Date:
October 26, 1967
Location: Moigne Downs, United Kingdom
Angus
Brooks, a former flight administrative officer for British
Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC), was walking his dogs
at Moigne Downs, Dorset, England. He saw what appeared
to be a contrail high in the sky. Then the contrail disappeared
and in its place, a UFO descended "at lightning speed"
to 200 or 300 feet altitude. One of the dogs, back from
foraging for game, stood "distraught" beside
the witness.
Details of Moigne Downs, England, 'Craft,' October 26,
1967.
Source:
NICAP (National Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomenon),
'Strange Effects from UFOs', by Donald Keyhoe and Gordon
Lore
The
"Flying Cross" Case
Angus
Brooks, a former flight administrative officer for British
Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC), was walking his Dalmatian
and Alsatian dogs at Moigne Downs, Dorset, England, on
October 26, 1967. At 11:25 a.m., he decided to lie down
in an indentation on a hill to shelter himself from the
strong wind.
"Almost
immediately," he saw what appeared to be a contrail
high in the sky. Then the contrail disappeared and in
its place, a UFO descended "at lightning speed"
to 200 or 300 feet altitude.
"The
shape of the 'craft' prior to leveling out to 'hover'
position was of a central circular chamber with a leading
fuselage in the front and three separate fuselages together
at the rear," the former World War II photographic
interpreter stated. "On slowing to 'hover' position
the two outer fuselages at the rear moved to position
at [the] side of [the] 'craft' to form four fuselages
at equidistant position around [the] center chamber. ...
On attaining 'hover' the 'craft' rotated 90 degrees clockwise
and then remained motionless, unaffected by very strong
wind."
For
22 minutes, the strange object remained motionless in
the sky. The Alsatian, back from foraging for game, stood
"distraught" beside the witness.
"The
dog was standing hereband her ears were pricked straight
up like she does when her ears heard sounds that she was
worried about," Brooks said.
The
witness, who served with a Royal Air Force Middle East
Command unit, said the UFO was made "of a translucent
material." Dark shadows were dotted along the
bottoms of the fuselages and center chamber. Nose cones
and "groove fins" were seen along the
bases of the fuselages. The center chamber was an estimated
25 feet in diameter and 12 feet high. Each of the fuselages
was thought to be about 75 feet long, seven feet high
and eight feet wide.
The
UFO appeared to be hovering somewhere between the Winfrith
Atomic Station and the Portland Underwater Defence Station
"and about a mile inland from the USAF Communications
Unit at Ringstead Bay."
At
11:47 a.m., the craft flew to the east-northeast and disappeared.
Brooks
said that, on future visits to the area, his Alsatian
dog appeared nervous. The animal died of "acute
cystitis" (a disorder of the urinary bladder)
about six weeks later.
The
Official Attitude
The
witness reported the incident to the Ministry of Defence
in London and received an official reply from L. W. Akhurst,
who investigated the sighting.
"We
do not doubt that the experience which you have described
was a very vivid one, nor have we overlooked your long
association with aviation," Akhurst wrote. "However,
we are unable to agree with your conclusion that you saw
a controlled flying vehicle of unique design and performance."
The
Ministry official went on to expound a theory that Brooks,
who experienced "some years ago" a corneal
transplant as a result of an eye injury, actually saw
"a vitreous floater a piece of loose matter
(a dead cell) floating in the fluid of the eyeball."
"These floaters," Akhurst said, "sometimes
appear as rods or discs and can be more pronounced by
a corneal transplant."
"However,"
Akhurst added, "it is unlikely that the floater
would have remained stationary for as long as 22 minutes."
The
London official further stated that the recent UFO publicity
and the floater could have triggered a dream state while
Brooks was resting.
Brooks
responded that his eye doctor informed him that the eye
muscle "moves upwards and downwards and, as the
craft entered the vision circle at 30 degrees, moved across
descending to center of vision, hovered for 22 minutes,
then exited vision circle at 320 degrees, this hardly
conforms" with Akhurst's theory. The corneal
transplant, Brooks said, greatly improved his vision.
"In
your conclusion," Brooks added, "your
disadvantage is, of course, that I was there at the time
and any Investigation Commission can only work on the
creditability of second hand report details combined with
technical, medical and scientific assistance, so, with
reciprocal respect, your conclusions have not given me
cause to alter my opinion of the Moigne Downs UFO."
Julian
J. A. Hennessey, Chairman of NICAP's European Subcommittee
#1, investigated the incident.
Source:
http://www.ufoevidence.org/cases/case566.htm