There have been near-death revelations associated with UFOs before, notably Boyd Bushman, former Lockheed engineer.
Thread
Debunked: Boyd Bushman, Area 51 scientist, claims existence of aliens in deathbed video [Hoax], my post
# 13 in the "Scale, Viability and Cost of the Conspiracy..." thread, Snopes "Did Boyd Bushman Provide Evidence of Alien Contact?" 31 Oct 2014, David Mikkelson
https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/boyd-bushman-aliens/
A
Daily Mirror story (link in post #13, "Scale, Viability.." as above) says Bushman attended Brigham Young University, so he was probably a Mormon like Rogers. Don't know what to make of this, but I think another member here (
@NorCal Dave? Apologies if wrong) noticed that several notable people in the UFO field/ narrative have connections with the Church of the Latter-day Saints.
Bushman's account has been effectively debunked. Near-death disclosures are not necessarily reliable.
Ben Rich, another Lockheed engineer and notably the second director of the "Skunk Works" (Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ben_Rich_(engineer)) is claimed to have made a "deathbed confession" (that we know about aliens, current US aircraft are based on alien tech and we have FTL travel) but the reliability of these claims- whether Rich ever said anything even remotely like this- is much more questionable than Bushman's video account, and perhaps has little credibility outside UFO enthusiast circles, e.g.
"Ben Rich - Deathbed Confession" (complete with tasteless illustration),
The Night Sky II website
https://www.thenightskyii.org/deathbed3.html.
"UFOs Are Real : Ben Rich Lockheed CEO Admitted In His Deathbed" (Rich wasn't a Lockheed CEO AFAIK, History Oasis website
https://www.historyoasis.com/post/lockheed-martin-ceo-history) Sightings.com website
http://sightings.com/1.reports2010/benrich.html
If Roger's "confession" is at least in part accurate, it means he lied to his daughter for decades (or at least didn't confide in her; we don't know the dynamics of their relationship).
It is established beyond reasonable doubt that some people have maintained improbable UFO-related stories to the end of their lives, and others have made dramatic (and debunked) "disclosures".
Michael Rogers has been an unreliable source- by his own admission, if his final account is accurate in any way- and might have been to the end.
Rogers cast doubt on Travis' version of events in 2021, but (as far as I can make out) he didn't seem to say he (Rogers) had been involved in a hoax. It's unclear if he was still maintaining if there was a UFO, or maybe a fake UFO which he thought might not be real (implying he wasn't part of a hoax):
External Quote:
"We were talking in the woods one day... We were talking about creating a UFO hoax, okay? I don't know how the UFO got there. But I remember... when I was driving the truck and he jumped out, it was all deliberate. It was all a staged thing, okay? He ran up there and there was something about the UFO not being real, although it looked real."
Wikipedia, Travis Walton incident
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Travis_Walton_incident
A possible motivation for Roger's change of story might be his finding out that Travis intended to make more money from the story without involving Rogers, Wikipedia again
External Quote:
He later clarified: "Travis tried to keep a new remake of the movie a secret from me. He has always had his big secrets that he has kept from me. It angered me. I tried over the last two weeks to reason with [him], but of no avail. I don't believe Travis is an honest person, and therefore I want nothing to do with him."
But Rogers later appears to have recanted, saying later in 2021
External Quote:
I, Michael H. Rogers, make an open apology to Travis C. Walton for anything negative I may have said against him within the last few years.
...and Walton made a very similar reciprocal statement
(
Bad UFOs website, Robert Sheaffer, 2021
https://badufos.blogspot.com/2021/03/mike-rogers-says-that-he-is-no-longer.html)
Again, at least some of Michael Rogers' accounts are probably unreliable. His final statement about his role as a hoaxer
might be truthful but it contains details which, given his track record, some of us might find hard to believe, and as far as we know he provided no corroborating evidence (photos, details of how he hoaxed the Phoenix lights, anything else).