I was sacked by NASA for telling TRUTH about alien mission – now I fear Mars astronauts won’t come home alive

Published on July 20, 2025 at 10:25 AM

A TOP scientist claims she was sacked by Nasa after raising concerns about alien life on Mars.

Catharine Conley, the agency’s Planetary Protection Officer from 2006 to 2017, also fears astronauts won’t come home alive.

Illustration of the Perseverance rover on Mars drilling a rock sample.
Conley claims the Mars 2020 rover Perseverance was not cleaned properly
Ingenuity helicopter flying over Mars.
An image of Mars’s surface taken by the Mars 2020 rover Perseverance
Portrait of Catharine Conley in front of a background depicting planets and space.
Catharine Conley worked as Nasa’s Planetary Protection Officer for over a decade until she was sacked

Conley first accused officials at the in of failing to clean the Mars 2020 rover correctly before its launch.

is Nasa’s mission sent to search for samples of the Red Planet to bring home and test for evidence of past or current

The rover, , is still crawling around the surface after landing in February 2021.

Its job is to obtain the samples which will then be collected by a future Mars Sample Return Mission.

But Conley feared any material eventually flown home could be contaminated – and the whole mission scuppered.

She claims she was suddenly removed from the position after speaking out – and suspects it was to silence her concerns.

Conley told The Sun: “Nasa decided they didn’t want to do the kind of work that I had been doing.

“They didn’t want to continue with the kinds of implementation that they had been doing historically.

“That was not something I thought was a good idea, so they decided they needed someone else for the job.

“This was basic planetary protection as it had been done for the prior 50 years or so.”;

Conley, who now works as a researcher, added: “The Mars 2020 rover was cleaned in a way that was not compatible with prior levels of cleanliness, in particular regarding the amount of contamination that was getting introduced into the samples that were being collected for return.

“I pointed out that having a 0.1% chance of contaminating any individual sample, when you have 40 samples in total, comes out to a 4 per cent chance of having contamination in the samples you’re looking at.

“That makes it fairly difficult to be confident that you can distinguish between Earth life and Mars life.

“That was not something that the people at headquarters management wanted to hear and they took the steps that they thought were appropriate.”;

Illustration of the solar system.
Mars is the fourth planet away from the sun
Illustration of Mars.
Retrieving samples from Mars is one of the most pressing priorities in space exploration

Conley claims she had been told of staff being careless when using gloves and protective equipment.

She also claimed to have been told of staff bringing equipment into assembly rooms that was not properly cleaned,along with an “attitude of skepticism I encountered regularly at JPL”;.

states on its website that Mars 2020 Perseverance Rover remains an active mission.

It landed in February 2021 as part of Nasa’s Mars Sample Return (MSR) campaign.

In January the agency said it was hoping to announce plans for the returning of samples in the second half of 2026.

But that has been thrown into doubt following Donald Trump’s proposed cuts to Nasa, with MSR a casualty.

Mars Perseverance rover image of a 5-centimeter abrasion patch at Serpentine Rapids.
A photo taken by the Mars Perseverance rover of the Malgosa Crest abrasion patch
Rocky Martian landscape.
Nasa intends to send a manned mission to Mars some time in the 2030s

is preparing to press ahead with their own plans to return Mars samples.

It has scheduled the Tianwen-3 Mars mission for launch in 2028, collecting and bringing samples back by 2031.

But Conley still fears the same problem.

She said: “The concerns are similar. I’ve been looking at some of the reports that have come out about the Chinese proposed missions, and they’re saying all the right things to the extent that I can obtain information.

“But it is difficult to follow up on what they are actually saying they’re doing.

“I certainly had experience within my duties at Nasa of engineers saying one thing and doing something else.

“So it’s difficult to know. But if other space agencies are not doing anything more than Nasa did, then I would be surprised if their contamination levels are low enough that you could detect the Mars signal underneath the background from Earth.”;

Despite the cuts, Trump has proposed no savings on Nasa’s plans to send astronauts to Mars in the 2030s.

But Conley fears that doing so without a sample return mission means a gaping hole in knowledge for what astronauts will encounter.

She also questions if astronauts will be allowed home if they fall sick.

Conley added: “Not doing a robotic sample return means we don’t have detailed information about what kinds of materials the astronauts are likely to encounter, and possibly bring back to Earth, which could be quite problematic if there is something hazardous in Mars regolith, even if it’s not biological.

Blurred image of an alien waving.
The Mars 2020 mission is collecting samples which will ultimately return to Earth for tests for evidence of alien life
Mars sand dunes with dark streaks resembling trees.
The image was captured by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter in 2008

“A question that didn’t get answered during Apollo and certainly hasn’t been addressed since is: if astronauts get sick after contacting Mars and we can’t figure out why, should they beallowed to return?

“The fundamental problem, from my perspective, is overconfidence in thinkingthat we already know everything we need to know about what could happen, when we don’t.”;

Conley also warned of Elon Musk’s plans to send a manned crew to Mars through his company, SpaceX.

She added: “SpaceX say they’re planning to launch humans to Mars, but I have serious doubts about whether anyone would be alive when the spacecraft gets theresince SpaceX doesn’t seem to be developing long-term life support systems along with their rockets.

“Musk has made numerous claims about when he’ll land humans on Mars that are distinctlyimplausible, at least if he wants the humans to be alive when they get there.

“Nasa is much more likely to be careful about preserving astronaut health but, ironically, seems not similarly concerned about protecting the Earth from possible Mars contamination.”;

The Sun has approached Nasa for a response to Conley’s allegations.

Illustration showing the distance between Earth and Mars, noting that Mars' distance varies depending on its orbit, with a closest distance of 33.9 million miles and a furthest distance of 250 million miles.

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