Daniel Sheehan
Daniel Sheehan served as General Counsel to The Disclosure Project and the Institute for Cooperation in Space. He also represented Dr. John Mack at Harvard Medical School following publication of Abduction: Human Encounters with Aliens." (*Daniel P. Sheehan's autobiography)
An acquaintance of Daniel Sheehan speaks highly of him on the Allies of Humanity forum: "genuine and heart-centered, well-informed, as well as intellectually astute and articulate. Actually, his lack of what we like to refer to as 'ego' is quite refreshing, especially given his impressive accomplishments. That does not mean he is not a warrior in the archetypal sense. He is, and can be very assertive because he cares so deeply about social justice. He is a clear thinker and has little patience for questionable assertions. Sheehan got interested in exopolitics years ago when he accidentally came across some official documentation of the existence of ET visitation while researching for another purpose in a restricted area of the Library of Congress. This was a huge consciousness-raising experience for him, and has led him to many connections with others in the field and to much seminal thinking. He has thought extensively about the implications on many levels of our emerging into the broader cosmic community. His views are cogent, compelling and often congruent with those of the Allies Briefings, though from a different frame of reference."(Robert Bushman on the Allies of Humanity forum)
Sheehan says that virtually everyone involved with the UFO issue in the U.S. government believes these craft are E.T. technology but never want to publicly admit it.[1]
External Links
Founded by Daniel P. Sheehan
- The Christic Institute (1980) a cutting-edge model for achieving social reform ends through means of litigation, succeeded by The Romero Institute with Sheehan and his wife Sara Nelson continuing as principles.
References
- ↑ Interview on The Debrief, May 19, 2023: Daniel Sheehan on loopholes and ambiguous language in Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena legislation