Date:
October 5, 2001
Location: Near Tiaro, Australia
An
extraordinary and controversial milieu has developed around
events that reportedly began late on the evening of Thursday,
October 4th, 2001, at a Gundiah property near Tiaro, culminating
in the early hours of Friday, October 5th, 2001, and then
played out in the glare of rapidly escalating media coverage.
Source:
Bill Chalker & Diane Harrison
Copyright
© B. Chalker & D. Harrison 2001
An
extraordinary and controversial milieu has developed around
events that reportedly began late on the evening of Thursday,
October 4th, 2001, at a Gundiah property near Tiaro, culminating
in the early hours of Friday, October 5th, 2001, and then
played out in the glare of rapidly escalating media coverage.
Three
people were directly involved in these alleged events.
Keith Rylance (40), his wife Amy (22), and their business
partner, Petra Heller (39) were on their property, which
was being developed as Whispering Winds winery.
Other potential activities were also being developed at
the location. The following account comes from interviews
conducted by us with them, along with primary source material
such as TV interviews.
Keith
Rylance told us that he had gone to sleep in the caravan
bedroom at about 9.30 pm. Petra retired to her bedroom
in the caravan annex. Amy stayed on a couch watching TV
in the caravan annex lounge room. Each of
these locations were in close proximity, separated by
a window and wall respectively from the lounge room. Petras
room had a door leading to the lounge room, which was
left ajar. The door to the bedroom, where Keith was, apparently
was open to the lounge room. Amy apparently fell asleep
on the couch. A storm was in the area.
Around
11.15 pm, Petra was reportedly woken up and when she entered
the adjacent lounge was confronted by an extraordinary
sight, that allegedly quickly overwhelmed her. A rectangular
beam of light was being projected through the open window
of the caravan lounge room. This light beam appeared to
be truncated at the end. Inside the beam Petra claims
to have seen Amy in a sleep prone position, being carried
out head first through the window. Underneath her, also
within the beam were the items that had been on the coffee
table adjacent to the couch Amy had been on. Before apparently
fainting in shock Petra saw that the beam was coming from
a disc shaped UFO hovering just above the ground a short
distance away, near a tree at the rear of the clear section,
immediately behind the annex caravan house.
Petra
reports she believes she was only in a faint for a very
short period of time. Regaining consciousness, she began
screaming. Keith reports that he was awoken by the commotion
coming from Petra. As he came from the caravan bedroom
and stepped down into the lounge room annex Keith claims
he was confronted by the sight of a highly agitated Petra
and the contents of the coffee table on the floor in front
of the window. He told us that he soon realised that the
window screen was torn in both a vertical fashion and
along the bottom of the window frame. Keith indicated
that initially he couldnt get any sense out of Petra
who was crying and very agitated, so he rushed outside
trying to locate Amy. She was reportedly nowhere to be
found. Keith states when he started to be less agitated
himself he was eventually able to get from Petra an idea
of what happened. Keith claims he initially refused to
believe what Petra was telling him. He said he rushed
outside again trying to find his wife. Eventually as the
situation became clearer, Keith indicates he decided to
call the police.
Keith call the Tiaro police around 11.40 pm reporting
that his wife had been abducted and imploring that the
police should come out. The manning status at that time
meant there were some delays in the police coming out,
but about hour and a half after the initial call Senior
Constable Robert Maragna from Tiaro and an officer from
Maryborough arrived at the site. Initially police thought
they might have been walking into a situation involving
foul play, even perhaps a murder scene, but then the bizarre
circumstances of the alleged events came into focus. The
two people, Keith and Petra, at the Gundiah property were
claiming that Amy Rylance had been abducted by a spaceship!
The officers were struggling to keep an open mind. They
were joined later by Sgt. John Bosnjak, the officer in
charge of the Tiaro police. He had been asleep when the
police called him to assist in the investigation.
The
three officers continued their investigations at the site.
They confirmed that Keith Rylance and Petra Heller appeared
to be in an agitated state and that there was no sign
of Amy Rylance. The torn screen was examined. A flowering
bush, commonly known as yesterday, today, tomorrow
was located immediately outside the left side of window,
had indications of possibly being affected by heat or
another mechanism along its right side. Oddly another
flowering bush, a hibiscus, located immediately on the
right hand side of the window area was not affected in
the same way. The police took samples for possible later
testing.
While
the police were at the property, a phone call came through,
which was taken by Keith Rylance. A woman was calling
from Mackay indicating that she had taken a somewhat distressed
and apparently dehydrated young woman from a BP petrol
service station on the northern outskirts of central Queensland
city of Mackay, some 790 kilometres to the north of the
Gundiah Tiaro area. The young woman turned out
to be Amy Rylance, and the female caller was ringing to
advise that Amy was apparently all right and was at the
Mackay hospital, where she had been examined by a doctor.
Keith handed the phone to Snr. Constable Marangna.
Given
these extraordinary circumstances Mackay police were called
in, making a total of three police stations involved in
the investigation Tiaro, n outskirts of central
Queensland, Maryborough on the coast and Mackay is some
790 kilometres to the north of the Gundiah Tiaro
area.
A
statement was notarised by the Mackay police with a Justice
Act acknowledgement, that required Amy to acknowledge
that it was true to the best of her knowledge and belief,
and that if it is admitted as evidence, that she may be
liable to prosecution if she had indicated anything in
it that she knew was false.
This
statement indicated that she last only recollected lying
on the couch at the Gundiah property. She had no recollection
of the events that Petra described, but claimed she then
next remembered waking up lying on a bench in a strange
rectangular room. Illumination came from the walls and
the ceiling. She was alone. She indicated she called out
and heard what seemed to be a male voice, asking her to
be calm and that everything would be alright and that
she would not be harmed. Soon an opening appeared in the
wall and a guy about 6 feet tall walked into
the room. The man appeared to be slender in build but
in perfect proportion, covered head to foot in a full
body suit. He had what seemed to be a black covering mask
on his face, with a hole for his eyes, nose and mouth.
He repeated his calming assurances. Amy felt she had been
there a while. The guy told her they were returning her
to a place not far from where they took her from, because
the lights were wrong at the property and it wasnt
safe. She then indicates she found herself lying on the
bed and falling asleep. The next thing she recollects
is that she woke up on the ground with trees around her.
She felt disorientated, could smell the ocean, and indicated
she was not sure how long she tumbled through bushland,
but seemingly it was for a long time, but she felt she
wasnt making much progress. She then came out onto
a road that looked like a highway and saw a light from
a petrol station. She walked into the station, where staff
seeing her state, tried to off some assistance. She accepted
some water, as she felt somewhat dehydrated. Initially
she was not able to answer identifying questions, and
didnt know where she was. She was also asked if
she had been drinking or was on drugs, to which she said
no. Amy indicated she felt tired, sore, drained and lethargic.
She asked a woman at the service station to take her to
the hospital, as she didnt know of where else to
go. The woman and her friend took Amy to the hospital.
Later Amy spoke with two police officers and also spoke
with her husband Keith from the hospital. She then went
to Mackay police station where she gave the statement
of events. Amy also indicated that this sort of thing
had never happened to her before, but when she was in
5th year school she had seen a large UFO surrounded by
smaller objects.
The
police arranged to put Amy in a motel pending the arrival
of her husband. He and Petra arrived during the day and
indicated they spent considerable time with Amy discussing
what happen. Extensive notes were apparently made and
photographs were taken of a triangular arrangement of
marks on her inner right thigh, marks on each heel and
the growing out of her hair which she had dyed earlier
in the week. Her hair had apparently started to show her
former colour, suggestive that some considerable time
had passed for her, apparently indicative of rather more
than a few hours. Body hair had allegedly also become
somewhat more pronounced that would otherwise would be
apparent for the short time involved.
Via
an Newsagents a copy of the Australian Ufologist
magazine was purchased, Keith, Petra and Amy started to
learn more about UFOs. Keith Rylance contacted the Australian
UFO Research Network office number mentioned in the magazine.
Diane Harrison took the call Date: Fri, 5 Oct 2001 15:20
p.m and for the next hour or so listened to the story
that Keith and Amy told. Petra was apparently sleeping
at the time.:
Given
the nature of the story, its complexity and the fact it
apparently featured the alleged use of solid light,
Diane decide to bring Bill Chalker into the investigation,
making contact with him during the evening of Friday,
October 5th. Paradoxically Bill was scheduled to talk
at a Brisbane UFO conference on October 13th, and his
topics included solid light cases and the
application of science to alien abduction cases. Bill
put a call through to them at the motel, securing permission
to record the conversation. Once again Petra was not available
to talk about her part in the alleged events. Keith Rylance
went into considerable detail about the events, referring
often to the notes they had apparently been compiling
during the day. The details described covered the events
Petra had witnessed, what Keith had experienced, and what
Amy told them had happened to her during her experience.
Finally Bill spoke with Amy, focusing mainly on the events
before and after the claimed onboard experiences, because
Keith had already gone into considerable detail about
the latter. Bill discussed with Amy her general responses
and her physical state and her current state of thought
on her experiences. Keith Rylance seemed to what to control
how both media and investigators would get involved. His
desire to contact the media promptly drew from both Diane
and Bill the suggestion that he should think very carefully
about the possible ramifications of doing so. Keith seemed
to feel that it was important to get the story out, as
it would come out anyway and this way he could control
the way it did. He was also trying to restrict the way
the investigators could or should look into their experience.
He claimed they didnt need to proof the experience.
While he didnt directly witness the experiences
he believed both Amy and Petra.
Given
the possible nature of the event, and that irrespective
of the ultimate resolution of the affair, it seemed destined
to be a big story, Diane and Bill decided undertake an
investigation. They had been given an indication from
Keith Rylance that the three would wait for the investigators
to come to Mackay. The claimants were in no apparent hurry
to return to Gundiah. They gave permission for Bill and
Diane to visit the property on the way. Bill arrived in
the Brisbane area on Tuesday afternoon, October 9th.
Diane
and Bill then travelled to Gundiah, arriving at the Whispering
Winds winery property, just after 10 pm. Because of the
lateness of the hour, we got the witnesses permission
to stay there overnight and to conduct whatever investigation
we needed to do. Keith had arranged for a neighbour to
regularly check on the two pets left behind, namely a
parrot and a kelpie dog. He indicated to us that it would
be okay to let the dog off for a run, but warned us it
was very friendly but inclined to jump all over people.
We
let the dog off at some point and observed its behaviour.
At one point it did jump up on the window where the damaged
screen was located. This gave some support to the possibility
that at least some, if not all of the damage, could have
been caused by the dog. Some of the damage on closer inspection
seemed suggestive of possible dog damage. Our inspection
of the plant damage also suggested possible prosaic causes,
such as heat stress. A plant at the front of the house
had similar damage and a healthy flowering bush of the
same species that was at the window, was examined by us
at Mount Basset lawn cemetery has similar damaged. A gardener
there we spoke to indicated that the species often had
random or more extensive damage of a heat stress nature
from hot sunlight. The prosaic possibilities for both
the screen and the plant damage are only suggestive at
this point and further investigation is required.
We
undertook extensive investigations at the property and
the area. Police were very helpful. Our investigation
generated many issues and questions, which we feel need
resolution, in order to assist interpretations of these
events. Further extensive investigations were undertaken
in Mackay, focusing in particular at the area where Amy
Rylance returned. These included attempts to reconstruct
the circumstances of Amys return, through onsite
research. The BP petrol service station staff were spoken
with and a surveillance video tape that may contain Amys
visit there was provided to us by the station owner. This
part of our investigation also generated many issues and
questions that need resolution if we are to approach any
measure of certainty about the real nature of the events
alleged.
Keith
Rylance indicated to us he would be available to us when
we got to Mackay, but it was made clear to us early on
the first day of our investigations there that this wasnt
probably going to be the case. When we contacted the motel
where they had been the night before, their third motel
in Mackay, we learned they had apparently already checked
out that morning. We left messages on their phone but
didnt hear from Keith until early on the afternoon
of our second day, as we were leaving Mackay. In his mobile
call, Keith apologised for not being available, but was
indicating they had relocated to an unspecified location
after having fled the area. The primary reason for this
Keith indicated was that they claimed they had a kind
of men-in-black experience. In this case Keith
was reporting a pursuit of their vehicle by a high powered
dark brown 4 wheel truck. The nature of this event apparently
frightened Keith, Amy and Petra, prompting Keith to attempt
to loose the vehicle and eventually leave the area.
Before
the completion of this preliminary report (14th October)
we have heard from Keith again. We remain hopeful that
they will get into more direct contact with us.
This
affair is both extraordinary and controversial. Many have
rushed to judgement, but given its complex and evolving
dynamics, caution and patience is necessary. We have many
issues and questions we would like to try to resolve.
Further contact with the Rylances and Petra Heller may
help this process. The case is far from closed and requires
an objective, open minded investigation. Only time will
give us the possibility of resolution and certainty about
this intriguing but controversial affair.
Source: The Australasian Ufologist Magazine Vol.5 No.4
Pgs 26-28 (Photos)
Source:
http://www.ufoevidence.org/cases/case64.htm