Timothy Mellon is Trump’s $130 Million Mystery Military Donor as “UAP” Psyop Film Nears Release
October 25th, 2025Timothy Mellon’s $130 million would only cover payments to U.S. military personnel for a few hours. Let’s be generous and call it far less than a day.
I think it’s safe to assume that there’s an approximately zero percent chance that these funds are actually meant to cover payroll for military personnel.
Hmm…
I find it interesting that the highest profile known ringleader of the U.S. Intelligence Community’s fake/limited hangout “UAP” “disclosure” operation is Timothy Mellon’s family member, Christopher Mellon. With the totally absurd Age of Disclosure about to be released, is there any possible connection between this film and the $130 million donation???
Dark Journalist, please pick up the nearest white courtesy phone.
Via: CNBC:
The mystery donor whose $130 million contribution is meant to pay U.S. military troops during the government shutdown is Timothy Mellon, an heir to a renowned Gilded Age banking family, The New York Times reported Saturday.
But Mellon’s donation works out to only about $100 per service member. It costs nearly $6.4 billion to pay U.S. troops every two weeks.
And using his money might run afoul of federal law, according to the Times, which cited two people familiar with the matter in identifying the billionaire railroad magnate as the donor.
When President Donald Trump announced the donation at the White House on Thursday, he did not identify the man by name, but described him as a “great patriot” and a “friend of mine.”
“And he’s a big supporter of mine,” Trump told reporters on Friday night. “He’s a wonderful man, and he doesn’t want publicity.”

In 1967, William “Billy” Mellon Hitchcock became a major investor in Resorts International (which opened the first casino in Atlantic City), acquired by Trump in 1987. By 1970, the firm harbored its own intelligence service, staffed with ex-executives from three-letter agencies.
S. William Snider discusses Resorts International as part of his thorough study of the Profumo affair in “A Special Relationship” (2020).
Snider writes: “Trump had dealings with individuals linked to Resorts since at least the 1970s. When Trump broke into Atlantic City during the early 1980s, he was greatly aided in these efforts by Resorts’ long-time attorney, ex-Marine Patrick “Paddy” McGahn.”
Jim Hougan’s book “Spooks” relates a number of stories involving Intertel, the intelligence business owned by Resorts. For instance, it was hired by General Motors to deal with the 1972 Lordstown, Ohio strike.