Date:
1971
Location: Caribbean/Bermuda Triangle
From
the witness: "We heard someone yelling 'There is
something hovering over the ship!'... As we looked up,
we saw a large, glowing sphere.... It made no sound that
I could hear. The light coming from it wasn't too bright,
about half of what the sun would be. It sort of pulsated
a little and was yellow to orange... Virtually all electronic
components stopped functioning during the 20 minutes or
so that [the UFO] hovered over the ship. "
The aircraft carrier, USS John F. Kennedy CV-67, from
which the UFO was seen.
Source:
Jim Kopf (credit: Rense.com)
[go
to original source]
US
Aircraft Carrier stopped by UFO
By Jim Kopf
"This
encounter occurred in 1971, while aboard the aircraft
carrier, USS John F. Kennedy CVA-67 (now CV-67) in the
Bermuda Triangle. I was assigned to the communications
department of the Kennedy and had been in this section
about a year. The ship was returning to Norfolk, VA after
completing a two-week operational readiness exercise (ORE)
in the Caribbean. We were to stand down for 30 days, after
arriving in Norfolk, Virginia, to allow the crew to take
leave and visit family before deploying to the Mediterranean
for six months.
I
was on duty in the communications center. My task was
to monitor eight teletypes printing the "Fleet Broadcasts".
On the top row were four teletypes, each printing messages
from four different channels. On the bottom row were four
more doing the exact same thing except the signal was
carried on different frequencies. If one of the primary
receivers started taking "hits," I would be
able to retrieve the message from the bottom one. I also
notified Facilities Control of any hits so they could
tune the receivers. On the other side of the compartment
(room) was the NAVCOMMOPNET (Naval Communications Operations
Network). This was the Ship to Shore circuit with the
top teletype being the receive and the bottom as the send
(known as a duplex circuit). Next to this was the Task
Group Circuit for ship to ship communications (task group
operations or TGO).
It
was in the evening, about 20:30 (8:30 p.m.) and the ship
had just completed an eighteen hour "Flight Ops".
I had just taken a message off one of the broadcasts and
turned around to file it on a clip board. When I turned
back to the teletypes the primaries were typing garbage.
I looked down to the alternates which were doing the same.
I walked a few feet to the intercom between us and the
Facilities Control. I called them and informed them of
the broadcasts being out. A voice replied that all communications
were out. I then turned and looked in the direction of
the NAVCOMMOPNET and saw that the operator was having
a problem. I then heard the Task Group operator tell the
watch officer that his circuit was out also. In the far
corner of the compartment was the pneumatic tubes going
to the Signal bridge (where the flashing light and signal
flag messages are sent/receive). There is an intercom
there to communicate with the Signal Bridge and over this
intercom we heard someone yelling "There is something
hovering over the ship!" A moment later, we heard
another voice yelling. "IT IS GOD! IT'S THE END OF
THE WORLD!".
We
all looked at each other, there were six of us in the
Comm Center, and someone said, "Lets go have a look!".
The Comm Center is amidships, just under the flight deck,
almost in the center of the ship. We went out the door,
through Facilities Control and out that door, down the
passageway (corridor) about 55 feet to the hatch that
goes out to the catwalk on the edge of the flight deck
(oppisite from the "Island" or that part of
the ship where the bridge is). If you have ever been to
sea, there is a time called the time of no horizon. This
happens in the morning and evening just as the sun comes
up or goes down over the horizon.
During
this time, you cannot tell where the sea and sky meet.
This is the time of evening it was. As we looked up, we
saw a large, glowing sphere. Well it seemed large, however,
there was no point of reference. That is to say, if the
sphere were low, say 100 feet above the ship, then it
would have been about two to three hundred feet in diameter.
If it were say 500 feet about the ship, then it would
have been larger. It made no sound that I could hear.
The light coming from it wasn't too bright, about half
of what the sun would be. It sort of pulsated a little
and was yellow to orange.
We
didn't get to look at it for more than about 20 seconds
because General Quarters (Battle stations) was sounding
and the Communication Officer was in the passageway telling
us to get back into the Comm Center. We returned and stayed
there (that was out battle station). We didn't have much
to do because all the communication was still out. After
about 20 minutes, the teletypes started printing correctly
again. We stayed at General Quarters for about another
hour, then secured. I didn't see or hear of any messages
going out about the incident.
Over
the next few hours, I talked to a good friend that was
in CIC (combat information center) who was a radar operator.
He told me that all the radar screens were just glowing
during the time of the incident. I also talked to a guy
I knew that worked on the Navigational Bridge. He told
me that none of the compasses were working and that the
medics had to sedate a boatswains mate that was a lookout
on the signal bridge. I figured this was the one yelling
it was God. It was ironic that of the 5,000 men on a carrier,
that only a handful actually saw this phnomenon. This
was due to the fact that flight Ops had just been completed
a short time before this all started and all the flight
deck personnel were below resting. It should be noted
that there are very few places where you can go to be
out in the open air aboard a carrier. From what I could
learn, virtually all electronic components stopped functioning
during the 20 minutes or so that what ever it was hovered
over the ship. The two Ready CAPs (Combat Air Patrol),
which were two F-4 Phantoms that are always ready to be
launched, would not start.
I
heard from the scuttlebut (slang - rumor mill) that three
or four "men in trenchcoats" had landed, and
were interviewing the personnel that had seen this phenomena.
I was never interviewed, maybe because no one knew that
I had seen it.
A
few days later, as we were approaching Norfolk, the Commanding
and Executive Officers came on the closed circuit TV system
that we had. They did this regularly to address the crew
and pass on information. During this particular session,
the Captain told us how well we did on the ORE and about
our upcoming deployment to the Mediterranean. At the very
end of his spiel, he said "I would like to remind
the crew, that certain events that take place aboard a
Naval Combatant Ship, are classified and are not to be
discussed with anyone without a need to know". This
was all the official word I ever received or heard of
the incident.
Being
young and excited about my visit home and going to the
Med, I completely forgot about it until years later when
my wife and I went to see "Close Encounters of the
Third Kind" at the movies when it first came out.
In fact, the friend that had been the radar operator was
with his wife and went with us. As we walked across the
parking lot to my car, I ask him if he remembered what
we had experienced years earlier on the ship. He looked
at me and said he never wanted to talk about it again.
As he said it, he turned a little pale. I never talked
about the incident again. When I discovered "Aliens
and Strange Phenomenon" on MSN and started reading
the posts, I started thinking about it again. Now I seem
obsessed in finding out all I can about this phenomena."
Jim
Kopf
Mt. Airy, Maryland
Source:
http://www.ufoevidence.org/cases/case1075.htm