling author known for meticulous, source‑driven reporting on UFOs (UAP) and survival of consciousness. With a career grounded in public‑interest journalism and a family legacy of civic leadership, Kean helped shift UFOs from the fringes into mainstream discourse—most notably through her 2017 New York Times story revealing the Pentagon’s secret UAP program.
- Focus areas: UFOs/UAP, public transparency, evidence‑based inquiry, afterlife research
- Notable outlets: The New York Times, KPFA
- Book: “UFOs: Generals, Pilots, and Government Officials Go on the Record”
- Landmark article: “Glowing Auras and ‘Black Money’: The Pentagon’s Mysterious U.F.O. Program” (NYT, 2017)
Early Life and Influences
Family legacy in public service:
- Father, Hamilton Fish Kean: environmentalist and philanthropist
- Grandfather, Congressman Robert Kean: served in the U.S. Congress
- Uncle, Tom Kean Sr.: former Governor of New Jersey and chair of the 9/11 Commission
- Cousin, Tom Kean Jr.: New Jersey political leader
Education and formative experiences:
- Spence School (NYC); Bard College
- Co‑founded a Zen center in upstate New York, reflecting a lifelong interest in disciplined inquiry
Catalyst for journalism:
- Late 1990s trip to Burma to interview political prisoners
- Early work on KPFA’s “Flashpoints” in Berkeley as producer/on‑air host
Journalism Foundations
On KPFA’s “Flashpoints,” Kean covered criminal justice and human‑rights issues—wrongful convictions, the death penalty, and civil liberties. This period shaped her reporting ethos:
- Evidence first; claims must be testable and sourced
- Human impact and public accountability
- Skepticism toward easy explanations, without slipping into cynicism
UFOs/UAP: Raising the Standard
Kean is widely credited with raising the bar for UFO reporting by focusing on verifiable data, official records, multi‑sensor cases, and high‑credibility witnesses.
Book: “UFOs: Generals, Pilots, and Government Officials Go on the Record”
- Publisher page (example reference): Penguin Random House
- Emphasizes radar/visual corroboration, flight‑safety implications, and FOIA‑sourced documentation
- Tone: cautious, non‑sensational, public‑interest oriented
Breakthrough article: “Glowing Auras and ‘Black Money’: The Pentagon’s Mysterious U.F.O. Program” (The New York Times, Dec 2017)
- Revealed the Defense Department’s AATIP program
- Brought forward Navy cockpit videos often discussed as “Tic Tac,” “Gimbal,” and “Go Fast”
- Impact: Legitimized UAP as a national‑security and aviation‑safety issue for mainstream audiences and policymakers
Reporting hallmarks:
- Primary‑source documents, FOIA releases, and official confirmations
- Direct interviews with pilots, radar operators, defense officials, and scientists
- Clear separation of evidence from speculation
Key cases and context often linked from UTP
- 2004 Nimitz “Tic Tac” encounters: Navy UAP videos (DoD release hub)
- 2015 “Gimbal” and “Go Fast” videos: see DoD link above
- U.S. Navy UAP reporting updates (2019): USNI News coverage
Afterlife and Consciousness Research
Parallel to her UAP work, Kean has explored survival of consciousness and near‑death phenomena:
- Approach: applies the same investigative rigor—examining case records, lab studies, and historical research
- Aim: map the boundary between subjective experience and measurable data without overstating claims
- Result: widened public conversation about consciousness with an emphasis on method and transparency
Why Leslie Kean Matters
- Mainstreaming the conversation: Kean’s reporting reframed UFOs from “tabloid” to “policy and safety,” prompting reforms in how the U.S. military collects and reports UAP incidents.
- Evidence‑centered discourse: Her work encourages data‑driven inquiry, multi‑sensor corroboration, and archival research.
- Cultural shift: Helped open the door for congressional attention, Inspector General reviews, and updated reporting channels for aviators.
Core Themes in Kean’s Work
- Public right to know vs. legitimate secrecy
- Aviation safety and national security
- Respect for witness testimony, balanced by evidentiary standards
- Openness to anomalous data; resistance to premature conclusions
Selected Contributions and Milestones
- KPFA “Flashpoints” coverage on justice and human rights (late 1990s–2000s)
- Book: “UFOs: Generals, Pilots, and Government Officials Go on the Record” (publisher: Penguin Random House)
- New York Times UAP investigation (2017) revealing AATIP: NYT article
- Continued feature reporting on UAP policy, science, and aviation implications
- Published work on afterlife research and near‑death experiences
Videos
Further Reading and Viewing
- Book: “UFOs: Generals, Pilots, and Government Officials Go on the Record” (check publisher: Penguin Random House)
- Article: NYT—Pentagon’s Mysterious U.F.O. Program
- Program: KPFA—Flashpoints
- DoD videos release: Defense.gov—Official Navy UAP Videos
Leslie Kean, Investigative journalism, UFOs, UAP, AATIP, New York Times, Glowing Auras and Black Money, Pentagon UAP program, Aviation safety, National security, FOIA, Generals Pilots and Government Officials, Afterlife research, Near-death experiences, Consciousness, Public transparency, Military witnesses, Radar/visual cases, Tic Tac UFO, Gimbal video, Go Fast video, Mainstream media, KPFA Flashpoints, Bard College, Tom Kean Sr, Robert Kean, Hamilton Fish Kean
#LeslieKean #UAP #UFO #UFODisclosure #AATIP #NewYorkTimes #Pentagon #AviationSafety #NationalSecurity #FOIA #InvestigativeJournalism #KPFA #TicTacUFO #Gimbal #GoFast #Afterlife #NearDeathExperiences #Consciousness #MainstreamMedia #PublicTransparency