A day later, Pasho was summoned to the office of Global’s VP, John Evans. The moment he walked through the door, he knew he’d stumbled into something. Three men in suits, one wearing sunglasses, stood around the office, looking almost stuffed. Evans handed Pasho a piece of paper. “Maybe you want to take a look at this and sign it,” he said. Pasho signed Walt Lloyd’s secrecy form, embossed with a bald eagle, and got the story. The next day, fully cleared, he moved out of Global Marine’s downtown headquarters and into a new location known as “the program office.”

