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The Roswell 'UFO' Incident
One morning around Independence Day 1947, about 75 miles from the town of Roswell, New Mexico, a rancher named Mac Brazel found something unusual in his sheep pasture: a mess of metallic sticks held together with tape; chunks of plastic and foil reflectors; and scraps of a heavy, glossy, paper-like material. Unable to identify the strange objects, Brazel called Roswell’s sheriff. The sheriff, in turn, called officials at the nearby Roswell Army Air Force base. Soldiers fanned out across Brazel’s field, gathering the mysterious debris and whisking it away in armored trucks.
WATCH: Full episodes of History's Greatest Mysteries online now and tune in for all-new episodes Saturdays at 9/8c.
Did you know? The Project Mogul team invented a number of high-tech materials for its balloons and other equipment, including ultra-lightweight and ultra-strong metals, fiber-optic cables and fireproof fabrics. This is part of the reason why some people who saw the debris thought it came from outer space: It didn’t look or behave like anything they’d ever seen. Many of these materials are still in use today.
On July 8, “RAAF Captures Flying Saucer on Ranch in Roswell Region” was the top story in the Roswell Daily Record. But was it true? On July 9, an Air Force official clarified the paper’s report: The alleged “flying saucer,” he said, was only a crashed weather balloon. However, to anyone who had seen the debris (or the newspaper photographs of it), it was clear that whatever this thing was, it was no weather balloon. Some people believed–and still believe–that the crashed vehicle had not come from Earth at all. They argued that the debris in Brazel’s field must have come from an alien spaceship.
READ MORE: The First Alien-Abduction Account Described a Medical Exam with a Crude Pregnancy Test
Dummy Drops and UFOs
These skeptics grew more numerous during the 1950s, when the Air Force conducted a series of secret “dummy drops” over air bases, test ranges and unoccupied fields across New Mexico. These experiments, meant to test ways for pilots to survive falls from high altitudes, sent bandaged, featureless dummies with latex “skin” and aluminum “bones”–dummies that looked an awful lot like space aliens were supposed to–falling from the sky onto the ground, whereupon military vehicles would descend on the landing site to retrieve the “bodies” as quickly as possible.
To people who believed the government was covering up the truth about the Roswell landing, these dummy drops seemed just as suspicious. They were convinced that the dummies were actually extraterrestrial creatures who were being kidnapped and experimented on by government scientists.
READ MORE: Two Pilots Saw a UFO. Why Did the Air Force Destroy the Report?
Roswell and the Mysterious Project Mogul
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It turned out that the Army knew more about Brazel’s “flying saucer” than it let on. Since World War II, a group of geophysicists and oceanographers from Columbia University, New York University and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution on Cape Cod had been working on a top-secret atomic espionage project at New Mexico’s Alamogordo Air Field that they called Project Mogul. Project Mogul used sturdy high-altitude balloons to carry low-frequency sound sensors into the tropopause, a faraway part of the Earth’s atmosphere that acts as a sound channel. In this part of the atmosphere, sound waves can travel for thousands of miles without interference, much like under the ocean. The scientists believed that if they sent microphones into this sound channel, they would be able to eavesdrop on nuclear tests as far away as the Soviet Union.
According to the U.S. military, the debris in Brazel’s field outside Roswell actually belonged to Project Mogul. It was the remains of a 700-foot-long string of neoprene balloons, radar reflectors (for tracking) and sonic equipment that the scientists had launched from the Alamogordo base in June and that had, evidently, crashed in early July 1947. Because the project was highly classified, no one at the Roswell Army Air Field even knew that it existed, and they had no idea what to make of the objects Brazel had found. (In fact, some officials on the base were worried that the wreckage had come from a Russian spy plane or satellite–information that they were understandably reluctant to share with the public.) The “weather balloon” story, flimsy though it was, was the simplest and most plausible explanation they could come up with on short notice. Meanwhile, to protect the scientists’ secret project, no one at Alamogordo could step in and clear up the confusion.
READ MORE: In 1952, the Flatwoods Monster Terrified 6 Kids, a Mom, a Dog—and the Nation
Roswell and 'Flying Saucerism' Today
Today, many people continue to believe that the government and the military are covering up the truth about alien landings at and around Roswell. In 1994, the Pentagon declassified most of its files on Project Mogul and the dummy drops, and the federal General Accounting Office produced a report (“Report of Air Force Research Regarding the Roswell Incident”) designed to debunk these rumors. Nevertheless, there are still people who subscribe to the UFO theory, and hundreds of thousands of curiosity seekers visit Roswell and the crash site every year, hoping to find out the truth for themselves.


Live Reporting
A look at what's been happeningpublished at 21:35 31 May 2023
21:35 31 May 2023
A televised meeting of a panel set up by Nasa has come to an end, after telling us their report into sightings of unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP) will be published in July. Here's a look at some of the key takeaways.
Stigma: We were told there's widespread public interest in the subject but researchers believe UAPs are under-reported due to the stigma attached to them. On that note, Dr Nicola Fox spoke of the online abuse scientists studying the topic face, which she said was "disheartening".
Visualise: The graph below showed us the trends in sightings of UAPs, defined by Nasa as "observations of events in the sky that cannot be identified as aircraft or known natural phenomena from a scientific perspective".
Image source, Nasa
Needle in a haystack: The All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) has collected "about 800 [UAP sighting] events over about 27 years", science journalist Nadia Drake told the meeting, adding the issue was like trying to find "a very slender needle in a very big haystack".
Life beyond Earth: Planetary scientist David Grinspoon explained how sightings of anomalous events, such as "anomalous gases", could well prove there are signs of life beyond what is currently known - highlighting their importance.
UFO vs Bart Simpson: There was also conversation around the importance of scientists debunking potential UFO sightings - as well as proving them. Scott Kelly, a former astronaut and pilot, recalled flying near Virginia Beach on one occasion when a colleague became "convinced we flew by a UFO".
"I didn't see it. We turned around, we went to look at it, it turns out it was Bart Simpson. A balloon," he said.
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The truth is out therepublished at 20:56 31 May 2023
20:56 31 May 2023
Richard Gray
Editor, BBC Future
Image source, Getty Images
After decades of stigma that saw unidentified anomalous phenomena – or UFOs as they are more commonly known – frequently dismissed from sensible scientific discussion, it is clear from this meeting that Nasa now wants to take the subject seriously.
It reflects an ongoing shift within the wider scientific community regarding the willingness to talk openly and honestly about the potential for extra-terrestrial life out there in the Universe.
Many scientists often avoided being drawn into such discussions. But it is now largely accepted that alien life probably does exist somewhere out there.
Data beamed back from other worlds within our solar system have revealed they have environments that could well be capable of supporting primitive life, such as within the icy oceans of the moons of Jupiter and Saturn.
Organic compounds that could form the building blocks of life have been found on asteroids, external and comets, external. There is even evidence that our nearest planetary neighbour, Mars, could once have supported life, external (although the hard evidence that life did once exist there has yet to be found, external).
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UFO Crashes
Summary: The subject of crash retrievals is an important one in Ufology. The potential for obtaining hard evidence of UFOs and occupants is a Holy Grail for researchers, but it has proven as elusive as the chalice itself. Below are a few of the best known cases of "downed" UFOs and encounters with their alleged occupants. All of these cases have been thoroughly investigated, and the evidence is in the public domain for all to see and consider.
The subject of crash retrievals is an important one in Ufology. The potential for obtaining hard evidence of UFOs and occupants is a Holy Grail for researchers, but it has proven as elusive as the chalice itself. What is clear is the large amount of circumstantial data pointing to the reality of several UFO crashes, and the subsequent mopping-up operations of government forces. This is a problem of pseudoscientific proportions; one can explain the lack of public evidence in terms of government conspiracy, and therefore remain covered both ways. However, the various eye-witness testimonies, some from death-beds, gives credibility to some of the crashes claimed.
At the same time, it should be borne in mind that this aspect of Ufology is prone to much speculation. This list, that we obtained from one “Titanium Knight”, should suffice to illustrate the rumour mill out there. We're not even going to attempt to corroborate this information. If just one of these is true, then the world is indeed a different one from the one we're constantly having rammed down our throats. But without supporting evidence, the data is seen to be awash with speculation:
22/7/47 Roswell, NM 4 bodies13/2/48 Aztec, NM 12 bodies7/2/48 Mexico, South of Laredo TX 1 body1952 Spitzbergen, Norway 2 bodies14/8/52 Ely, Nevada 16 bodies10/9/50 Albuquerque, NM 3 bodies20/5/53 Kingman, Arizona 1 body19/6/53 Laredo, Texas 4 bodies10/7/53 Johannesburg, S. Africa 5 bodies13/10/53 Dutton, Montana 4 bodies5/5/55 Brighton, England 4 bodies18/7/57 Carlsbad, NM 4 bodies12/6/62 Holloman AFB, NM 2 bodies10/11/64 Ft Riley, Kansas 9 bodies27/1066 N.W. Arizona 1 body18/7/72 Morroco 3 bodies10/11/73 N.W. Arizona 5 bodies12/5/76 Australian Outback 4 bodies22/7/77 N.W. Arizona 5 bodies5/4/77 S.W. Ohio 11 bodies17/8/77 Tobasco, Mexico 2 bodies11/88 Afghanistan 7 bodies5/89 South Africa 2 alive7/89 Siberia 9 alive
Again, this information is for illustration of a point only. The Roswell date is incorrect, for starters. 1953 was obviously a bad year for travellers to Earth: Perhaps a new Anti-Flying Saucer Missile came into service. Also note the propensity for disaster in the S.W. USA. Finally, we at Cosmic Conspiracies are at a loss to explain the apparent galactic interest in Brighton, England. It is of course possible that the UFO occupants were simply visiting relatives!
Below are a few of the best known cases of "downed" UFOs and encounters with their alleged occupants. All of these cases have been thoroughly investigated, and the evidence is in the public domain for all to see and consider:
F16 Shoots Down UFO!
[The following story was forwarded by a friend in Saudi Arabia who says that this story appeared recently a local newspaper.]
A high level source has revealed that an American Air Force F16 gunned down a UFO over Saudi Arabia during Desert Storm and five nations are trying to cover up the encounter. 'I don't know all the details but I'm sure that when this story comes out it will shake the world,' says Colonel Gregor Petrokov, a senior Russian official.
'It is a cover-up waiting to explode'. Colonel Petrokov says he was one of the first experts at the crash site in a barren desert region 250 miles northeast of Riyadh, the Saudi Arabian capital. 'The Americans won't admit it was a UFO their plane shot down, but the debris was not from any known aircraft,' he says. 'The Saudi's with me were so frightened that they asked American, British and French investigators to come to the crash site immediately'. The Colonel says he was visiting in Riyadh at the time and that he and a small Russian team were able to inspect the wreckage before American forces from Desert Storm arrived.
'The craft was circular and made of a material I've never seen before,' he says. 'About a third of it seemed to be missing, possibly blown away by the American missiles.' The Saudi's wouldn't let us touch anything, but we saw instruments, machinery and other things that completely baffled us.' He says the markings on the instrument panels and dials were not in any language he was familiar with. 'It seemed to be a relatively small craft, maybe 15 feet across,' he says. 'There were three chairs, probably for crew members, but they were so small they seemed to have been made for children. Evidently space aliens are only about three feet tall. Most amasing, though, is the fact that there were no bodies at the crash site, nor did there appear to be an engine in the craft.'
'The American Missiles may have scored a direct hit on the engine, causing it to disintegrate,' he says 'But I checked with the Saudi radar technicians and they claim their instruments didn't show anyone ejecting or bailing out from the craft. Search helicopters were all over the area, which is a desert, and they did not spot any survivors in the vicinity of the crash.' During interviews with the radar technicians, Petrokov was told that the blip identified as the UFO appeared out of nowhere as four F16s were streaking towards Baghdad. 'One of the American planes broke from formation and headed for the UFO' he says. The alien craft started moving southwest, away from the F16 and the American pilot gave chase. When the F16 was within three miles, the alien craft seemed to fire something at the plane but missed. The American then fired two missiles. Both hit the saucer. There was a terrific explosion, and then the crash. When American investigators arrived, Petrokov says he and his team were immediately ordered out of the area and flown back to Riyadh. 'There were things they didn't want us to see more, I think, than the fact that the craft was circular, that there were no survivors and that it was made of a foreign substance' he says. Petrokov says members of his team were able to sneak pictures without the knowledge of the Saudi's or Americans, but he was ordered to turn them over to Russian authorities the next day. Petrokov says American army engineers gathered up all debris and carted it away for shipment to the U.S.
ROSWELL
The definitive UFO crash retrieval. Much solid research has gone into proving the validity of this case in the last couple of decades, particularly by Kevin Randle, Don Schmitt and Stanton T. Friedman. Essentially, the U.S.A.F. released information to the media about the unexpected discovery of a crashed flying disc near Roswell A.F.B. in the first week of July, 1947. This claim was quickly retracted by a higher military authority as the startling news went global. An effective debunking of their own news story then took place, publicly humiliating the officer who initially broke the story, Jesse Marcel.
Roswell highlights how the post-war U.S. government was able to cover-up an incident that had profound implications for our planet with ruthless efficiency. The general population in those days took the military's word that what they did was above board and always in the best interests of the country. Authority meant authority, and if someone was told to keep quiet about something then they did. Nowadays, it is difficult for us to comprehend how the authorities got away with Roswell, especially when they are now publicly laughed at when they produce the sort of drivel recently used to debunk the case.
1947 saw the introduction of the National Security state in the U.S., two years after the War and first use of the atom bomb. The Manhattan Project had been kept quiet successfully during the war, so why was it deemed necessary to create further levels of secret government in 1947? The answer, of course, is Roswell, with the subsequent investiture of the committee overseeing dealings with UFOs and the necessary secrecy surrounding them (Majestic 12), and the establishment of various ultra-secret intelligence agencies. For a long time it worked, and Roswell wasn't even on the Ufological map until the Seventies. If the same happened today, would the cover-up be as complete?
VARGINHA
An extraordinary event occurred in the Brazilian city of Varginha on 20 January 1996. Multiple witnesses were shocked by the appearance in their midst of small, orange-red beings which behaved as if "on the run". They were captured by members of the local Fire Service and taken to a local teaching hospital where they were again seen by many credible witnesses. Upon the speedy intervention of U.S. military personnel, the entities disappeared. Stories of pregnant dwarves (!) were then circulated to the media to put them off the chase. But it was too late. Ufology is more popular in Brazil than perhaps anywhere on the planet, and researchers were on the scene, investigating the claims and distributing their preliminary findings almost immediately. A.J. Gavaerd has done much work to highlight this important case world-wide. Perhaps the incident in Varginha shows the speed with which the Authorities now have to fire-fight an emerging situation to prevent complete loss of control of the UFO subject. This may have been one of their nearest misses.
RENDLESHAM FOREST
Aliens may not have been captured in this case, but it does involve a significant interaction between them and the military. American servicemen stationed at Bentwaters in East Anglia, England were witness to a remarkable close encounter outside the perimeter of their base in December 1980. Although later debriefed about the security implications of going public with their story, some indeed risked everything to let the truth be known. Larry Warren has engaged in a personal crusade to bring this case to the attention of the world, encountering hostility from many quarters. Much of his story has been corroborated by other testimony and circumstantial evidence. Some of his wilder claims, as to the exact nature of the incident, remain highly controversial.
As if the appearance of UFOs over sensitive military establishments wasn't enough, the entities involved appear to have been trying to defuse an international situation by tampering with nuclear weapons secretly stored in an underground facility below Woodbridge/Bentwaters. Amazing as this may sound, it's exactly the sort of activity predicted by the contention that we are being visited by aliens. Whether this conclusion is acceptable to many is a moot point, but something very strange did happen near the air-bases in 1980, as corroborated by documents made available through the American Freedom of Information Act. We would highly recommend the book "Left at East Gate" to those interested in reading up on the case.
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Swedish Military Search For Fallen UFO In Lake
By Clas Svahn/UFO-Sweden
Translation from Swedish by Eileen Fletcher
What was it that crashed down into the 13-metre-deep Lake Backsjön north of Arvika in Värmland? An object with small wings, say the witnesses. Nothing at all, say the military who searched for many weeks. It was well after midday on the 27th of July 1999, at least four people around Lake Backsjön outside Gunnarskog saw how an oblong object plunged down from the sky. Some of the witnesses said they'd also seen small wings sticking out from the 5 metre long and 1,5 metre wide body. The object crashed down with a splash and water was thrown into the air. One of the witnesses contacted the rescue station in Arvika which in turn contacted the police, who sent a report to FO 52 - area defence in Kristinehamn - it finally reached operations command at milostaben in Strängnäs.
- We interviewed the witnesses who had all seen the object come down, said chief of staff Stellan Jansson, who was responsible for the search.
During late August many test dives were made in the lake, and the military worked with the security police and the rescue station, evaluating the reliability of the witnesses. The conclusion was that the witnesses were reliable and that a greater and more costly effort was needed. On the 13th of September they renewed the investigation around the 2 kilometre long and 800 metre wide lake under the code name "Operation Sea Find". There were 14 men, eight of whom were divers, along with Sweden's most sophisticated sonar equipment and an under-water camera. Personnel from operations command in Strängäs were also present. When the military began showing interest in the lake at the beginning of August, the public were presented with a completely different story. Arvika Nyheter's newsreporter Kjell Emanuelsson received the reply that it was a home defence practice, whilst Anne-Marie Gundahl who lives at Lake Backsjön heard that the divers were training to make bridges!
- We got to know that it could be something which was dangerous if it ended up in foreign hands, says Birgitta Jakobsson from the nearby community of Gunnarskog.
Confusion as to what the military were up to at the lake was great. According to Stellan Jansson, it was all due to a break-in at a mobilisation supply depot in the area some weeks earlier. Home guardsmen were responsible for guarding the area whilst repairs were carried out, at the same time as checks were made to see if anything had been stolen.
- Then we drove down and interviewed the witnesses who had all seen the same thing. At the same time there were also home guardsmen in the area. Then at the end of August, we began a three-man diving operation in the lake.
- With this very strong coalition we were able to make a thorough search from September 13th to September 16th. We gave it all we'd got.
How much time did you set aside for the search?
- Including the preparation time and reconnaissance, it was ten days. In the end we had searched through 75 per cent of the lake. We were methodical, so that we were sure that the object that had come down into the lake had not glided further away. We really tried to cover the whole area.
From the shore, the locals around Lake Backsjön could follow the activities of the military. From seven in the morning to seven in the evening, they could see divers working in the 13-metre-deep lake. Visibility was ten centimetres. But with the help of an underwater craft equipped with ultrasound and a camera capable of seeing an object only a couple of centimetres in size on the bottom of the lake, nothing was left to chance.
If the same area had been so thoroughly searched by divers, it would have taken a year with the poor visibility, according to Stellan Jansson.
- No matter how small the object had been, we would have found it, said Stellan. Were you surprised that nothing was found?
- I must admit that I was. With the powerful equipment and effort made this week, I really thought we'd find something. The search in Lake Backsjön gave the military food for thought. Here were good witnesses who related a plausible story. But after investigations, their claims could not be verified.
- We have to treat the reports as reliable, but the search has not found anything and we do not know exactly what we're looking for, says Colonel Yngve Johansson at FO 52.
The result after many weeks of searching was only a metal barrel and a plastic bag.
- It has been a bit difficult. The people are very reliable and have really put themselves forward to help us in any way imaginable, said Stellan Jansson.
- They were interested themselves to see us bring something up from the lake. But one knows how the sun can reflect when at a certain angle - perhaps a fish leaped or a bird dived down..... Certainly seven people could experience an optical illusion, it does happen. One cannot dismiss the possibility altogether.
After midday on the 16th of September, the search was discontinued. On October 1st, a report was finished for further distribution to the commanding officer, and the military intelligence and security at headquarters in Stockholm. Two pages were not classified but transcripts from the security police's interviews and a detailed description of the technics used during the search were classified. UFO-Sweden has filed a request to de-classify parts of the report. In all the search costed 150.000 Swedish crowns. When I asked the colonel of the first grade Yngve Johansson at FO 52, what people who see unidentified objects in the sky should do, he replied:
'I think that the public should report all the information and possibilities to us. We can then build up a picture of what happened. One incident does not give us the answer, but many could'.
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WAS A UFO SHOT DOWN IN OKLAHOMA?
On Friday, October 13, 2000, ufologist Jim Hickman "was monitoring local law enforcement (radio channels) and at 7:31 p.m. local time, a radio call came in that four or five fighter planes were sighted by local police officers, and they were traveling to the northwest."
"At the same time, an unidentified flying object (UFO) encountered the fighters and reportedly crashed into the ground north of Elk City, Oklahoma." The fighters were presumably from Tinker Air Force Base near Oklahoma City.
The descending UFO, Hickman reported, "was seen by multiple witnesses as far west as Shamrock, Texas and as far east as Clinton, Okla., north to Cheyenne, Okla. and south to Granite, Okla." According to a radio transmission reportedly made by Hammond, Okla. police cruiser, the UFO "was headed north" and crashed on a farm just north of Hammond.
"At about this time, I made a personal observation out my back door," Jim reported, "and I noticed a bright luminous vapor trail that went from the southwest to the northeast. There were several other trails in the area to the north (of Elk City--J.T.) but they seemed normal in color. I saw no other lights or aircraft in the area."
Another eyewitness also reported seeing a strange luminous vapor trail in the lower atmosphere. Richard P. of Jenks, Okla. (population 1,100), a town 10 miles (16 kilometers) south of Tulsa, reported, "There was cloud cover everywhere but to the southwest." At 7:20 p.m., "I had just stepped outside when I saw a light in the southwest sky, moving to the north. It was about 'a fist at arm's length' above the horizon. It was more like two or three lights on the front of an object that was leaving a definite trail. The trail, which had sort of a shine to it, made me question if the object was an airplane. It seemed more like a fireball that was starting to break apart. As the object moved north, it would pass behind scattered cloud cover, but I saw it for at least thirty seconds before it disappeared for good." "The trail stayed in the sky for another 10 to 15 minutes. Also, as the sky got darker, the trail got brighter! Finally, it was a beam of light, as bright as the full moon, across the southwestern sky."
The Rogers Mills County Sheriff's Department also reported, "Sparks in the sky," according to Jim Hickman.
On Saturday, October 14, 2000, KFOR TV in Oklahoma City reported, "It happened last night at 7:30 p.m. when a strange sight surface in the sky. Reports came into our newsroom from across the state, and many callers saw the same thing. They had seen a mysterious fireball in the sky." KFOR TV reported sightings of the UFO and its luminous trail in the cities of Elk City, Erick, Enid, Alva, Clinton, Leedy, Oakwood, Choctaw, Mangum, Ringwood and Sayre." The TV station telephoned Tinker Air Force Base, the National Weather Service and NORAD., "and we quickly learned that the object had been seen by folks from Texas to Nebraska." However, eyewitnesses in Kansas saw more than one object in the sky. "'There's one big light and around it just five little balls, just lights, just following them. And then through the sky there was just
like vapors, and vapors like different colors--blues and oranges--that were just cool,' said eyewitness Arthur Davis of Valley Center, Kansas."
There were also reports of "fire in the sky" from McCook, Nebraska. In Wichita, the largest city in Kansas, hundreds saw the aerial display. "Gary Bishop of South Wichita said, 'Just looked over my shoulder and right across the sky, from the southwest to the northwest, down a little bit. This was a meteor that left a trail of blue light. It was beautiful!'" "911 supervisors said they had more telephones ringing than dispatchers to handle them. They say they had around 150 calls from witnesses saying they saw everything from space aliens to a plane crash."
"At NORAD, M/Sgt. Larry Lincoln said, 'It seems to be a very heavy meteor shower. Our weather people told us to expect something like this between October 10th and the 19th of October, with the heaviest coming down around the 15th. It seems to be probably coming down a little early.'"
(Editor's Comment: Right, Sarge. And that's why, despite advance warning, NASA launched the space shuttle Discovery right into the teeth of this meteor storm.)
At 7:43 p.m., the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) office in Oklahoma City reported that it was a meteor shower. (See the Wichita, Kansas Eagle for October 14, 2000. Many thanks to Jim Hickman, Louise A. Lowry and Todd Lemire for these reports.)



1561 – 1997 List of UFO crashes
1923 Quetta, Pakistan
1925 Chevy Chase, Maryland, USA
1925 Sept/Oct Polson, Montana
1930 Mandurah, West Australia
1933 Italy
1933 or 1934 – Ubatuba, Brazil Witnesses on a beach are said to have seen a disc dive and explode, showering the area with silvery fragments of highly pure magnesium.
1936 Black Forest, Germany
1938 CZERNICA, near Jelenia Gora. Seized by Nazi Germany, after Polish Invasion One Year Later. Updated 12-10-02
1941 West of San Diego, Ca
1941 Spring Cape Girardeau, Missouri
1941 July 4 Tinian Island, Oceania
1945 Somewhere in the UK
1945 Mataquescuintla, Guatemala
1946 Magdalena, NM
1946 July 9 Lake Barken, Sweden
1946 July 10 Bjorkon, Sweden
1946 July 18 Lake Mjosa Sweden
1946 July 19 Noon Lake Kolmjarv, Sweden
1946 August 12 SW Sweden
1946 August 16 Malmo Sweden
1946 mid-October Southern Sweden
1947 January Papagos Indian Reserv. AZ NEW
1947 May Spitzbergen, Norway Newspaper articles, cover-up, 17 bodies.
A report by journalist Dorothy Kilgallen stated that British scientists and airmen were excavating the wreckage of a mysterious flying ship. The Swedish military acknowledged its extraterrestrial origin and reported 17 bodies were found. The story appeared as a tiny blip for only one day in the U.S. news media before it was silenced by the military. I personally saw this news story years ago.
1947 May 31 Socorro, New Mexico
1947 July Near St. Joseph, MO
1947 July 4 Roswell, New Mexico, USA The well known Roswell affair. 4-5 bodies, one alive ET?
Most famous of the UFO Crash cases and most thoroughly investigated. William (Mac) Brazel, a local rancher, reported hearing a loud explosion during the night of a thunderstorm. The next day Brazel found a debris field on his ranch. Word reached Major Jesse Marcel at the Roswell Army Air Field and he investigated. Marcel reported finding a debris field scattered over a mile. The material recovered from the debris included small beams with hieroglyphics on them; a metal that was as light as balsa wood but couldn’t be dented with a sledgehammer, although flexible. The material would not burn. The scrap material was flown to Carswell AFB in Fort Worth. Witnesses have described a second site where the main body of the craft was found along with the bodies of its crew.
1947 July 5 Plains of San Augustin, New Mexico, USA
1947 July 31 Maury Island, Tacoma, USA Complicated hoax?.
1947 August 13 Hopi Reservation, Arizona
1947 October 2 Cave Creek, Arizona, USA
Not much is known about this crash. There is still one living witness in Prescott, AZ.
1947 October Paradise Valley, Arizona, USA
1947 October 20 San Diego, California
Feb 13, 1948, Aztec, New Mexico 12 Bodies
Mar 1948 (Socorro, NM) A second craft came down in this vicinity that was much like the Aztec craft according to an ex-army private.
1948 March 25 White Sands, New Mexico, USA
Mar 25, 1948 (Aztec, NM) Though still considered a hoax by most researchers, others have left the door open on this one. A new first-hand witness has been found in Las Vegas. The story is that a large disc said to be 99 feet in diameter came down in Hart Canyon and that a military recovery team was dispatched from Durango, CO.
See also Cylinder Shaped UFO's
July 7, 1948, Mexico, south of Laredo 1 possibly due to interception by American military aircraft. Photographic evidence was made of the alien bodies recovered (12-10-02) 1 body recovered
1948 August Laredo, Texas, USA 1 body recovered
October 2, 1948
Phoenix/ Paradise Valley Arizona
(Dreamy Draw)
Cave Creek Arizona. Approx. 3 months after Roswell, a UFO crashed somewhere in the Dreamy Draw area. Another version to the report has it that a UFO settled down in the Dreamy Draw area but actually crashed 10 miles away near Cave Creek landfill.
The remains of its two aliens, described as about 4½ feet tall, were recovered. They were kept in some guy’s freezer for a while and then taken away by the military.
Some believe the reason the Army Corps of Engineers built the Dreamy Draw Dam was not for flood control, but to bury the UFO… Also in that same area, you will find a large underground vault.
1949 Roswell, New Mexico 1 ET Living
August 19, 1949 – Death Valley, California,
Two prospectors named Mace Garney and Buck Fitzgerald claimed to have watched an object crash in the desert. It was a 24-foot disc. The story appeared on page 13 of the local Bakersfield newspaper the next day.
1950 (before) Near Mexico City, Mexico Second-hand witness.
1950 January Mojave Desert, California, USA
1950 February 10 Copenhagen, Denmark Farmer witness UFO explode.
1950 March? New Mexico, USA FBI memo mentions recovery of 3 crashed saucers.
April 1950 – Argentina
Mr. E.C. Bossa found a strange disc and four small dead pilots in a remote region of Argentina. He returned with a friend the next day and found only a pile of warm ashes. A cigar-shaped object was seen briefly as it flew overhead at a high altitude.
1950 September 10 Albuquerque, Texas, USA 3 bodies
1950 December 6 El Indio/Guerrero area, Tex-Mex border, Texas, USA
Mid-50’s BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA When a disc crashed near Birmingham, the area was cordoned off and humanoid bodies were flown to Maxwell AFB, according to a man who claims to have flown the helicopter with the bodies to a waiting aircraft. Total bodies unknown at this time.
9-10-50 ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO 3 bodies recovered
1952 Spitzenbergen, Norway 2 Bodies
Aug 14,1952 Ely, Nevada 16 Bodies
1952 July Washington DC, USA
1952 July 23 Pueblo, Colorado, USA Admitted hoax.
1952 August Ohio, USA
April 18,1953 S.W. Arizona No Bodies
May 20, 1953, Kingman, Arizona 1 Body People were taken in blacked-out buses to the crash site updated 1body recovered 12-10-02
Update: A USAFveteran claims to have participated in the recovery of a crashed aluminum-like disc impacted 20 inches into the earth. It was oval, 32 feet wide. Inside were two swivel chairs, an oval cabin and numerous instruments. One 4 foot tall occupant was recovered, dead. It was a dark brown complexion and wore a silvery metal suit with no helmet. The witness affidavit was released by respected UFO researcher Ray Fowler in UFO Magazine, April 1976.
1953 May 20 Western Utah, USA
Reports indicate that the aliens survived the crash, taking refuge in the nearby woods and is related to the Kingman Crash (Cseti)
See also 1999: Subject: Abduction
May 21, 1953 – Kingman, Arizona
A USAF veteran claims to have participated in the recovery of a crashed aluminum-like disc impacted 20 inches into the earth. It was oval, 32 feet wide. Inside were two swivel chairs, an oval cabin and numerous instruments. One 4-foot-tall occupant was recovered, dead. It had a dark brown complexion and wore a silvery metal suit with no helmet. The witness’ affidavit was released by respected UFO researcher Ray Fowler in UFO Magazine, April 1976.
June 19,1953 Laredo, Texas 4 Bodies
1953 Summer Fort Polk, LA, USA
July 10,1953 Johofnisburg S. Africa 5 Bodies
Oct 13,1953 Dutton, Montana 4 Bodies
Mr. C.M. Tenney, returning from Great Falls to Conrad, saw an oval object that followed his car while balls of fire fell all over the road. Later that day he was phoned by a colonel from Malmstrom AFB who asked him to come to the base at 10 a.m. the next day. He was escorted to a windowless room inside a fenced-off compound and asked to sign a statement. While doing so, he says he saw two men carrying large laundry bags containing humanoid bodies.
Spring 1954 – Mattydale, NY
In this suburb of Syracuse, at 3 a.m. on a Sunday, an information specialist and his wife saw a 20-foot-wide object being examined on the ground by several men who were taking pictures. The next day an officer told them the event was a military secret. Later, police denied the whole incident ever took place.
1955 July Vestra Norrland, Sweden
May 5,1955 Brighton, England 4 Bodies
July 18,1957 Carlsbad, New Mexico 4 Bodies
1957 September 14 Ubatuba, Brazil Physical evidences, fragments analyzed.
1957 November 21 Reasty Hill, Scarborough, Yorks
1958/1959 Woomera, Australia
1958 Utah Desert Craft was in excellent condition but mysteriously abandoned by occupants
update 12-04-02 4 bodies recovered
Jan 21, 1959 Gdynia Poland update 12-04-02
1959 – Frdynia, Poland
An object was reported to have fallen into the harbor. Divers recovered pieces of shiny metal, which was examined by the Polytechnic Institute and Polish Navy. Some material was reportedly lost. Several days later a small humanoid was found on a nearby beach; its remains were sent to the Soviet Union.
1959 September 17 Wormer near Amsterdam
1959 Undated Italy, North of Rome
1960s offshore Spain
1960s Great Sand Dunes, Co
March 1960 – New Paltz, NY
Local law enforcement authorities captured a small humanoid outside his craft while two copilots escaped. The alien was turned over to the CIA and died 28 days later.
1961 Timmensdorfer, Germany 12 Bodies
1961 April 28, 2 am. Lake Onega, Karelskaya, USSR.
June 12, 1962, Holloman, AFB, New Mexico 2 Bodies
1962 Otero County, NM
1962 April 18 Las Vegas, Nevada, USA Impressive events.
1963/1972 Australia, 12 recoveries
1963 July 16 Charlton, UK
1963 December 10 Cosford RAF, UK Alleged crash cover-up on RAF base.
Nov 10, 1964, Ft. Riley, Kansas 9 Bodies
1965 San Miguel, Argentina
12-09-65 Crash in Kecksburg, PA
Oct 27,1966 N.W. Arizona 1 Body
1966-1968 5 Crashes IN/KY/OH/ area 3 Bodies and Disc Intact
January 1967 – Southwest Missouri
Mr. Loftin found a 40-inch disc and gave it to the U.S. Testing Company for analysis.
See also 1999: UFOs: WHAT YOU'RE NOT TOLD
1968 Shag Harbor Incident. The One that got away.
1968 February 12 Orocue, Columbia US say ‘satellite debris’.
1969 PENNSYLVANIA recovered Craft
July 18,1972 Morroco Sahara Desert 3 Bodies
July 10,1973 NW Arizona 5 Bodies
1973 July 10 Northwest Arizona, USA 5 bodies
1974 Llandrillo, Clwyd, Wales, UK
1974 November 9 Carbondale, Pennsylvania, USA Hoax or cover story?
May 17, 1974 – Chili, NM
An Air Force team allegedly removed a 60-foot-wide metallic object from an impact area and moved it to Kirtland AFB.
Aug 25, 1974, Chihuahua, Mexico Bodies and Disc intact
November 9, 1974 – Carbondale, NJ
A glowing object fell into a small lake outside town. Three teenagers saw it fall at 7:30 p.m. on a Saturday. They observed a yellow-white glow under the water that shifted to a point 25 feet offshore. The boys were kept in a police car for three hours while a number of vehicles with floodlights and cranes removed a disc-shaped object and put it into a van. The following Monday, a railroad lantern and battery were recovered from the lake, and officials called the whole thing a hoax. Hoax? Or a cover story?
May 12, 1976, Australian Desert 4 Bodies
June 22, 1977, NW Arizona 5 Bodies
April 5, 1977, SW Ohio 11 Bodies
Aug 17, 1977, Tobasco, Mexico 2 Bodies
May 6, 1978 – Padcaya, Bolivia
A large luminous object crashed on a 13,000-foot mountain. An expedition of soldiers and scientists was dispatched to the site but was delayed by bad weather. They found nothing.
1978 – Soviet Union
After a collision with a Soviet fighter plane, a disc-shaped object fell into the ocean off Finland, where it was recovered with humanoid bodies – by a Soviet salvage team.
1978 November 10 Lebanon
Nov 1988 Afghanistan 7 Bodies
1989 Cap Ontario, Canada
May 1989 South Africa 2 ET Living
June 1989 South Africa 2 ET Living Disc Intact
July 1989 Siberia 9 ET Living Live Alien transported in 2 galaxy modes of transport from S.Africa to Wright AFB.
1989 September 28 Smith’s Point Beach, Long Island, New York, USA
Sept 2, 1990, Megas Platonos, Greece?
11-24-91 Alien spacecraft crashed into a remote area of Southhaven Park in Shirley, NY. The incident happened just after 7 PM according to John Ford, chairman of the Long Island UFO Network.
4-15-92 Buffalo, NEW YORK 10 Miles N. of Buffalo, 100′ in diameter. Crash Site was cleaned up. Not known if there were survivors
Nov 1992 Long Island, New York?
1994 Birmingham, UK
1996 January 20 Varginha, Brazil Alleged capture of aliens by the military.
6-23-96 Pinedale, ARIZONA Multiple witnesses saw a white light falling out of the sky, break into three balls of light and crash into the forest.
3-15-97
WEGORZEWO, Suwalki Providence. Site cleaned up by the Polish Army. No known survivors 12-10-02
4-15-99 Alien Ship beaches itself in Guam, Uranas Reef. Survivors are unknown. 12-10-02
2000 August 27 Balochistan, Pakistan Newspaper report ufos and ufo crash.
8-2002 Unidentified spherical object landed near the Angolan village of Manzawu, in northern Uije province. The object weighs around 10kg and measures some 50 centimeters in diameter. Angolan Armed Forces were sent to investigate. No further information (AFP)

Special Types of Sightings
International


1999: UFOs: WHAT YOU’RE NOT TOLD
While most UFOs are known to be light emitting or light-absorbing objects seen moving about the sky no satisfactory explanation has ever emerged to explain them. They have been labeled hoaxes, imagination and misinterpretation which in some cases has been proven true. But there are those that defy any rational explanation and after fifty years of diligent investigation, the enigma remains unresolved.
Those in the UFO community blame government cover-ups for this lack of progress and include the media for following the government line. But the public has long ago lost interest in reports of fleeting UFO events which rarely last long enough to be properly investigated. When investigators do arrive and are equipped to gather samples of affected materials for laboratory analysis, the process can take weeks before the results are known and the media has other assignments.
An example of this was played out during the invasion of the crop circles in England in the late 8Os and ended in a fiasco when the reporters found two pensioners who claimed they had created all of the circles in England. They said they downed a few drinks in a local pub then used a board and rope to make the circles in some farm field before going home. The tabloids spread the story around the world and the public was satisfied with a solution that didn’t involve crop-fax messages from other worlds or the earth itself as proposed by some.
But the laboratory analysis of the affected plant and soil samples gathered at circles sites proved otherwise. When Dr. Levengood of the Pinewoods Laboratory, who had carried out some of the analysis, was asked if he thought the circles were hoaxes he replied, “If people had energy able to affect the plants and soil in this way they wouldn’t be squandering it in farm fields.” He added, “It’s a type of energy I’ve never come across.” The analysis had revealed that plants and soil had been altered on the atomic and molecular levels by an outside source able to alter the material’s time, matter and gravity in ways not known to science. In the light-emitting phase, it was able to expend thousands of watts of energy over long periods and the source of that energy is still unknown.
Also missed by the media were the reports of those who visited these event sites days or weeks later and suffered headaches, nausea, and disorientation and had to leave. This includes animal mutilation, crop circles, and UFO landing sites. This suggests some form of persisting radiation continues to come from the site and most animals, including predators, seem to sense a danger and will refuse to even approach these affected areas.
See also 2000: Y3K? Space aliens and androids
Further evidence was demonstrated dramatically when a BBC crew did a TV interview with the English investigator Pat Delgado at a two-week old crop circle. Each time Pat stepped inside the centre of the circle the TV sound technician outside the wide circle yanked the phones off his ears because of a loud warbling sound being radiated while Pat was inside the circle and Pat shouted that he could feel the vibrations in his body.
Others have not been as lucky. In 1967 a Manitoba prospector suffered a cribbage board-like pattern of burn spots across his chest from radiation emitted by a landed UFO and spent months in hospital. In 1967 the bodies of two Italian fishermen drowned in the Adriatic were found to have a similar pattern of burn spots on their bodies after their boat had been sunk by a UFO. In l980 two Texas women experienced undefined skin burns, falling hair and skin sores after their encounter with a UFO while driving down a highway late one night.
Most bizarre are the claims of miraculous physical healing and transformations experienced by those who have been targeted by beams of light from UFOs or had close encounters with these aerial objects. Typical were the l970s… claims of a French doctor who was cured of old war wounds and a policeman who was instantly healed of an alligator bite on his arm when the wounded arm was struck by a beam of light from a nearby UFO. Those involved in these encounters often claim to have acquired heightened psychic abilities from the event and the claims of healing parallel the healing reported at religious shrines and the remissions have been proven by physical tests and past hospital records.
Stranger still are the personality changes experienced by some. There are a good number of cases where longtime investigators or accidental observers have found their lives dramatically changed by the encounter. Some seek a new role in life where they are more giving and drawn closer to their religious beliefs. Often the sudden change can break up the family and the experiencer will move to a distant location to follow their new role.
The fact that these radiations can and do invade the wavelengths used by the human brain seems obvious from the reports on file showing that these aerial objects can change their shape and form to comply with the observer’s belief and expectation. What you believe and expect is what you get, whether that is a devil or a deity. Its the Merlin Factor that leads many to think that these UFOs are under intelligent guidance by beings with well developed psychic abilities.
See also UFOs Caught By Canadian News Crew During Forest Fire Coverage
Dr Michael Persinger of Laurentian University has made a long-time study of the human brain and links these personality changes to micro-seizures in the human brain. The changes, he proposes, are due to bursts of radiation emitted by electrical flows generated by geologic pressures on the crystalline structures of rock deep inside the earth. He believes these energies erupting into the atmosphere invade wavelengths used by the human brain and are well capable of altering human personality. While his colleagues disagree with many parts of his proposals there can be no doubt that Persinger’s approach is more practical than belief in evil aliens. In fact the earth seems a more likely source of such natural phenomena.
In articles for scientific journals he demonstrated how these erupting energies could invade the human mind and entrain specific mental wavelengths to produce horrific nightmares. His measurements of these unknown energies were made and recorded on sophisticated scientific equipment which he had installed in an apartment where those sleeping in adjoining bedrooms reported similar reoccurring nightmares and the apartment sits atop a well known branch of a major fault cutting through the area….
If such a discharge able to expend thousands of watts of energy, as reported in some cases, then erupting from the earth directly under an animal while the animal is standing, it might hold the animal paralyzed and immobile while the surging energy seriously damaged its underside. If the energy disintegrates and invades the carcass before venting out through the throat or rectum, it might destroy vital organs along the way. As with the affected plants and soil, it might rob the blood of iron, or extract selected mineral elements from internal organs turning them into mush. It might even levitate the carcass into the air and carry it along for some distance before breaking free and allowing the carcass to fall back to earth.
Many of the veterinarians who have analysed the condition of the carcasses of mutilated animals refute the claims that predators or devil cultists are responsible for the killings. They find the animal’s internal organs and blood to have been robbed of essential mineral elements in ways parallelling the altered soil and plants at crop circle and UFO burn ring sites.
While most qualified scientists refuse to become involved in UFO events to protect their reputations or due to a lack of funds, those few who have explored the evidence on site or on file and have investigated the events have publicly stated their belief that the subject holds great potential. Dr. Allen Hynek who devoted years to the subject said that the solution to the UFO enigma could provide rich rewards. Others have said the energy behind the UFO phenomena could provide a quantum leap for science and open
the way to a whole new technology.
See also 2005: What's This? A Shaver Revival?
Like electricity, electronics and chemistry and their hazards, knowledge and ingenuity taught us safe ways to make use of natures forces for their benefits. If the energies behind UFO5 can provide ways to overcome gravity and alter time and matter in ways that seem impossible today, then these could be the basis for a whole new technology in the coming millennium. It would be 3MT, 3rd Millennium Technology. It would eliminate highways and bridges, dramatically change physical healing and open new roads to the stars.
For those in Southern Ontario with an interest in UFO5 watching and other mysterious events, the best location is anywhere along the north shore of Lake Ontario. Since the earliest of times this area, about a mile from shore, has been the site of numerous sightings of UFOs, sea serpents, ghostly burning vessels or crashed aircraft. Here ships have vanished from sight, people and planes have strangely disappeared and the area has a record for UFO sightings which have been photographed and videotaped. On the night of April 6, 1999, a report was phoned in by an observer on the bluffs who had watched a plane crash into the water near Bluffers Park. As in past years
With that sort of record it should not be a surprise that the Canadian Geological Society has finally admitted that this area is the location of a huge geologic fault that stretches from the St Lawrence River to Ohio. In some places the bottom of the lake here has dropped one to two hundred feet and the recent discovery of a huge six by three mile area of humping of the lake bottom a mile off the Toronto islands has raised questions about the future of this area. Over the past three centuries this lake has demonstrated an affinity for bizarre and mysterious events and has earned the reputation as the “Mother of Mysteries” and it would seem there is still much to be learned from her.
MUFON Ontario
1395 Lawrence Avenue West, Suite 20030
Toronto, Ontario M6L 1A7
Canada


2009: The CIA’s UFO History
After the Cold War ended, the culture of secrecy and the operational style of the CIA began to change. Its director appeared on a radio talk show, and it became possible for citizens to pressure the CIA in ways unheard of during that earlier era.
Ufology has been a beneficiary of these changes.
In late 1993, inquiries from several UFO researchers led CIA Director R. James Woolsey to order a review of all CIA files on UFOs. This agency-wide search occurred in 1994 and centralized the CIA’s UFO files.
Taking advantage of this opportunity, government historian Gerald K. Haines reviewed the documents, conducted interviews, and wrote a study examining the CIA’s interest and involvement in UFO investigation and government UFO policy from 1947 until 1990.
Haines’s study was published in Studies in Intelligence, a classified journal published quarterly for the intelligence community. The article, “CIA’s Role in the Study of UFOs, 1947–90,” appeared in the first semiannual unclassified edition for 1997, on pages 67–84.
This is a rather important document because it is the first time that a government agency has written a review of its involvement with UFOs. Although the study had been available at least since June when I downloaded it from the CIA Web site, it did not receive widespread publicity until early August.
But when the press learned about the Haines study, the attention was dramatic. The story was carried in most large newspapers, on the NBC Nightly News, and many other media outlets. A typical headline from the Chicago Sun-Times reads, “CIA feared UFO hysteria.” Several columnists used the CIA history as an opportunity to bash the CIA and secrecy in government, as exemplified by the column by David Wise (author of The Politics of Lying: Government Deception, Secrecy, and Power) in the New York Times “Big Lies and Little Green Men.”
The media generally focused on two aspects of the Haines article. In a brief section entitled “CIA’s U–2 and OXCART as UFOs,” Haines claims that many UFO sightings in the late 1950s and 1960s were actually misidentified secret American spy planes. Moreover, he alleges that the Air Force’s Project Blue Book was in on this cover-up, purposely misled the public, and falsified (Haines didn’t use that word but that is plainly what the Air Force would be doing) UFO explanations. This is important news if true, and the media rightly played up this angle.
Note that the CIA is not accused of deception by Haines; rather, it is the Air Force that willingly concocted the bogus explanations. Reporters asked the Air Force for comment, and on August 4, Brigadier General Ronald Sconyers told the press, “I cannot confirm or deny that we lied. The Air Force is committed to providing accurate and timely information within the confines of national security.”
General Sconyers sounds a bit like a weasel-worded politician, and his statement hardly serves to reduce the controversy. The second topic seized upon by the press and played up as news was the CIA-sponsored Robertson Panel from 1953.
Yes, that is correct, the Robertson Panel, whose report has been well-known to anyone interested in UFOs for over 30 years now. That the press could consider the recommendations of the panel to be news at this late date speaks volumes for the intelligence, reporting skills, and historical knowledge of the Fifth Estate. (The Washington Post, in full damage-control mode, said in an editorial that the study was “not an exposé full of new revelations,” but the paper had already published an article claiming the opposite.)
Press coverage focused on the panel’s recommendations that UFO reports be debunked (a policy Blue Book followed assiduously after 1953), that UFO groups be watched, and that there was a danger the Soviets might use UFOs to clog the channels of communication and then launch a nuclear attack.
The deception about our spy planes was just a small part of this strategy.
Although the press was only late by about 40 years, their coverage of this aspect of the report is a positive note for ufology. What is clear from the tone of most articles is that the CIA’s (and Air Force’s) lies about UFOs are just further examples of all the many lies the American public had been told during the Cold War.
And for once, Ufologists are being viewed in a sympathetic light by the media as direct victims of government deception.
Coming on the heels of the Air Force’s second report on Roswell, the tide has begun to turn against the government in the UFO debate. More and more, it is becoming apparent the government has lied about UFOs for years, and that it still may be lying today.
Although the press gave so much coverage to the Haines article, it missed part of the story, failed to do any independent investigation, and generally swallowed the report as written. As Paul Harvey says, now for the rest of the story.
The CIA’s excessive secrecy
The report by Haines is remarkably brief, given the CIA’s complex UFO involvement. In its Internet version the full article is 21 pages in length, with eight pages of that for footnotes (with several interesting tidbits buried there).
Whole swaths of history, such as the early 1970s, are compressed into a few paragraphs or sentences. Certainly a more complete study could be done, and perhaps the classified version is a bit longer.
Nevertheless, to this credit, Haines several times makes it clear that the CIA bungled the handling of UFOs because of its policies of excessive secrecy, in effect fueling the idea of a massive UFO cover-up (for which, not surprisingly, Haines finds no evidence).
For example, in 1957 Leon Davidson, a UFO investigator who worked at getting the Robertson Panel report released and was a believer in a government cover–up, was working on a UFO case involving a strange tape recording made by the Maier sisters of Chicago.
See also Cylinder Shaped UFO's
This tape had actually been analyzed by the CIA’s Office of Scientific Intelligence (OSI) and found to be “nothing more than Morse code from a US radio station.”
When Davidson wrote to Dewelt Walker, the CIA officer who had contacted the Maier sisters, Walker obfuscated and refused to provide a straight answer about his role.
When Davidson persisted, the CIA had the Air Force contact Davidson saying that Walker “was and is an Air Force Officer.” Then to further screw things up, the CIA had one of its officers dress in an Air Force uniform and contact Davidson, claiming to speak on behalf of the Air Force. One cannot blame Davidson for believing there was a cover-up because, obviously, there was.
As Haines writes, “Thus, a minor, rather bizarre incident, handled poorly by both the CIA and the Air Force, turned into a major flap that added fuel to the growing mystery surrounding UFOs and CIA’s role in their investigation.”
In another incident, officers from the Contact Division (CD) of the CIA obtained a UFO photograph from Ralph Mayher in November 1957. After the photos were returned (with no comment or analysis for Mayher), he contacted the CD for the CIA’s evaluation because he wanted to mention it on a television program on which he was going to appear. The CIA declined.
Major Donald Keyhoe, head of NICAP, heard about these events and contacted the CIA to confirm the story. But the CIA refused, referring the matter to the Air Force, even though, as Haines writes, “CD field representatives were normally overt and carried credentials identifying their Agency association.” No wonder, again, that Ufologists would conclude the government was lying about its UFO activities.
Monitoring of UFO investigators
Although the CIA clearly lied to Davidson and Keyhoe, the actual UFO events at the heart of each story were mundane and not of particular importance. More sinister is the suggestion that the CIA (or FBI at the CIA’s direction) has monitored UFO groups and investigators.
Haines has no direct evidence for this, but it is unclear where such records would be kept or whether they would even be at the CIA (rather than the FBI). Certainly, the FBI has files on various Ufologists, including Richard Hall, head of the Fund for UFO Research and long-time staffer at NICAP.
A complete history of the CIA’s involvement in UFOs should have discussed this critical issue in depth; after all, the Robertson Panel recommended that UFO groups be monitored for subversive activities.
That Haines did not fully discuss this subject can probably be attributed to his ignorance of UFO history, to the lack of documentation about this subject in CIA records, and perhaps, to the scope of his article which is more concerned with the investigation of UFOs rather than the investigation of Ufologists.
The one bit of evidence Haines does include involves Leon Davidson again. In 1958, worried about future inquiries about government UFO investigation, the CIA met with the Air Force to discuss what to do with such requests.
CIA officer Frank Chapin “hinted that Davidson might have ulterior motives” and he suggested having the FBI investigate Davidson. Haines says the record is unclear as to whether the FBI ever acted on this suggestion, but it is not clear how deeply Haines investigated this possibility
Although the evidence is circumstantial, there are other hints that the government was monitoring UFO groups long before these discussions. In their book UFOs Over the Americas, Jim and Coral Lorenzen detail several rather bizarre incidents of what would seem to be rather clumsy attempts to learn the Lorenzens’ motives for their UFO investigations and the work of APRO, the organization they founded.
These occurred in several states over at least a dozen years, and the Lorenzens sound more amused by the experience than upset.
In point of fact, just about any Ufologist would have been pleased to have the Air Force or CIA approach them and ask for advice about UFO investigations or what types of cases the investigator was receiving. The problem faced by these agencies, as Haines outlines, is that an excessive policy of secrecy kept them from openly contacting UFO investigators who most likely would have cooperated with government requests for information.
As evidence, in early 1965 CIA agents finally did meet openly with Richard Hall at NICAP offices, who gladly gave them copies of UFO reports for the CIA’s own review of the UFO situation.
The Robertson Panel
There is no more pivotal event in the CIA’s involvement with UFOs, perhaps in the U.S. government’s interest in UFOs, than the Robertson Panel of January 1953. Haines devotes just over a page to this critical study, which provides him no room for nuance or much more than a bare reciting of the facts.
In his review of CIA documents he demonstrates the very high-level CIA interest in UFOs engendered by the UFO flap in the summer of 1952 and, especially, the sightings over Washington, D.C. A special study group was formed within OSI to review the UFO situation.
Director Walter Bedell Smith “wanted to know whether or not the Air Force investigation of flying saucers was sufficiently objective,” and he wondered “what use could be made of the UFO phenomenon in connection with US psychological warfare efforts.”
Memos and meetings were frequent in late 1952 as the CIA considered what should be done about the UFO problem. Haines’s research shows that the Robertson Panel’s concerns about the clogging of communication channels and the use of UFOs to disrupt U.S. air defenses were taken straight from CIA concerns expressed in internal memos during the summer of 1952.
See also 1957 CIA Memo Concerning UFO Report
In other words, the Robertson Panel, despite the eminence of the scientists involved, appears to have been carefully orchestrated by the CIA to come to the conclusions it did, which included debunking UFOs with the help of the Air Force Project Blue Book. Haines does not comment on this element of the CIA’s role in determining government policy.
Spy planes and UFOs
I turn now to the issue that so dominated press coverage of Haines’s article, the claim that many UFO reports were caused by secret aircraft flights. Given the nature of many UFO reports of objects seen at close range low to the ground, Ufologists have uniformly found this claim preposterous.
I have over the years personally reviewed the majority of Blue Book reports and know that that they were not caused by misidentifications of spy planes. But because this is such an important claim, here is the full discussion of this issue by Haines.
In November 1954, CIA had entered into the world of high technology with its U-2 overhead reconnaissance project. Working with Lockheed’s Advanced Development facility in Burbank, California, known as the Skunk Works, and Kelly Johnson, an eminent aeronautical engineer, the Agency by August 1955 was testing a high-altitude experimental aircraft—the U-2.
It could fly at 60,000 feet; in the mid-1950s, most commercial airliners flew between 10,000 feet and 20,000 feet. Consequently, once the U-2 started test flights, commercial pilots and air traffic controllers began reporting a large increase in UFO sightings.
The early U-2s were silver (they were later painted black) and reflected the rays from the sun, especially at sunrise and sunset. They often appeared as fiery objects to observers below. Air Force BLUE BOOK investigators aware of the secret U-2 flights tried to explain away such sightings by linking them to natural phenomena such as ice crystals and temperature inversions.
By checking with the Agency’s U-2 Project Staff in Washington, BLUE BOOK investigators were able to attribute many UFO sightings to U-2 flights. They were careful, however, not to reveal the true cause of the sighting to the public.
According to later estimates from CIA officials who worked on the U–2 project and the OXCART (SR-71, or Blackbird) project, over half of all UFO reports from the late 1950s through the 1960s were accounted for by manned reconnaissance flights (namely the U-2) over the United States.
This led the Air Force to make misleading and deceptive statements to the public in order to allay public fears and to protect an extraordinarily sensitive national security project. While perhaps justified, this deception added fuel to the later conspiracy theories and the cover-up controversy of the 1970s.
The percentage of what the Air Force considered unexplained UFO sightings fell to 5.9 percent in 1955 and to 4 percent in 1956.
What exactly is the evidence for the claim that “over half of all UFO reports . . . were accounted for by manned reconnaissance flights”? In one footnote, Haines mentions the monograph The Central Intelligence Agency and Overhead Reconnaissance: The U-2 and OXCART Programs, 1954–1974, by Gregory W. Pedlow and Donald E. Welzenbach (1992).
A colleague at CUFOS tried to obtain a copy of this reference, which was published by the CIA History Staff, but has been told the monograph is classified. That makes it impossible to verify its accuracy.
In a second footnote, Haines mentions a telephone interview with a John Parongosky, who “oversaw the day-to-day affairs of the OXCART program.” I would like to call Mr. Parongosky myself, but have been unable to find any listing or address for him.
In any case, there is a very straightforward step which could verify this claim about spy planes, one I am surprised was not taken by at least one reporter. If the Air Force was lying about the cause of UFO sightings to protect the secrecy of our spy planes, then obviously the heads of Blue Book would have been central to the deception.
Yet no one seems to have contacted any of these officers, most of whom are still living, for a comment.
I had previously spoken to Lt. Col. (Ret.) Robert Friend, head of Blue Book from about 1958 to early 1963, on a matter of UFO history, so I called him again recently to discuss this subject.
Friend had not heard about the CIA report (he doesn’t watch much television and doesn’t follow UFO news closely these days), but he was very interested to learn about its existence. He asked me for a copy plus any news stories I had on the report.
I read to him the discussion by Haines reproduced above and then asked for his comment. Almost the first words he said were that it is “absolutely not true” that he or his Blue Book team were covering up spy flights as alleged by Haines.
He found the whole idea laughable, and he knew Blue Book did not receive more reports from pilots and air traffic controllers after the U-2 began flying.
I asked him if he had ever concealed classified activities that were reported as UFOs. Friend indicated that, indeed, this had occurred on a few occasions, but it was not a regular occurrence. I inquired as to whether he had regular contact with the CIA at Blue Book.
He said that he did because the CIA overlooked no potential source of information and wanted to keep tabs on all government intelligence activities. In addition, the Air Force had utilized the services of the National Photographic Interpretation Center, the CIA’s photo analysis office, to analyze UFO photos.
However, in none of his contacts with the CIA or U-2 project staff was Friend ever told to conceal sightings of the U-2 by the CIA.
See also 1996: UFO Reality Shift?
To be absolutely sure before I ended the conversation, I asked Friend whether the project had ever received a sighting which he recognized as caused by a U-2 (or other secret aircraft). He said, to his recollection, no. Once again, he chuckled about the idea of half of all UFO reports being caused by manned reconnaissance flights.
I then read him the statement by Sconyers quoted earlier, in which the general cannot “confirm or deny that we lied.” This brought a guffaw from Friend, who wondered why Sconyers, or anyone currently in the Pentagon, should know what happened 30 years ago.
We both marveled at how the press and the military (and Haines) had failed to contact the obvious central figures in this alleged cover-up.
In summary, then, the claim that motivated the press coverage of Haines’s report is inaccurate and is not evidence for a CIA and Air Force cover-up of UFO sightings and lies to the American public.
Yet the CIA and Air Force did knowingly debunk UFO sightings, and Blue Book personnel often came up with any old explanation so that the yearly summary sheets would have only a small percentage of unidentified sightings.
So I’m not too unhappy that the CIA and Air Force were taken to task for something they didn’t do, but it is important to set the record straight.
Forcing disclosure of CIA records
Beginning in the mid-1970s, UFO researchers began using the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) to request government, including CIA, documents on UFOs. Once again, the CIA mishandled the requests.
After William Spaulding, head of Ground Saucer Watch, wrote in 1975 requesting UFO records, the CIA Information and Privacy Coordinator Gene Wilson wrote to Spaulding that the Robertson Panel was “the summation of the Agency interest and involvement in UFOs.” As Haines states, “Wilson was ill-informed.”
Not believing Wilson’s statements, Ufologists sued the CIA for records and won the release of about 800 pages in December of 1978.
Since the CIA had, unwisely, been denying its involvement in UFO matters, the media was surprised to learn how many documents were held by the agency. The New York Times claimed as a result that the CIA was probably secretly involved in the study of UFOs.
CIA Director Stansfield Turner was so upset by this that he asked his senior officers “Are we in UFOs?” He received a negative answer from his deputy and so moved to quash a new lawsuit asking for the withheld documents from the first release.
Notwithstanding the reply Turner got, Haines found that the CIA continued a few activities during the 1980s. As he writes:
During the late 1970s and 1980s, the Agency continued its low-key interest in UFOs and UFO sightings. While most scientists now dismissed flying saucers [sic] reports as a quaint part of the 1950s and 1960s, some in the Agency and in the Intelligence Community shifted their interest to studying parapsychology and psychic phenomena associated with UFO sightings.
CIA officials also looked at the UFO problem to determine what UFO sightings might tell them about Soviet progress in rockets and missiles and reviewed its counterintelligence aspects. Agency analysts from the Life Science Division of OSI and OSWR officially devoted a small amount of their time to issues relating to UFOs.
These included counterintelligence concerns that the Soviets and the KGB were using US citizens and UFO groups to obtain information on sensitive US weapons development programs (such as the Stealth aircraft), the vulnerability of the US air-defense network to penetration by foreign missiles mimicking UFOs, and evidence of Soviet advanced technology associated with UFO sightings.
If I hadn’t checked the calendar after reading this, I would have sworn this was 1952 and I was reading of CIA concerns about how UFOs could be used by the Soviets against the United States, as eventually expressed in the recommendations of the Roberson Panel report. Some things never change, at least during the Cold War.
Haines notes that during this period, “Agency officials purposely kept files on UFOs to a minimum to avoid creating records that might mislead the public if released,” and Haines says he found almost no documentation on CIA involvement with UFOs in the 1980s. This certainly is an effective method to circumvent FOIA, but it hardly leads to further confidence in the CIA.
Finally, in an intriguing footnote, Haines says that the “CIA reportedly is also a member of an Incident Response Team to investigate UFO landings, if one should occur. This team has never met.” Say what?
He offers no evidence for this statement, which, if true, belies the notion that the government completely ignores UFO reports.
In the end, Haines’s article is not as revealing as press reports indicated, but it does open a window on CIA activities that have long been closed to the public.
Perhaps its chief contribution will be the documents referenced in the footnotes which can now be specifically requested through FOIA by an enterprising UFO historian.
His historical analysis is unremittingly pedestrian, but he does admit that CIA errors of commission and omission contributed directly to the notion of a UFO cover-up, and he demonstrates that there was indeed a cover-up, though not of spy planes, of a UFO crash near Roswell, nor other events of similar import.
Another effect of Haines’s article is a gradual shifting of media opinion toward granting greater credibility to the statements of UFO groups and investigators and a concomitant greater distrust in government claims about its UFO activities.
This is all to the good and here the old phrase “better late than never” surely applies.
source & references:



UFO Crash in Arizona, 1953
Though considered a hoax by some UFO investigators, there is an interesting account of a UFO crash that comes to us from Arizona. The facts are certainly worth a look.
Famed researcher Raymond Fowler first broke the details of this event of May 20, 1953 in 1973, although it was known to UFO investigator Richard Hall as early as 1964. Fowler stated that his information came from engineer "Fritz Werner," later identified as Arthur G. Stancil.
Stancil graduated from Ohio University in 1949 and was first employed by Air Material Command at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton, Ohio as a mechanical engineer on testing Air Force aircraft engines.
Dr. Eric Wang, who was suspected of leading a reverse engineering team on alien craft, headed the Installations Division within the Office of Special Studies where Arthur worked.
Stancil signed a legal affidavit vouching to the honesty of his testimony, which was released by Ray Fowler in UFO Magazine, April 1976.
He was working for a company that had a government contract at a nuclear site in Nevada. He was summoned by his boss on 5-21-53, and sent on a "secret" assignment.
After being flown to Phoenix, Arizona, he was placed on a bus with blacked out windows, and taken to a point some four hours drive northwest of the city of Phoenix proper. The location was supposedly near the city of Kingman, Arizona.
The bus was full of passengers, none of whom Stancil knew, and would not know, as they were told not to communicate with each other. Arriving at their secret destination, two military light-alls illuminated a surreal scene in the late night, pre-dawn skies of the desert.
The engineer was amazed to see a disc-shaped craft embedded into the sand.
Stancil estimated its diameter to be about 30 feet. Military personnel surrounded the aluminum-like craft, which was brought down by either an internal explosion, or was hit by military rockets, Stancil surmised. The wound was easily seen, a gaping hole in its side.
Stancil's duty was to calculate the speed of the craft, a task he quickly discharged. Afterwards, the tense atmosphere of the group of investigators began to loosen some, and he began to glean details from some of the other personnel assigned to this "off the record" mission.
He was told of a small cabin inside the craft, and very small chairs.
He did not get to look into the unknown craft himself. He was taken back when he peeked into a nearby medical tent.
Inside was the small body of a "creature," about 4 foot tall. He asserts that the alien was wearing a type of skull cap, and a silver suit. The suit seemed to be seamless. Soon the investigation was called to a halt, and the members summoned to leave the area.
Back on the bus, all of the members of the assignment were ordered to sign the "official secrets" act, and were warned not to discuss what they had seen with anyone. Before bringing the crash story to other UFO groups, Fowler did a thorough background check on Stancil, and was satisfied to his authenticity, and personal integrity.
Fowler also was persuaded beyond doubt as to the ability of Stancil to do his job, as he came forward with great knowledge of his field and occupation.
There was additional confirmation to the validity of the Arizona crash. Personnel at Wright Patterson AFB claimed to have been witness to the delivery from a "crash site" in Arizona.
These witnesses claimed to have seen "three small bodies packed in dry ice." The beings were reported as being about 4 foot tall, with large heads, and brownish skin color.
The time of the delivery perfectly coincided with the events put forth by Stancil. Unfortunately, the military personnel could not make their names public. Fowler maintains that several other witnesses have come forward in the years following the incident, but the lack of other facts, and other testimony leave the case lacking somewhat.
Possibly one day more evidence will be revealed on this alleged UFO crash in the desert of Arizona.
B J Booth
Sources:
Situation RED, by Leo Stringfield
UFO Crash at Roswell, by Kevin Randle and Don Schmitt, p.250-251, Avon Books, 1991, ISBN: 0-380-76196-3
UFO: Crash Retrievals, by Jenny Randles, 1995.

Infamous Black Triangle UFO Hovers above Home for an HOUR
Published: 10:11 PM 5/25/2022
in a triangular shape...
ByKelly-Ann MillsNews Reporter
The clip appears to show a dark object with lights along the bottom in a triangular shape and it does not seem to be travelling at speed as it hovers over Huddersfield.
A triangular-shaped UFO has been caught on camera as it appears to hover over a housing estate for more than an hour.
The silent, dark coloured flying object, is said to be reminiscent of those reported by spotters across the world in the 1940s.
The clip appears to show a dark object with lights along the bottom in a triangular shape and it does not seem to be travelling at speed.
The hour-long footage was reportedly taken in Huddersfield and a clip of it was shared on Skywatch Explorer's YouTube channel.
It is not clear exactly when the clip was filmed, but was uploaded last week by UFO hunter Mick Proctor who runs the channel.
Mr Proctor said he was given it by someone, who wanted to remain anonymous adding: "He said it was on his CCTV camera for an hour but could only send a 10 min version as the file was too big".
"He didn't want to give the exact location where he lives."
One of the channel's followers, Darren Smith comments that the footage is "incredible".
"Thought it was a triangle aka TR3B but then at 1.00 it appears to be a larger more square like craft."
The Mirror reported earlier this year that the American government has launched a new office to look into reports of UFOs from around the world.
The move was signed into law just before the turn of the year and aims to establish if there is a potential security threat from what is seen in the skies.
Experts will then work to establish if they came from a foreign force - or from a galaxy far, far away.
Senator Kirsten Gillibrand said: Our national security efforts rely on aerial supremacy and these phenomena present a challenge to our dominance.
The United States needs a coordinated effort to take control and understand whether these aerial phenomena belong to a foreign government or something else altogether."
The new Unidentified Aerial Phenomena programme was launched after a number of high profile videos were released by the Pentagon - many including US military chasing targets pulling off impossible manoeuvres and speeds.
The move has upset many ufologists who believe the truth about possible visitors have been hidden from the masses for decades.
Video is no longer available
permanent link: www.ufocasebook.com/2022/huddersfield-triangle-ufo-video.html
source & references:
source: https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/ufo-like-something-1940s-caught-27064280
edited by UFO Casebook

Massachusetts Residents Share Details of UFO Encounter
Thursday, October 19, 2006
A man and woman in Billerica claim their lives have been altered since a huge, luminous object they said appeared over their porch one winter evening, levitating the woman, blistering the man's hand, and leaving white, powdery material that quickly disappeared afterward.
A UFO investigation reported in the Billerica Minuteman has now caught the attention of an international audience, after a couple in town posted a firsthand narrative on a Canadian UFO Web site and UFO sites worldwide picked up links both to their account and the Minuteman article. The couple, identified only as Robert and Anne, are scheduled to share their story in an interview with radio talk show host Jeff Rense Friday, Oct. 20 at 7 p.m. on the Jeff Rense Show, which is broadcast on a satellite network. The show is also available on line at www.rense.com.
The couple are scheduled as guests of Vike, who, holds a regular spot on the radio show and who posted the narrative on his UFO research Web site, hbccufo.org.
"I knew this story and experience was a dandy, as we do not hear many stories like this," Vike said.
The report is also under investigation by Mark Petty, a former Billerica resident now living in Nashua, N.H., and a volunteer with Massachusetts Mutual UFO Network, which follows up on reports of unusual sightings of or contacts with objects in the sky.
Petty, who has given presentations on UFO investigations at the Billerica Senior Center, said he gave a talk on the couple's experience at the network's conference Oct. 14 in Watertown. Petty said the couple were counseled not to talk publicly about their experience until the investigation was complete, but said, "It's their decision. They are the people who actually experienced it."
Light in the night sky
In the narrative, Robert said the encounter occurred Sunday, Dec. 12, 2004, when he and Anne saw a ball of light in the night sky about 7:10 p.m. He said they saw the apparition through a sliding door leading to a deck off the kitchen. He described "a huge ball of brilliant white light coming toward the house from the west," slightly above the tops of trees. As the object came closer, he said it appeared to grow bigger, and stopped above the house, where it appeared "absolutely huge, maybe two, maybe three football fields. The white light engulfed everything."
Despite the intense light, the glare didn't hurt their eyes, he said, but hovered silently for a few minutes before a pale blue light emitted from the underside and formed a perfect square on the deck. Robert said the light fully engulfed Anne, who was lifted off the deck, prompting Robert to open the sliding door with one hand and grab Anne's waist by other. He said he pulled her into the house and the shut door. When he looked out again, the strange light was gone, he said.
During the ordeal, Anne went unconscious. When she came around, she said she remembered seeing the blue light and that Robert described it as square, but could not remember any details after that. A short while later, they said they received a phone call from Robert's sister and her husband, about five miles to the east, saying they too saw a ball of white light trailing a blue tail, moving parallel to the ground. Robert said he noticed blisters on his hand, just below his middle finger.
Strange happenings cited
In the report, Robert said he and Anne subsequently noticed unusual occurrences in their own home, including a microwave open beeping at random and objects flying off shelves. Robert said many of these occurrences would happen during the day, and Anne would relate them when he returned home from work. Hypnosis helped her recall details but didn't work for him, he said. However, he recalled an eerie instance in which he said he administered CPR to Anne as she lay on the floor.
"After I got her off the floor and on to the couch I looked into the kitchen and saw what looked like snow or fine pellets of Styrofoam pouring in through the sliding door - I guess didn't shut it all the way. After icing my hand for awhile I told Anne, I'm going in the garage to get the shop vac to clean up the mess.' When I looked again all the white stuff was gone and the small carpet in the kitchen was dry."
He added, "Also the white light outside looked like it flowed like a liquid wrapping itself around everything," and no shadows formed.
Billerica police said they did not receive any reports of an unusual sighting in the sky Dec. 12, but said from time to time, they, like all police departments, do get calls from concerned residents of a strange light or sound that turns out to be something ordinary. Petty said someone also reported seeing something peculiar in the sky over Billerica around 6:30 p.m. on Dec. 29 and reported the incident to the National UFO Reporting Center in Seattle, Wash. That report describes "a very large, circular, bright-white light above the clouds going around and around in a very large circle" at high speeds. The report said the witness looked out again and saw the same light about an hour later and insisted it wasn't a search light or plane.
Without ruling out any possibilities, Petty said the light may have come from an area business, such as a gym in nearby Tewksbury. Petty said investigators work to collect information from reported UFO witnesses, and said the overwhelming majority of objects turn out to be less than extraterrestrial, including lights from businesses, crafts from air force bases, satellites and meteors. About 5 percent remain unexplained, he said.
Seeking clues
In his probe in the reported Dec. 12, 2004 incident, Petty said, among other steps, he made inquiries to several area police departments, interviewed many of the couple's neighbors and have filed a Freedom of Information Act request from the federal Aviation Administration regarding aerial activity in the area on that evening. He said Billerica police provided a printout of police log entries from the time of the reported sighting, but that log activity suggests no unusual reported occurrences. He said Burlington police sent a written response indicating nothing unusual. An inquiry to Bedford police received no response, he said.
Anne, 58, a disabled contractor, agreed to meet recently with a Minuteman reporter, but would not give her or Robert's last name. She showed the small porch where she said the object appeared and which she said lifted her a few feet in the air before Robert grabbed her and pulled her inside.
But she said any physical evidence - the burns on Robert's hands, which she showed in a photograph, and the powdery residue she described - are gone. She said, after the incident, her sister called on the phone to say she, too, had seen a bright object with a trailing tail while traveling on a highway. They're not UFO or science fiction buffs, she said, and books and movies of that ilk are sparse in their collection. Anne, who said she recalled a peculiar sighting of a lighted object in her youth, said the experiences she reported suggest the possibility of extraterrestrial presence. However, she remains as mystified as anyone, she said.
She said, "I've always been very open-minded. I'd be arrogant to think we are the only beings in this vast universe."
For more information on Massachusetts Mutual UFO Network, visitwww.massmufon.com
Link Case Files
1878 Denison, Texas - Daylight UFO
Jan, 1878
USA
1880s Poachers Sent Packing by UFO
1880s
U K
1897
USA
Apr, 1897
USA
1930s Alien Picture from Alaska
-1930-
Alaska
1939 Alien Bodies Confirmed (Cordell Hull)
-1939
USA
Dates: 1940-1949
1940s The Foo-Fighters of WW II
1940s
Europe
1941 Missouri Crash & Retrieval
-1941-
USA
1942 The Battle of Los Angeles
Feb,1942
USA
1946 Spitzbergen, Norway Crash
1946
Norway
1947 Wright Field Circular Craft - Two Creatures
1947
USA
1947 Flying Saucers - Portland, Oregon
1947
USA
1947 B-17 Encounters 9 Flying Discs
1947
USA
1947 The Kenneth Arnold Sighting
June, 1947
USA
alta-Alien Entities Seen on Watercraft
June, 1947
Malta
1947 Pilot Sees Six UFOs - Morristown, NJ
July, 1947
USA
1947 The Roswell, New Mexico Crash
July, 1947
USA
1948 The Death of Thomas Mantell
Jan, 1948
USA
1948 The Aztec, New Mexico Crash
Mar, 1948
USA
1948 The Chiles-Whitted Sighting
July, 1948
USA
Oct, 1948
USA
Mar, 1949
USA
1949 Norwood, Ohio Searchlight Incident
Aug, 1949
USA
Dates: 1950-1959
Jan, 1950 Douglas Plane Disappears
USA
1950 Alleged UFO Crash in Mexico City
Mar, 1950
Mexico
1950 Alien Encounter at Varese
Apr, 1950
Italy
1950 Dr. Botta Enters Flying Saucer
May, 1950
S Amer
1950 The Trent UFO Photographs
May, 1950
USA
1950 The Great Falls, Montana Film
Aug, 1950
USA
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