Crash at Corona Analyzes the Majestic 12 Documents and the Roswell Incident

Published on January 05, 2026 | Translated from Spanish
Cover of the book Crash at Corona on a desk, next to ancient-looking documents simulating the MJ-12 files and a background image of the San Agustín plain.

Crash at Corona Analyzes the Majestic 12 Documents and the Roswell Incident

The work Crash at Corona, written by nuclear physicist Stanton T. Friedman and Don Berliner, positions itself as an in-depth analysis of the famous 1947 event. Its main focus is on the Majestic 12 files, a set of papers that would describe an ultra-secret government committee. 🛸

The Investigation that Rethinks the Location and the Facts

Friedman and Berliner not only examine the documents but also propose that the location of the event was not Corona, but the San Agustín plain. To build their case, they present a detailed timeline with statements from people who claim to have participated in recovering debris and possible occupants of the crashed object.

Key points developed by the book:
The book claims that the United States government recovered a craft of non-terrestrial origin and its crew.

The Methodological Impact on UFO Phenomenon Studies

This work has become a reference for those who approach ufology from a documentary angle. Its method prioritizes scrutinizing official papers and direct testimony, attempting to bring solidity to a field often marked by skepticism.

Aspects it addresses regarding the cover-up:

A Legacy that Endures in Research

More than just recounting events, Crash at Corona structures a coherent alternative hypothesis to the official weather balloon explanation. Its focus on documentary evidence seeks to establish a more rigorous framework for debating one of the most enigmatic incidents of the 20th century. 🔍