Date:
March 27, 1979
Location: Oak Bluffs , Massachusetts, United States
Apparently
in contact with the water, was a luminous green cylinder
with rounded ends at a distance estimated at about 200
feet.
Source:
Joseph Nyman, Mass. MUFON Chief Investigator, Mass. MUFON
There
are many local cases that, over the years of UFO investigation,
have been filed, forgotten or just plain ignored. Many
times that is justified. Sometimes that neglect is due
to lack of circulation or knowledge that the case even
exists even though there is much interesting material
to think about and remember.
That's
the situation with a case I investigated in April, 1979.
Its only public mention that I know of is a brief paragraph
on page 144 of Ray Fowler's "Casebook of a UFO Investigator".
Now, in retrospect, twenty years after the case report
has disappeared into the MUFON files without further notice,
the case events can be seen in an increased light of understanding,
although not everything can be fit coherently in place.
It's worth writing about, now.
The
case came to Ray Fowler's attention through his state
police connections. Apparently, they had received the
report from the local police on Martha's Vineyard where
the sighting occurred. Since MUFON had no representation
in Duke's County, no one in the Boston area wanted to
take the time and expense to interview the witness; that
is, until I volunteered and so was on the Vineyard ferry
on April 7, 1979.
On
March 27, 1979, Ed Brown (pseudonym), age 19, was traveling
north to Oak Bluffs along the narrow Edgartown-Oak Bluffs
Road at about 50 mph, It was about 10 p.m. and he was
listening to WRKO (680 KHZ) when he noticed a green glow
behind the sand dunes on his right. "It must be people
on the beach using 'light sticks'!", he thought.
As
he proceeded, the glow brightened and his radio began
to pick up a "low frequency hum". He reached
a point where his view was unobstructed by dunes. Apparently
in contact with the water, was a luminous green cylinder
with rounded ends at a distance which we later estimated
at about 200 feet.
Ed
stopped his car with the engine still running and the
headlights on. The object immediately began to rise slowly
and Ed could see water motion, as if the object had been
in the water. As he continued to watch, the object rose
to a height where sight of it was blocked by the car's
roof. Ed then got out of the car and stood by the driver's
side with the door open and the car's interior light on.
The
beach and water were now illuminated by the glow from
the object. The witness continued watching the object
rise with increasing speed for a few seconds and decided
to reach into the car for a 12-volt quartz light which
his father used for checking unoccupied cottages in the
off season.
Ed
intended to shine this light at the rising object but
couldn't turn it on for he suddenly found himself unable
to move except for his head. Was this self induced paralysis
or induced externally? Ed couldn't decide. He then watched
as the object rose out of sight.
Reenacting
events at the site, we were able to time the entire incident
as less then two minutes from the initial glow until the
object disappeared. The object itself was in view for
less than a minute.
To
Ed, it seemed that things had taken quite a bit longer.
He estimated six minutes. He immediately headed for the
Oak Bluffs police station where I found his report logged
at 10:30 p.m.. The officer on duty remembered Ed as unusually
excited and possibly scared; unusual because Ed was known
to the police as an auxiliary policeman. What he was saying
was definitely out of character.
Even
considering that it took Ed about 10 minutes to get to
the police station, there still seemed to be a gap in
time between his 10 p.m. sighting and his log report at
10:30 p.m..
The
next day, Ed noticed that his calendar watch was indicating
the correct day of the month (28). At the time of the
incident, it was reading three days fast (30!) and had
been running consistently fast. Ed had not corrected it
because of the amount of time it took to adjust. He would
have had to move it ahead 29 days in daily 24-hour increments
to have it read correctly. For at least the next month,
the watch kept accurate time instead of running fast.
At the time of investigation, the watch did not effect
a compass held close to it.
I
assumed then that there couldn't have been enough time
for an encounter to have taken place. I have since learned
that this isn't necessarily the case. There are some encounters
that seem to take place instantaneously! I will not elaborate
on that statement here, but it's based on my case data
developed in other situations.
The
most puzzling aspect of this case, then and still now,
is the watch correction issue. Since the correction was
noticed the next morning, I suspect the possibility of
an encounter after Ed retired for the night. But that
is only rough conjecture and explains nothing about the
correction mechanism. The watch was an inexpensive manually
wound Timex. If anyone reading this has an idea of how
a date correction like this could have happened, let us
know!
Source:
http://www.ufoevidence.org/cases/case4.htm