House Oversight Committee to hold UFO hearing next week
"I'd love to see whatever facts and information we have," McCarthy said Monday.
The Republican-led House Oversight Committee will hold a hearing on UFOs, officially called unidentified aerial phenomena (UAPs), next week.
Rep. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn., announced on Twitter that the session is scheduled for Wednesday.
The hearing comes after Republican lawmakers have promised to look deeper into UAPs following unconfirmed claims from a former intelligence official that the U.S. military had allegedly found crashed alien spacecraft. The Pentagon has said it hasn't discovered any information to substantiate this claim.
David Grusch, the former intelligence community official, had alleged last month that the U.S. government has a covert program focused on recovering debris from crashed, non-human origin spacecraft and is attempting to reverse-engineer the technology, the online tech outlet The Debrief reported.
A press conference on Thursday by a bipartisan group of House lawmakers gave some more detail about Wednesday's hearing.
Grusch will testify at the upcoming hearing along with two former Navy pilots, including one who recorded a widely seen video of a UAP near his fighter jet.
"We're not going to bring you in a saucer or a little green man. That's not what it's going to be about," Burchett said Thursday. "But the reality is the American public deserves to know. And you better be careful about a government doesn't trust its people."
House Speaker Kevin McCarthy was asked Monday if he believes in extraterrestrial life, in light of Burchett's announcement of the hearing.
"I will continue to see," McCarthy told reporters with a grin. "But I think if we had found a UFO, I think the Department of Defense would tell us because they would probably want to request more money."
"I'd love to see whatever facts and information we have," McCarthy continued. "I'm very supportive of letting the American people see what we have, where we go."
Burchett, who is leading the panel's inquiry into UAPs with fellow GOP hard-liner Rep. Anna Paulina Luna of Florida, had previewed the hearing last week.
"We're going to have professionals in here and we're getting blowback from some of the alphabet agencies," he claimed to reporters then, without elaborating further.
"I'm sick of government ... that does not trust the people," he said when pushed by the press for more detail.
Burchett and Luna will be joined in the hearing by Rep. Jared Moskowitz, a prominent freshman Democrat from Florida.
Earlier this year, the Pentagon office tasked with reviewing UAPs said it had look at more than 800 cases dating back decades but hadn't identified any that could be attributed to alien origin.
Sean Kirkpatrick, the director of the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office, told a Senate subcommittee in April "only a very small percentage" of UAP reports could be described as "anomalous."
"The majority of unidentified objects reported to AARO demonstrate mundane characteristics of balloons, unmanned aerial systems, clutter, natural phenomena, or other readily explainable sources," he said at the time.
ABC News' Luis Martinez contributed to this report.