# John Coleman and the Phoenix cult

## Contents

- Article by Eustace Mullins from 1992 - Phoenix cult and America West - References to Coleman in Phoenix Journals

## Article by Eustace Mullins from 1992

In 1992 the _Criminal Politics_ magazine published an article about John Coleman by Eustace Mullins: [http://www.whale.to/c/check.html, https://books.google.com/books?id=19ZiuSksPaoC&pg=232, https://big-lies.org/mullins/Eustace+Mullins+-+Exposes+and+Legal+Actions+%281991-97%29.pdf] > A specter is haunting the American conservative movement - a specter using an alias (among others) of Dr. John Coleman. Coleman bills himself as "the World's Greatest Intelligence Expert - with secret but highly placed ties to British Intelligence." He appeared out of the blue at a Bob White, Sound Monetary Conference meeting in Costa Rica in 1984. > With no sponsorship - other than the seminar sponsor, a Dr. Harold Brown - and no documentation, Coleman managed to convince the attendees that he was indeed one of the world's important experts on international intelligence. He claimed to be privy to the most carefully guarded secrets of the individuals who clandestinely rule the world. > However, Coleman said he would share these secrets only if certain carefully observed guidelines were maintained. The most important of these was that he would never be asked to furnish any personal background information - any documentation or any source from which he obtained his "secret information." Such restrictions would scream "confidence artist" to most people. But when he met James K. Warner (editor of the Christian Defense League newspaper) - in 1984, he justified his refusal to reveal background information on himself or his sources by claiming that "he was subject to assassination threats." > He snared Jim Warner by confiding in him one of his closely guarded secrets - that his name was not Dr. John Coleman at all, but that it was, in fact, John Clark. Coleman stated that by giving Warner this private information, he was actually placing his life in his hands. As he was an accomplished confidence artist, Coleman convinced Warner that he should offer him a position. Warner responded to him by employing him as a writer for the Christian Defense League Report. > Coleman would send in material which indeed contained startling information (but was totally undocumented, [and] would soon win him an enthusiastic following among Warner's readers. Coleman also supplied a great many audio tapes which were offered to Warner's readers. Each of course supplying "secret information." This began a five year relationship which proved to be filled with pitfalls for Warner, who was after all a small underfinanced businessman. > Not only did Coleman continue to refuse [to provide] any documentation, but he made frequent demands for salary increases...extra expenses for himself and his family...and advances on his salary which exceeded the projected totals of several years salary. Warner was in no position to meet these demands, but in his anxiety to retain Coleman, he dug deep into his own pocket and also issued frantic fund raising appeals for Coleman. The result was that Warner was nearly bankrupted and conservatives nearly lost an excellent source of out of print books and independent information. > [...] > There were other problems which Coleman created for Warner. One of them was his continuous demands that Warner cease any articles or sell any books written by myself, Eustace Mullins. I had, in fact, been writing for Warner for more than a decade. Warner attributed this obsession to mere jealousy on Coleman's part. In fact, it went much deeper. > Coleman's vaunted sources of information were not secret at all, but were discovered by me in the process of reviewing his printed statements. Here are the results of my study: about 30% of his material was lifted from my own writings and about 70% was stolen from Lyndon Larouche publications. Principally, Coleman would rely on feature articles in the Executive Intelligence Review magazine. The material was simply rewritten by Coleman and crudely puffed up to five or six times its original length. Unfortunately, Warner never noticed. > Finally I became so concerned about the quantity of material lifted from the Larouche publications by Coleman that I decided to let Jim Warner know that his "new star" was lifting most of his "secrets" from Larouche publications. > Some months later, Warner received an indignant letter from the Larouche office, complaining about Coleman's plagiarism of the Larouche material. When Warner confronted Coleman, Warner was assured that it was simply an effort by the Larouche group to sow dissension. Coleman claimed he had only seen one copy of the Executive Intelligence Review in his life. Sometime later, when Coleman claimed to have left the country for South Africa, some of his effects were stored at the Warner warehouse. Among them, Warner found two boxes of well-thumbed issues of Larouche magazines. Sure enough, this proved to be the source of many of Coleman's "British intelligence" connections. But Warner's readers were trapped, and they were besieging him with requests that he bring Coleman into the public spotlight through meetings and seminars. > Coleman finally did appear at some meetings for a few months. But then, Warner was hit with still more demands for more loans and salary advances. He tried to find other employment for him, sending him off to a part-time job with a long time supporter, William Makinney, of Florida. Bill Makinney was lured by the promise that Coleman could make some extremely profitable deals for him. Later he was disappointed when Coleman arrived with his wife and son, and Coleman demanded the use of a Lincoln town car and memberships in the most exclusive Palm Beach Clubs and nightly meals in the most expensive restaurants. > Even worse he spent much of his time closeted in a room at Makinney's home. He claimed to be making long distance phone calls to the head of the South African gov't. Makinney was later unable to find records of any such phone calls in his billing. Soon Makinney asked him to leave and put him on a plane the sadder but wiser. > Warner was again assailed by constant demands for more money. Warner finally decided that the only way to meet the demands was to hold public meetings with Coleman as the star. Coleman, who had billed himself as the "World's Greatest Orator" proved to be a lack luster speaker, who read in a dull monotone from his type written speech, The meetings were a failure. Meanwhile, Warner had purchased a car for Coleman's use and a computer for Coleman's use at a large home which Warner rented for him. Coleman rarely appeared at the Warner offices citing his fear of assassination. > What's more, Warner discovered at the meetings, Coleman attempted to make financial deals for himself, showing no loyally to Warner whatsoever. Finally, Warner informed him that he was fired. Warner was required to obtain a warrant to cease the automobile and computer that were loaned to him. Then he realized that Coleman had obtained an illicit copy of his mailing list. Coleman began issuing appeals to Warner's subscribers claiming that I had had him discharged in order to become an editor of another Warner publication. > Finally, Coleman showed in California where he was guest of one Dr. Arnold Geisbret, of Glendale, CA. Geisbret has an interesting background. He is an attendee at many rightwing meetings, including those of Lawrance Patterson's National Bankruptcy Seminars. He would take copious notes and interrogate everyone that would talk to him. Geisbret, obviously, intended to collect as much information on the right-wing as possible. Coleman, meanwhile, went from one address to the other in California using Warner's mailing list as a source of suckers. > At each resident, he would spin a spiteful tale of having been cruelly used by Jim Warner who had taken all of his money. Meanwhile, Coleman would make threatening calls to Warner informing him that he would launch a national campaign against him if he refused to make a financial settlement. Wishing to avoid legal problems, Warner settled a substantial sum of money on Coleman, all to no avail. Coleman not only launched a campaign of denunciation against Warner using his mailing list of subscribers, but he also began a surreptitious mailing campaign using pseudonyms to accuse Warner of sexual offenses and of being a double agent. These defamatory letters were also mailed to Warner's mailing list. > [...] > One source I have spoken with claimed that he has been trained in Israel by a Mossad unit - and had been known there as Joseph Pavlonsky. > We later discovered that he entered the United States on an English passport recorded by the INS as #A20211168 issued to "John Clarke." Interestingly, when Warner accompanied him to get a driver's license in Louisiana, he claimed he had applied for a social security number although none was forthcoming. Even though he had been in the United States for almost a decade, he had been driving in the Western states on a Louisiana license, and had never obtained a U.S. green card or work permit. > [...] > Next comes Coleman's employment with one George Green who operates a nonconformist publication titled Phoenix Journal Express which is supposedly representing the statements from a space being - (yes, we said space being) by the name of Gyorgos Ceres Hatonn!! > Hatonn is the claimed commander of a fleet of space ships from the galaxy of Pleiades. These spaceships have been deployed over the California border with Nevada for several years. This has proved to be convenient for all concerned because the people of Pleiades, interestingly enough, do not require a U.S. work permit from its employees. Coleman is now writing the material for Hatonn. Interestingly enough, he gives advice about International Banking, but amazingly, is always negative on Sterling denominated investments and, interestingly, Swiss banking as well. > Under the auspices of George Green's Phoenix Journal Express, and America West publishers of Tehachapi, California, Coleman finally published his first and only book "The Committee of Three Hundred". After examining this book, it has proven to be the usual amalgam of his borrowings from my various textbooks and, again, from the Larouche magazine. The "one source" that Mullins mentioned above may have been George Green, who is not necessarily a reliable source since he also claims that he he was in communication with Hatonn. Jim Warner also wrote an article about the 1993 IHR takeover by Mark Weber and Greg Raven. [http://web.archive.org/web/20100218114054/www.williscarto.net/html/evidence_of_subversion.html]

## Phoenix cult and America West

From 1989 until 1998, a series of over 100 book-length "Phoenix journals" was published by a cult based in Tehachapi in California, which currently has a population of around 14,000. The author of most of the books was named as "Gyeorgos Ceres Hatonn", who was supposedly a 9-foot tall Pleiadian Ascended Master who lived onboard the space ship Phoenix. The books were published by George Green's publishing company America West, which was initially based in the town of Tehachapi, but their editorial offices were transfered to Las Vegas in 1992. Several people claim to have contacted Hatonn over the years, but according to the book _A Culture of Conspiracy: Apocalyptic Visions in Contemporary America_ by Michael Barkun, the series of Phoenix journals associated with the cult in Tehachapi was started in 1989 by George Green, who was later joined by Doris Ekker and her husband who acted as channelers of the material from Hatonn, even though another series of material transmitted from Hatonn had been published by Richard Miller since 1974: [https://books.google.fi/books?id=-0wFZRWKdfoC&pg=PA150, https://libgen.lc/index.php?req=barkun+culture+conspiracy (second edition)] > The most intense and sustained anti-Semitism in UFO-related material appears in a series of interrelated publications issued in the far West since about 1989. As a result of complex internal disputes, business decisions, and litigation, the name of the publication has changed several times. It was initially known as the _Phoenix Journal Express_, and successor publications have appeared under such titles as _Phoenix Liberator_, _Contact_, and _The Spectrum_. The first editorial offices were in Tehachapi, California, but they were transferred to Las Vegas, Nevada, in 1992. Although there have been bitter disputes among those involved, there are sufficient continuities in personnel and editorial policies that the publications can be analyzed together. To avoid confusing shifts in nomenclature, they are collectively referred to here as the Phoenix publications.[19] > The Phoenix publications purport to print radio transmissions received from extraterrestrials. The publications have principally served as the mouthpiece for pronouncements from Commander Gyeorgos Ceres Hatonn, more familiarly known simply as Hatonn. Hatonn claims to be "Commander in Chief, Earth Project Transition, Pleiades Sector Flight command, Intergalactic Federation Fleet - Ashtar Command; Earth Representative to the Cosmic Council and Intergalactic Federation Council on Earth Transition." His spaceship is named _Phoenix_ - hence the titles of the periodicals. In what was claimed to be a radio interview with Hatonn in Phoenix, Arizona, in 1992, he said that he had "well over a million ships" under his command, and that "my mission is to remove God's people from the planet when that becomes necessary ... if that becomes necessary."[20] > Up to this point, there is nothing particularly unusual, much less sinister, about Hatonn. Indeed, as we shall see, many others since the 1950s have claimed contact with him, though the messages often differ. Hatonn falls in the category of so-called space brothers: benevolent, spiritually enlightened alien entities who desire to help humanity. In this, they closely resemble the ascended masters who appear in such neo-Theosophical movements as I AM and the Church Universal and Triumphant. > [...] > In historical terms, contactee narratives preceded abductee narratives. Thomas Bullard's exhaustive study of abduction stories found no reports before 1957, though a few individuals claimed that such occurrences took place earlier. By contrast, contactee stories emerged shortly after the first modern UFO sightings in 1947. The first major contactee narrative came from George Adamski (1891-1965), who claimed that on November 20, 1952, he had an encounter with a Venusian in the California desert. Adamski had a history of Theosophical speculation that extended back to the mid-1930s, when he founded an organization called the Royal Order of Tibet. He was also reportedly an anti-Semite, but unlike his fellow contactee, George Hunt Williamson, he kept those views to himself. His messages from the Venusian sounded suspiciously like his own earlier occult teachings. He was accompanied that November day by several friends, including Williamson, who later emerged as a major link between contactees and anti-Semite William Dudley Pelley. After Adamski met with the Venusian, Williamson took a plaster cast of what purported to be the extraterrestrial's footprint. It was through Adamski's associate Williamson that the name Hatonn first appeared.[24] > George Hunt Williamson (1926-86), a prolific writer on occult matters, claimed to have witnessed Adamski's 1952 encounter. Subsequently, in 1952 and 1953, he and associates supposedly established radiotelegraphic contact with extraterrestrials, in which they received Morse code messages. Hatonn appears in these messages - not as the name of an extraterrestrial being, as it is in the Phoenix publications, but as the name of a place: "the Planet Hatonn in Andromeda," the alleged site of the universal "Temple of Records." Evidently, Williamson's extragalactic informant held the planet Hatonn in high regard, for, referring to its role as custodian of records, he remarked that "only a world of great spiritual advancement could be so honored." By the time of the Phoenix journals more than thirty-five years later, Hatonn is an entity, not a place, and he hails from the Pleiades, not Andromeda. The shift in location is likely the result of the context in which Williamson's Hatonn references were embedded. He was at pains to contrast the dark and negative worlds of Orion with the positive worlds of the Pleiades, which "send ... forth vibrations of peace and love." In fact, the motif of Pleiadean virtue and enlightenment is commonplace in New Age literature.[25] > Long before Phoenix, however, Hatonn had metamorphosed into a being, largely as a result of the experiences of Richard T. Miller, a Detroit television repairman who heard a lecture by Williamson in 1954. Inspired by Williamson's account, Miller and some friends sought to establish radio contact with extraterrestrials - which, Miller reported, they quickly succeeded in doing. So successful were these communications that on October 30, 1954, Miller and his associates were able to meet with an extraterrestrial and enter his spacecraft, the Phoenix. The principal individual with whom they spoke, however, was not Hatonn but someone named Soltec, who subsequently appeared in a subsidiary role in Phoenix publications. Miller and Williamson jointly founded an organization called the Telonic Research Center in Williamson's Prescott, Arizona, home, but parted company about a year later. Miller's own published space messages contain numerous dispatches from the creature known as Hatonn, the first dated September 1, 1974. In a 1992 Internet posting, Miller called the Phoenix journals "thoroughly disgusting," and their use of Hatonn's name "fraudulent." He claimed that he had once had authentic contact with Hatonn but had "not been active in such activities for many years."[26] > Hatonn and his associates have communicated through others as well. One such channel has been the Ashtar Command. In 1952, an early contactee, George Van Tassel, began to channel an extraterrestrial entity named Ashtar, whose messages became the basis for Van Tassel's Ministry of Universal Wisdom. In addition to Van Tassel's activities as a channeler, he hosted the annual Interplanetary Spacecraft Convention at Giant Rock in the Mojave Desert. The Giant Rock gatherings began in 1954, with Williamson prominent on the roster of speakers. After Van Tassel's death in 1970, other channelers claimed access to Ashtar's messages. The most prominent among them has been Tuella (Thelma B. Terrell), who emphasizes the role of extraterrestrials in evacuating "purified" souls from the earth in order to escape natural calamities. While Tuella's messages come from many of Ashtar's associates, Hatonn seems to have a special place among the subordinates. He is not simply a "Great Commander" but also "the Record Keeper of the Galaxy and the records are kept on the planet bearing his name" - thus resolving the contradiction between Hatonn the place and Hatonn the personage.[27] > [...] > Another of Hatonn's contactees, George Green, was central to the development of the Phoenix publications. Green claimed to have seen an alien craft at Edwards Air Force Base in 1958. According to him, he was contacted by "space beings" in October 1989, entering into an agreement with them to "publish the material transmitted from the spacecraft called 'THE PHOENIX.'" Sometime thereafter he was also approached by a husband and wife, E.J. and Doris Ekker, who claimed to be in touch with the same group of extraterrestrials. Doris Ekker, under the name Dharma, was the principal receiver, though not apparently in a mediumistic capacity.[28] > At this point, an already complex series of linkages became even murkier. On the one hand, Green claimed that he financed the publication of the Ekkers' messages through the Phoenix journals. At an early point, however, a separate set of Phoenix materials was produced by Miller, so that two different publishers were simultaneously issuing material under the rubric of the Phoenix Project. > In 1979, Miller began issuing a series of _Phoenix Project Reports_ through his Advent Publishing Company. He continues to issue this material, along with a newsletter, _Insights_. _Insights_ contains a substantial amount of material alleging various conspiracies in which both humans and malevolent extraterrestrials are participants; but his material does not contain any of the anti-Semitic themes that figure so prominently in the Phoenix journals.[29] > Green is another matter. His publishing company, America West, specializes in conspiracy works, the best known of which is John Coleman's _Conspirators' Hierarchy: The Story of the Committee of 300_. According to Coleman, the megaconspiracy that rules the world includes "Universal Zionism" and something called the "Order of the Elders of Zion." > [...] > By 1992 or 1993, the relationship between the Greens and the Phoenix journals was fraying. Initially, ties were amicably loosened to relieve the Greens of some of the publication responsibilities, but by mid-1993, the relationship had broken down in mutual recriminations. Such bitter struggles seem endemic to these publications: six years later, in March 1999, the Ekkers locked out the editorial staff, who then started a separate publication, _The Spectrum_. Again, there were charges of fraudulent extraterrestrial communications. Internet supporters of The Spectrum observe darkly that "Doris Ekker is not receiving from Lighted Source at this time!"[31] > [...] > Although the precise origins of this otherworldly anti-Semitism are difficult to trace, they may ultimately lie with William Dudley Pelley (1890-1965), a well-known figure in American anti-Semitism. Founder and head of the Depression-era Silver Legion, Pelley is often classified as a homegrown fascist; and indeed, his Silver Shirts resembled the Nazi brownshirts not only in their uniformity of dress but in their ideology. Pelley, however, was also an occultist and mystic whose taste for metaphysics and the supernatural went back to the late 1920s.[33] > Pelley's mysticism was obscured by his fascist proclivities, particularly after the entry of the United States into World War II. Convicted of sedition during the war, he was finally paroled in 1950 on condition that he not engage in political activity. He appears to have complied for the most part during his remaining fifteen years, but he ran a significant publishing operation in Indiana, in connection with which he crossed paths with Williamson.[34] > About 1950, Williamson - then in his midtwenties - moved to Noblesville, Indiana, where Pelley lived, and began writing for Pelley's periodical, Valor. Williamson worked for Pelley for a year or two before moving on to California, where he witnessed the alleged Venusian contact with Adamski. Vallee suggests that Adamski may have known Pelley before World War II, during Pelley's fascist period, and that "Pelley may have put Williamson in touch with Adamski." Pelley and Adamski also appear to have had a common interest in the Ballards' I AM movement. Whatever the exact sequence, Williamson seems to have had brief but intense involvement with Pelley prior to his contactee phase. Although Pelley's postwar publications were a fuzzy mix of mysticism, there is no reason to believe that he had abandoned his earlier anti-Semitism.[35] > Pelley's influence on Williamson seems to have been extensive. Although Pelley did not directly refer to flying saucers until 1952 - after Williamson had left his employ - he published a major work on extraterrestrial life during Williamson's time in Noblesville. The book, _Star Guests_, consists largely of channeled communications that Pelley claimed to have been receiving from spirit entities since the late 1920s, interlarded with his own reflections and interpretations.[36] > [...] > Pelley's book clearly had a strong influence on the young Williamson. In 1953, Williamson published _Other Tongues, Other Flesh_, with an entire chapter devoted to a summary of Pelley's ideas. According to James W. Moseley and Karl T. Pflock, Williamson - by then living in Prescott, Arizona - was planning to go on a lecture tour with Pelley, though it is not clear whether he ever did so. Where Pelley tended to be vague about the relations between the Sirians and entities from other star systems such as the Pleiades and Orion, though, Williamson believed he could clearly distinguish the loci of good and evil. He became increasingly convinced that there was a division of the cosmos between virtuous Pleiadeans and evil aliens from Orion. The Orion forces were being aided by people on earth, whom he described in terms close to traditional anti-Semitic stereotypes: "These people are sometimes small in stature with strange, oriental type eyes. Their faces are thin and they possess weak bodies. ... They prey on the unsuspecting; they are talkative; they astound intellects with their words of magnificence. While their wisdom may have merit, it is materialistic, and not of pure aspiration toward the Father. ... We try to help them and suggest work to aid them, but they are a stubborn race."[39] > [...] > Williamson's extremist politics incorporated not only the beliefs of Pelley and Smith but Pelley's occult sensibilities as well. These interests inspired a strange expedition to Peru in December 1956. Convinced that he could best contact the ascended masters from the Andes, he and a small group of fellow occultists spent most of 1957 near Lake Titicaca, where they established a retreat called the Abbey of the Seven Rays. An eventual product of the Peruvian trip was a thin volume of channeled ascended-master communications, written under Williamson's nom de plume, Brother Philip. _Secret of the Andes_ (1961) was for the most part couched in the impenetrable language of neo-Theosophy. But it also contained passages similar to those in _UFOs Confidential!_. "The United Nations must collapse because that which you read from the Nostradamus forces is true. The war lords, the 'International Bankers' will use the United Nations to form their super-government. This will not be. We can tread upon serpents and scorpions. He [the Father] gives us that power. And His further promise of power over the enemy - the enemy which is the anti-Christ, which we recognize in the International Bankers and the others who would enslave man upon the Earth."[41] > Brother Philip almost certainly cribbed large parts of the book from his companions in Peru. One of them was Dorothy Martin (1900-1992), who went by the name Sister Thedra. In 1949, Martin was at the center of an extraordinary apocalyptic sect that was to make her the best known of recent channelers. She learned from extraterrestrial informants that vast natural disasters were to occur on December 21 of that year, but that spaceships would rescue her and her followers. Her group was exceedingly small, and the episode would not have gained attention but for the fact that behavioral scientists had been allowed to observe its members. This study became a classic of social psychology - _When Prophecy Fails_, by Leon Festinger, Henry W. Riecken, and Stanley Schachter, in which Martin appears under the pseudonym Marian Keech.[42] > As the authors of _When Prophecy Fails_ point out, Martin never seriously questioned the validity of her messages, even after the disconfirmation of her prediction had become stunningly evident. By an odd coincidence, the book appeared at the same time that she and Williamson left for South America, though it was not until some time later that the real identity of Marian Keech became widely known.[43] > Martin as Sister Thedra brought to the Peruvian enterprise many of the same influences as Williamson. She, too, was a devotee of flying saucer literature. She may also have had some indirect acquaintance with Pelley's ideas. Her followers certainly knew Pelley's mystical writings, and she herself was familiar with the teachings of Guy and Edna Ballard's I AM movement, which had close ties with some of the Silver Shirts. She returned to the United States in 1961, apparently well after Williamson did, and in 1965 established the Association of Sananda and Sanat Kumara in Mount Shasta, California. Her posthumous Web site, in addition to containing transcripts of her channelings, is interlarded with excerpts from Pelley's mystical writings. Of course, one cannot be sure whether the Pelley material was selected by Sister Thedra or by a follower.[44] In the dedication of the first Phoenix journal published by Doris Ekker's cult, Ekker seems to have said that the story that was told in the book was given to her by other people who wrote it for her: [http://www.phoenixsourcedistributors.com/html/j001/] > AND TO THOSE BLESSED ONES WHO GAVE UNTO ME THE STORY AND ACTUALLY WROTE IT FOR ME, I AM MOST HUMBLE IN THEIR PRESENCE, FOR THE GIFTS OF TRUTH AND KNOWLEDGE GIVEN TO ME SINCE THAT TIME HAS BEEN INFINITE AND BEYOND MY COMPREHENSION.

## References to Coleman in Phoenix Journals

Apart from the Phoenix journals, George Green's publishing company _America West_ was also the original publisher of John Coleman's book _Conspirators's Hierarchy: The Story of the Committee of 300_. When the CIA published a set of hundreds of thousands of files which were supposedly found on the computers at Osama Bin Laden's Abottabad compound, they included a PDF file of Coleman's book which can therefore be downloaded for free from the website of the CIA, which I used to think was strange since I thought it violated copyright. [https://www.cia.gov/library/abbottabad-compound/4A/4A92FD2FB4DAE3F773DB0B7742CF0F65_Coleman.-.CONSPIRATORS.HIERARCHY.-.THE.STORY.OF.THE.COMMITTEE.OF.300.R.pdf] But I guess the rights to the book are owned by an organization which is affiliated with the U.S. federal government. Several Phoenix journals claim that John Coleman is a Jew or that he also used the names Joseph Pavlonski or John Clarke. [https://www.google.com/search?tbm=bks&q=%22joseph%20pavlonski%22] Even though the journals supposedly consist of the words of a 9-foot-tall Pleiadian ascended master, parts of the journals which deal with personal fights between George Green and John Coleman seem like they were written by Green. Phoenix Journal #59 from 1992 said: [https://books.google.com/books?id=ECBPfIYOi4MC&pg=PA27] > The one, Joseph Pavlonski, (alias John Coleman) is personally in the process of contacting all on the America West and _LIBERATOR_ mailing lists which he stole along with all computer equipment, etc., and vanished from town with the police calling for warning and protection of George Green because 'Coleman is dangerous and armed.' COLEMAN IS NOTHING BUT A CHEAP AND COMMON CRIMINAL FEEDING OFF YOU WHO SEEK TRUTH. HE CLAIMS GREEN OWES HIM $15,000. FACTS ARE THAT HE OWES GREEN UNTOLD THOUSANDS MORE THAN THAT. CHELAS, IF YOU CONTINUE TO ALLOW THIS MAN TO FOOL YOU THEN I CAN ONLY ASSUME YOU WISH WHATEVER YOU GET. THIS MAN AND HIS COHORTS ARE ALIEN (FOREIGN) AGENTS IN THE UNITED STATES UNDER FALSE DOCUMENTATION AND UP FOR DEPORTATION--EXCEPT, NOW YOU HAVE PUT 'HIS' PEOPLE IN POWER SO GUESS WHO GETS FULL REIGN? BUT HIS "STUFF" DENOUNCES THE ADMINISTRATION AND GOVERNMENT OF THE U.S. YOU MIGHT SAY. OF COURSE, CHELAS, BECAUSE HE IS PREPARING FOR HIS OWN EVIL GOVERNMENT TO DESCEND UPON YOU. SO BE IT. Phoenix Journal #55 from 1992 said the following: [https://books.google.com/books?id=OAFlZfIybW8C&pg=PA34] > It is hard, today, readers and listeners, because this one calling himself John Coleman has taken all the property belonging to _THE LIBERATOR_ which was in his possession and had refused under order to relinquish it, with him. He took furniture which Greens had purchased for his use and left utility bills and other expenses hanging for these ones to pay. > I suggest, E.J., that since George still has access to books and contract rights to same, that you submit the billings for the equipment to America West. If George had not suggested same there would have been legal action already under way and the equipment could have been recovered by the sheriff. > Next, I suggest that this information be sent to the University of Science and Philosophy, Arcturus press and especially to UFO and Don Ecker. George may wish to do this "faxing". I also ask that a copy be sent to Dean Stonier of Global Sciences Congress. > Then, pass this information to ALL of the ones named in the "objection to actions" list of Coleman helpers. HE is the one who named each as an inside contact and I refuse to allow you ones to take any more flack from those who now are in self-denial over the incidents involved.