Bigfoot Interviews: Alaska Author and Montana Border Patrol Agent
Posted Wednesday, July 01, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
So I stumbled across this gem on YouTube the other day, and honestly, it's the kind of content that makes you sit up and pay attention. Dave Flaherty over at the Canam Missing Project dropped a quick intro video that sets the stage for two other interviews he recently released, and let me tell you, both of them are worth circling back for.
The first one features Dr. Rob Alley, a researcher who has spent considerable time in Alaska studying the Sasquatch phenomenon. If you're not familiar with his work, he's the author of two books that have become essential reading for anyone serious about the subject: "Bigfoot in Southeast Alaska" and "Raincoast Sasquatch." Both titles are considered foundational texts in the field, and Alley has earned a reputation as one of the more thoughtful voices in Sasquatch research.
What makes this particular interview stand out is the focus on Alaska Native communities and their long-standing relationship with these beings. Alley dives into the belief systems of indigenous peoples who have coexisted with Sasquatch for generations, and their perspectives often differ dramatically from the skeptical Western viewpoint. There's a depth of cultural knowledge here that you simply don't get from typical Bigfoot documentaries, and Alley handles it with the respect it deserves. The interview was apparently filmed on the fly, on the streets of Alaska, which gives it this raw, unfiltered quality that you just can't manufacture in a studio.
The second interview is where things get really interesting. Greg Warwick is a retired Border Patrol agent who spent over two decades patrolling the rugged terrain of Northwest Montana, including handling calls for Lincoln County. Ten of those years were spent in the mountains, and during that time, he had encounters and interactions that he describes in this short but absolutely compelling interview. Warwick attended Montana Con, an event put on by Flaherty and Joe Hauser in Kalispell, and approached Flaherty afterward to share his story. The fact that a retired federal agent with that kind of credibility is willing to go on camera and talk about Sasquatch encounters speaks volumes.
What's particularly fascinating about Warwick's account is the professional lens he brings to it. As a Border Patrol agent, he was trained to observe, document, and assess situations with a critical eye. These weren't the experiences of someone unfamiliar with the wilderness or prone to overactive imagination. This was a man whose job required him to be sharp, analytical, and grounded in reality, and yet he still has stories to tell.
Both interviews tie into the larger body of work Flaherty has been building, including the film "American Sasquatch: Man, Myth, or Monster," which is available on Amazon. The connections between these interviews and the documentary suggest a coordinated effort to bring together credible witnesses from diverse backgrounds, all pointing to the same conclusion.
If you're someone who values firsthand accounts from credible witnesses, these interviews are essential viewing. Flaherty mentions that the videos are released on staggered starts, so check the channel for the full lineup. And as he notes in the intro, the number one comment on each video contains additional information worth reading.
Definitely worth carving out some time for both of these. The Alley interview offers that deep cultural perspective from Alaska, and the Warwick interview brings the boots-on-the-ground credibility of a career law enforcement officer. Two very different angles, both pointing in the same direction.