Full episode of Weaponized Podcast with George Knapp and Jeremy Corbell featuring the whistleblower Matthew Brown is premiering now
In early 2024, a strange term started bouncing around in conversations among a small group of UAP researchers and insiders. It wasn’t a code name most people had ever heard before—but for those who had, it came with a warning: don’t say it out loud.The name was “Immaculate Constellation.”According to people close to the program, even mentioning it could be dangerous. It was said to be the title of an unacknowledged special access program—a black project so secret, it wasn’t overseen by Congress, but directly tied to the White House. The program, they claimed, used advanced AI to search through the classified servers of the U.S. military and intelligence community, looking for hidden UAP footage—videos and images the public was never supposed to see.The first real break came when a report about it landed in the hands of Congress. It wasn’t leaked. It wasn’t hacked. It was delivered quietly by Jeremy Corbell, a filmmaker known for his work on UAPs. The report had been written by an anonymous policy advisor who was ready to testify if asked. He’d already been introduced, behind the scenes, to a few members of Congress. But when the 2024 public hearing on UAPs rolled around, something strange happened. The report was barely mentioned. It was misrepresented. And the person who wrote it, who was ready to speak btw, was ignored. Soon after, a Pentagon spokesperson flatly denied that any program called “Immaculate Constellation” had ever existed.Months went by. The conversations continued behind closed doors. The risk remained real. But now, the author of the report is done waiting.In the latest episode of WEAPONIZED (Part 1 of a 3-part series), Jeremy Corbell and George Knapp sit down with the whistleblower himself. No more anonymity. No more whispers. He talks openly about where he worked, how he found out about the program, and why—after everything—he’s decided to go public."The secrecy that has been defended, is at the cost - in my mind - of human dignity, freedom and progress. And, it is no longer permissible or acceptable in my mind to continue this course. To deprive another generation of - not just Americans, but humanity - their birthright to know who they are, where they came from, and what's with us." - Matthew Brown