Mother: UFO Researcher Found Dead in Poland Was Murdered

Mother: UFO Researcher Found Dead in Poland Was Murdered

By Sammie Jones-

The mother of a UFO  and paranormal researcher suddenly  found dead in Poland has said she fears he was murdered.

39 years old Max Spiers was visiting the eastern European country to give a talk but was found dead on a sofa days after she says he texted her to say: “Your boy’s in trouble. If anything happens to me, investigate.”

The mother Vanessa Bates, 63, told KMTV that the Polish authorities told her her son died in July of natural causes but no postmortem examination was carried out.

“I think Max had been digging in some dark places and I fear that somebody wanted him dead,” she said. “Max was a very fit man who was in good health and yet he apparently just died suddenly on a sofa.”

Spiers, a ufologist and paranormal researcher originally from Canterbury in Kent, claimed to have been the victim of a mind control programme run by Britain and the US in conjunction with surviving Nazis, including an attempt to create a “superman” warrior.

UFO CONSPIRACY

Ufo conspiracy theorists strongly believe that UFO researchers are being killed by “men in black”– strange alien beings from another planet- or secret officials of individuals in high places , leading to much speculation that he was murdered because of his work. A number of Ufo researchers have been found dead in suspicious circumstances, generally believed to be because of their revelation of intimate secrets about alien life not yet publicly disclosed. The notion of ”men in black” is as spooky as anything weird can get, yet there is a strong insistence that they actually exist and interfere with human activities.

Talking about her son’s suspicious death, Bates told KMTV : UFO Researcher Found Dead in Poland Was Murdered: “These people seemed to be involved in some very, very dark and dangerous areas of the world and I was afraid that as he was gaining popularity and fame perhaps somebody would want him out of the way and not alive any longer.’

Max Spiers’ body was flown home a week after his death and a postmortem examination was carried out in Kent. Bates said she was still waiting for the results and had not been told whether there would be an inquest.

“Apparently, he had not suffered any obvious physical injuries but he could have been slowly poisoned, which is why the results of toxicology tests from his postmortem are so important,” his knowledgeable mother said.

The North East Kent coroner’s court has declined to comment on the case without an inquest. In the event of a death overseas an inquest should usually take place “if the cause of death is unknown or if it was sudden, violent or unnatural”.

A UK Foreign Office spokesman said: “We provided assistance to the family of a British national following his death in Warsaw, Poland, in July.”

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