The 1979 Message vs. 2013 Warnings | engelchanneling®
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The 2013 Return: The 1979 Mystery Happens Again
In 2013, a witness and I had a truly strange encounter with a human-looking being. This entity telepathically communicated with both of us at the same time. We could hardly believe it when we asked each other: "Do you hear that too?" There was absolutely no acoustic sound; the communication was purely telepathic.
This "woman" demanded that I stop taking UFO photos, stop calling them, and certainly stop publishing any material. There was no room for doubt—only a heavy presence with a threatening frequency. We both thought we were losing our minds.
Out of desperation, we did something quite bold to test the reality of the situation: I spoke to her mentally. I thought: "If what you are saying is true and we can really hear you, then freeze in your tracks."
She immediately froze mid-motion. One leg was lifted, ready to take a step. I tested her again mentally: "I can't believe it, keep walking... stop... keep walking." And every single time, she obeyed. Finally, she turned to us and signaled telepathically: "That should be enough now," and disappeared.
Since then, she has encountered me repeatedly at various locations whenever I go out to call UFOs. This encounter serves as undeniable proof of a coordinated, interdimensional monitoring of my work.

◆ The Cergy-Pontoise Archive ◆
On the early morning of November 26, 1979, at approximately 4:30 AM, one of the most significant and controversial events in French ufology unfolded in the suburb of Cergy-Pontoise. Three young men—Franck Fontaine, Jean-Pierre Prévost, and Salomon N'Diaye—were preparing for a routine workday when they witnessed a series of glowing spheres in the sky. While Prévost and N'Diaye briefly left the scene to retrieve a camera, 19-year-old Franck Fontaine remained by their vehicle. During those few minutes, a luminous fog engulfed the car, and Fontaine vanished without a trace.
This disappearance triggered a massive investigation by the police and GEPAN, the official French government body for UFO research. For exactly one week, Fontaine remained missing, only to reappear on December 2, 1979, at the very same location where he had vanished. To Fontaine, it felt as though only moments had passed, and he had no conscious memory of where he had been. In the aftermath, Jean-Pierre Prévost became the primary spokesperson for the group, claiming that he was in ongoing telepathic contact with the entities involved. These beings were described as having a human-like yet distinct presence, reminiscent of the Man in Black phenomenon, though they operated with a specific telepathic frequency that resonated directly within the mind.
The case took a dramatic turn in 1983 when Prévost publicly retracted the story, claiming the entire incident was a fabricated hoax intended to spread a message of peace. However, this retraction has always been viewed with suspicion by researchers who recognize the patterns of intimidation often used by these entities to silence witnesses. My encounter in 2013 provides the ultimate proof that the 1979 event was not a fabrication. By meeting an entity with the exact same visual and telepathic signature 34 years later, it becomes clear that the Man in Black phenomenon is a persistent reality, and the original case was far more than a mere story.