Susan and Robert Levy, the parents of murdered D.C. intern Chandra Levy, believe their daughter’s interest in UFOs may have played a part in her death 25 years ago.
The Levys spoke exclusively to NewsNation about their speculations on “Jesse Weber Live.”
They said they believe their daughter’s knowledge of and curiosity about UFOs may have contributed to her death.
The 24-year-old government intern disappeared May 1, 2001.
She was interning with the Federal Bureau of Prisons before her disappearance.
Her disappearance was trust into the spotlight when Levy was romantically connected to then-California congressman Gary Condit, who represented Levy’s hometown of Modesto, California.
Police maintained the congressman was never a suspect; Condit was never charged.
“Chandra mentioned something that she knew about the UFOs, that Congressman Condit was on the (House Intelligence) Committee to learn about UFOs,” Robert Levy said.
“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.
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The couple added they had “been told not to touch this subject.”
Susan Levy said as many as three years ago at a “Contact in the Desert” UFO conference, she felt “a strong, intuitive thing coming from me that there’s a possibility there may be a connection” between her daughter’s death and CIA involvement.
“We don’t know what really goes on in the government. So many of us don’t know the truth about many things,” she 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,” she added.
In May 2002, a hiker discovered Levy’s remains in a secluded area of Washington’s Rock Creek Park, a few miles from her Dupont Circle apartment.
Her death was ruled a homicide.
In 2009, Ingmar Guandique was officially charged with Levy’s murder while serving time for other assaults in Rock Creek Park in 2001.
Guandique was convicted in 2010 of Levy’s murder, but was granted a new trial in 2015 when it was revealed a key prosecution witness may have provided false testimony.
In 2016, prosecutors said they wouldn’t seek a retrial. Guandique was released and later deported to his native El Salvador in 2017.














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