INVESTIGATINGIntelligenceAn investigative article co-written with Christopher Sharp and Josh Boswell about the CIA's Office of Global Access allegedly running a UAP crash retrieval program was removed from the Daily Mail website. The removal was noticed and reported by one of the co-authors on Reddit.
“An investigative article co-written with Christopher Sharp and Josh Boswell about the CIA's Office of Global Access allegedly running a UAP crash retrieval program was removed from the Daily Mail website. The removal was noticed and reported by one of the co-authors on Reddit.”
An investigative article about the CIA's Office of Global Access and its alleged role in a UAP crash retrieval program was published by the Daily Mail — one of the world's most-read news websites — and then quietly removed.
The piece, co-written with Christopher Sharp (editor of Liberation Times, a leading UAP disclosure outlet) and Josh Boswell (Daily Mail's investigations reporter), detailed how the CIA's Office of Global Access allegedly coordinates the retrieval and concealment of crashed unidentified aerial phenomena.
One of the co-authors posted on r/HighStrangeness that the Daily Mail "appears to have removed" the article. No retraction notice. No correction. Just gone. In journalism, articles get corrected — they don't vanish without explanation unless someone with significant influence makes a call.
The OGA is a real, documented division within the CIA's Directorate of Operations. Whistleblower David Grusch referenced crash retrieval programs in his congressional testimony. The intersection of a known CIA division with UAP retrieval allegations was apparently too much for someone's comfort.
No one's said anything yet. Be the first to drop your take.





