Ok, so I did a little digging on "William Rutledge." Here's the wikipedia entry:
Hoax
"In April 2007 videos began appearing on YouTube under the username retiredafb telling the extraordinary story of Apollo 20, a secret lunar mission that definitively proved the existence of intelligent, alien life on the moon.
[1] Then, on May 23, 2007, Italian ufologist Luca Scantanburlo interviewed a man who identified himself as William Rutledge, a retired American astronaut living in Rwanda. Rutledge claimed to be the commander of the Apollo 20 crew and to be the account owner of retiredafb. However, Scantanburlo never met Rutledge in person because he conducted the interview over
Yahoo! Messenger.
[2]
"During the interview, Rutledge said Apollo 20 was a top-secret mission launched in mid August 1976 from
Vandenberg Air Force Base in
Santa Barbara, California, and conducted jointly by the United States and the former
Soviet Union. He said the other mission members were American Leona Snyder (an apparently fictitious person) and former Soviet cosmonaut
Aleksei Leonov, the first human being to walk in space. Rutledge said the videos show that he and Leonov discovered the remains of an ancient, lunar civilization.
[3][4] He also said they brought back artifacts to earth for study, including a hibernating, female humanoid.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollo_20_hoax
After watching the artifacts of the alien civilization for a while, skip to around 14:00 for the alien autopsy.
More from the wiki:
"The first Apollo 20 videos appeared on YouTube on
April Fool's Day, a hint that the story was nothing more than an elaborate prank. The videos, however, were then moved to Revver.com (another defunct website) also under user name retiredafb. Other videos are scattered throughout YouTube posted by several different account users, making it difficult to determine the true identity of the hoaxer. Each video continues to draw thousands of views.
"Despite the realistic appearance of the videos, amateurs have easily debunked them on YouTube and elsewhere on the internet.
[5]"