New Jersey Mayor Suggests Drones May Be Hunting for ‘Missing Radioactive Material’ as Biden Administration Stays Silent

Belleville Mayor Michael Melham (Credit: Fox5)
THE GATEWAY PUNDIT | Published December 17, 2024

While mysterious drone sightings over New Jersey have sparked fear and confusion across the state, Belleville Mayor Michael Melham (R) has dropped a bombshell: the drones may be connected to missing radioactive material.

In a series of eye-opening statements on Good Day New York, Mayor Melham revealed alarming details that federal and state officials seem determined to downplay or dismiss.

After an unprecedented emergency briefing with New Jersey’s mayors and legislators, Melham was left with more questions than answers.

“We were told very little,” Melham admitted. “It’s this lack of transparency, in my opinion, that’s doing nothing but fueling conspiracy theories online.”

ADVERTISEMENT
Drone sightings in New Jersey (Credit: New York Post via NJ STATE POLICE)

The mayor pointed to recent reports that radioactive material went missing in New Jersey, specifically through Port Newark—a major transportation hub, which was reported by The Gateway Pundit.

The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) has confirmed that radioactive material was lost in transit earlier this month.

The missing material, identified as a Ge-68 pin source manufactured by Eckert & Ziegler, was reported lost by its licensee on December 3, 2024. Shipped for disposal, the container arrived at its destination severely damaged and empty.

READ FULL ARTICLE

SOURCE: www.thegatewaypundit.com

RELATED: Missing radioactive material in New Jersey sparks drone theories: They’re ‘looking for something,’ mayor says

THE NEW YORK POST | Published December 17, 2024

A New Jersey mayor warned Tuesday that the troubling drone sightings over the state may be linked to missing radioactive material, although federal officials say the amount poses no serious threat either way.

Belleville Mayor Michael Melham said the drones flying in a grid-like pattern over his Essex County township appear to be “looking for something.

“What might they be looking for? Maybe that’s radioactive material,” Melham told Fox TV’s “Good Day New York.”

“It was a shipment. It arrived at its destination. The container was damaged, and it was empty,” Melham said.

The US Nuclear Regulatory Commission issued an alert earlier this week regarding a piece of medical equipment used for cancer scans that was “lost in transit” Dec. 2 while being shipped from the Nazha Cancer Center in Newfield in Gloucester County in southern New Jersey.

The device, an Eckert & Ziegler model HEGL-0132, was to be properly discarded — but its “shipping container arrived at its destination damaged and empty,” the agency said.

 

READ FULL ARTICLE

SOURCE: www.nypost.com

 

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply