Short Note / Jun 04, 2026

UAP disclosure gets the Kennedy Caucus Room

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UAP Logbook
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Jan
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Disclosure Forum 2026 now has a date, a Senate room, and a speaker list that pulls UFO/UAP disclosure into law, science, money, religion, and national security.

AI-generated editorial image showing an empty Capitol Hill-style forum room with microphones, press cameras, and seats before a UAP disclosure event.
AI-generated editorial illustration of a Capitol Hill forum room.

The Disclosure Foundation will hold Disclosure Forum 2026 on June 25 in the Kennedy Caucus Room at the Russell Senate Office Building, the foundation says on its event page.

The forum runs from 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. with doors opening at 8:30 a.m. It's free and open to the public. Seating is first-come, first-served, and registration doesn't guarantee entry.

Who's on the program

The forum page lists about twenty speakers across Congress, intelligence, science, religion, finance, and advocacy: former Senate Intelligence aide Christopher Mellon; Senator Mike Rounds; Senator Kirsten Gillibrand; Representative Eric Burlison; Representative Suhas Subramanyam; Representative Tim Burchett; former intelligence-community inspector general I. Charles McCullough III; former Senate Armed Services staffer Kirk McConnell; Harvard astronomer Avi Loeb; researcher Harold Puthoff; Yale religious-studies scholar Carlos Eire; Redwire Space's Mike Gold; investor Matthew Tuttle; lawyer Jonathan Miller; psychologists Tim Lomas, Susan Winterberg, and Jennice Vilhauer; arms-control analyst Marik von Rennenkampff; and Disclosure Foundation executive director Jordan Flowers.

For a UAP forum, that's an unusually broad table. Senate Armed Services, Senate Intelligence, House Oversight, Harvard, Redwire, religious studies, the markets side, legal aid, and the advocacy world are all in one room.

What the program is built around

The forum preview is built around oversight, national security, classified information, whistleblowers, science, financial impacts, and the social and religious implications of disclosure. That's a different question than "is anything there." It's "what happens if institutions have to treat the issue as real enough to plan around."

That makes the forum useful as a map of where the disclosure campaign wants the UAP and UFO story to go next: Congress, law, science, national security, markets, belief systems, and public process.

Why June 25 matters

The forum lands after a noisy spring.

The government has already pushed two PURSUE releases into public view. The Disclosure Foundation published a large NSA FOIA production in May. David Grusch is back in the interview cycle. The June 9 Capitol push is coming first. Spielberg's Disclosure Day is turning the word disclosure into movie-marketing oxygen.

A Senate-room public forum with a list like this is the longer version of that push. June 25 isn't a reveal date. It's a marker.

What's worth watching

Three things: who actually shows up, what gets said on the record, and whether anyone brings new documents or only new framing.

If the speaker list holds and the microphones pick up something the public record doesn't already have, the day will move the story. If not, it stays a high-visibility stage for a campaign that already had one.

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