They still think the truth is out there.
The parents of Chandra Levy — a Federal Bureau of Prisons intern who mysteriously turned up dead 25 years ago — believe she could have been “wiped out because she knew too much” about UFOs.
Susan and Robert Levy dropped the extraterrestrial theory about their daughter’s cold-case slaying on the anniversary of her May 1 disappearance — and as the White House has ordered an investigation into a series of other mysterious deaths and disappearances of scientists.
The 24-year-old intern, who had been having an affair with then-Rep. Gary Condit (D-Ca.), vanished in Washington, DC while she’d been working for the federal agency.
“Chandra mentioned something that she knew about the UFOs, that Congressman Condit was on the (House Intelligence) Committee to learn about UFOs,” her dad, Robert Levy, told NewsNation.
“She says, ‘Oh, he believes in UFOs like I do’ and that he deals with this stuff. So then it left me thinking, knowing Chandra, she’s very inquisitive. Could she have known something that she wasn’t supposed to know? And could she have been wiped out because she knew too much?” Susan Levy added.
Levy’s mom went on to speculate that the CIA was somehow connected to her daughter’s demise.
“We don’t know what really goes on in the government. So many of us don’t know the truth about many things,” Susan said.
“I’m stepping on a limb. I’m asking for disclosure. Someone knows the truth of what happened to my daughter, Chandra, and what has happened to a lot of other people who have disappeared, gone missing, that have disappeared in some mysterious ways.”
The couple added they had “been told not to touch this subject” but wouldn’t elaborate any further.
More than a year after Levy was reported missing, her remains were uncovered in a park just a few miles from her DC apartment.
Authorities ruled her death a homicide but questions still lingered.
Condit, for his part, was never named as a suspect and strenuously denied having anything to do with the saga.
Then, in 2009, authorities arrested a suspect — Ingmar Guandique — and charged him with her murder.
He was convicted the following year but the case ended up being tossed out in 2015 when it emerged a key prosecution witness lied in his testimony.
Guandique was ultimately deported back to his native El Salvador after he was released in 2017.
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