Christopher Mellon

Christopher Karl Mellon (born October 2, 1957),[1] is a former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Intelligence in the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations and later for Security and Information Operations. He formerly served as the Staff Director of the United States Senate Select Committee on Intelligence.

Christopher Karl Mellon
Born
Christopher Karl Mellon

(1957-10-02) October 2, 1957
NationalityAmerican
EducationColby College, Yale University
OccupationDeputy Assistant Secretary of Defense, Staff Director of the Senate Intelligence Committee
Years active1985-2004
OrganizationDepartment of Defense, United States Senate
RelativesJudge Thomas Mellon, Andrew Mellon, Matthew Mellon, Richard Mellon Scaife, Paul Mellon
FamilyMellon family
AwardsThe Secretary of Defense Meritorious Public Service Award,
The Secretary of Defense Outstanding Public Service Award,
The National Reconnaissance Office Gold Medal,
The Defense Intelligence Agency Director’s Medal,
The National Imagery and Mapping Agency Medallion for Excellence

Biography

Christopher Mellon was born to the Mellon family. He is the son of Karl Negley Mellon and Anne Stokes Bright. And the great-grandson of Gulf Oil co-founder William Larimer Mellon. His Mellon's great-great-grandfather, Thomas Mellon, founded Mellon Bank of Pittsburgh.[2][3] He received a B.A. in economics from Colby College in 1980 and a master's degree from Yale University in international relations, with a concentration in finance and management, in 1984.

Mellon served for 12 years in a variety of positions on Capitol Hill, including nearly 10 years as a professional staff member as a Staff Director of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. He was the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Intelligence from November 1999 until Jan 2002. From June 1998 through November 1999, Mellon served as the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Security and Information Operations. In that capacity, he was responsible for policy and programmatic oversight of information assurance, critical infrastructure protection, security, counterintelligence, and information operations strategy and integration. Mellon went to the Pentagon as a member of William Cohen's transition team on January 2, 1997. Following the transition, Mellon was appointed as the Coordinator for Advanced Concepts and Program Integration, Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy, concentrating on encryption and information assurance issues. From November 1997 to June 1998, he served as the Special Assistant to the Secretary of Defense for Intelligence Policy, providing advice on a range of intelligence issues. Before entering the private sector, Mellon returned to Capitol Hill, where he served as the Minority Staff Director of the Senate Intelligence Committee for Senator John D. Rockefeller, IV from 2002 to 2004.[4]

UFOs

Mellon worked with Leslie Kean in the UFO organization UFODATA[5] and is a private equity investor, shareholder and former advisor for the former Blink 182 punk rocker Tom DeLonge's To the Stars company that promotes stories about UFOs.[6][7] Mellon's title was, according to the company’s website, national security affairs adviser.[8] Mellon assisted in production and worked with UFO Hunter Luis Elizondo as a cast member for the pay television network History that distributes the UFO shows series Unidentified: Inside America's UFO Investigation.[8]

Mellon was featured in the 2020 UFO documentary, The Phenomenon, directed by longtime UFO-enthusiast James Fox.[9] In the documentary Mellon stated that he was the source who provided the three infamous Pentagon UFO videos which made the "lavish front-page Sunday spread"[8] of the New York Times on December 17, 2017: “Glowing Auras and ‘Black Money’: The Pentagon’s Mysterious UFO Program”.[10] In the documentary Mellon tells that he met with an unnamed individual in the parking lot of the Pentagon and was handed a package containing three videos captured by U. S. Navy pilots between 2004 and 2015.[11]

Notes

1. "Panelist" at the Wayback Machine (archived November 14, 2004), Harvard Law School

References

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