James Allen
James Allen was an American documentary filmmaker who produced the 2014 documentary "Zero Point: The Story of Mark McCandlish and the Flux Liner," a deep investigation into Mark McCandlish's claims regarding the Alien Reproduction Vehicle (Flux Liner). Allen died approximately one month before his documentary was scheduled to be released, under circumstances that UAP researchers have described as highly suspicious.
| Role | Documentary filmmaker; ARV researcher |
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Death and Alleged Radioisotope Poisoning
Allen suddenly became ill and was hospitalized, dying within approximately two and a half months of his illness onset. Due to the peculiar nature of his illness, a pathology analysis was conducted on his remains. The results allegedly showed elevated levels of multiple radioisotopes — including uranium, thorium, beryllium, and cadmium — substances that would not naturally occur in his system. McCandlish publicly stated that the pathology indicated Allen had been poisoned using radioisotopes, and dedicated his own 2015 Secret Space Program Conference presentation to Allen's memory.
Documentary
Allen's film explored the full story of McCandlish's ARV research, drawing on McCandlish's own testimony, the accounts of Brad Sorenson, and the broader context of alleged ARV programs and related phenomena. The film has been referenced by UAP Gerb as essential viewing for understanding the ARV story, alongside Steven Greer's 2001 National Press Club conference segment titled "Blueprint for a UFO."
Pattern of Suspicious Deaths
Allen's death is cited alongside McCandlish's own 2021 death, physicist Stefan Marinov (fell from a window in 1997), cold fusion researcher Eugene Mallove (beaten to death in 2004), zero point field investor Arie Deus (found dead in his car in 2007), stardrive inventor Mark Toman (died unexpectedly in 2009), and Dr. Amy Eskridge (died 2022) as part of an alleged pattern of suspicious deaths among researchers and advocates in the free energy and ARV disclosure fields.