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UFO
Sightings by Police Officers
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Timmins,
Ontario, DAILY PRESS, 29 July 1952, page 1
More
"Flying Saucers" Are Watched By Many
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Police and military observers and hundreds
of civilians reported seeing three "flying saucer"
objects over south central Indiana between midnight and
dawn yesterday.
State police at Indianapolis, Seymour and Connersville posts,
and army and air force observers at Camp Atterbury said
they watched the objects for several hours.
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Sudbury,
Ontario, DAILY STAR, 27 September 1954, page 6
Blue
Rain, Flying Disc In Kirkland District
KIRKLAND LAKE (CP) - A provincial police constable patrolling
Highway 11 at Ramore, 25 miles north of here, said he saw
an elliptical object Friday night, flying at 1,000 feet
and emitting an intense white light.
Constable Florian Grabowski said it was moving slowly northward
over the railroad tracks.
"Suddenly,
as I was stopping the car to get out and see if I could
hear any sound, it disintegrated in a shower of light particles
which fell over the tracks."
At about the same time, blue rain fell in Kirkland Lake.
William Martin said he noticed large blue drops on his window
during a heavy rain. In 15 minutes, they faded gradually
and finally became clear, he said.
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North
Bay, Ontario, DAILY NUGGET, 1 November 1958, Page 1
Saw
Flying Saucer, 4 OPP Officers Say
WALKERTON, Ont. (CP) - Four provincial policemen of the
Walkerton detachment reported seeing a flying saucer from
two different points in Bruce County early Friday.
The four officers made notes of their observations and were
in constant contact by police radio.
They calculated the object hovered about three miles northeast
of Paisley at a height of about 3,500 feet. From their observation
points 20 miles apart.
The predominent color, Constable Edward Johnston said, was
white, but it constantly changed to other shades, and at
times looked as though there were four lights coming from
it.
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Sudbury,
Ontario, STAR, 29 April 1964, page 1
Mysterious
Flying Object Prompts Probe by Expert
SOCORRO,
N.M. (AP) - An astronomer from the Dearborn Observatory
at Northwestern University was here today to examine the
secluded hill where a Socorro policeman reported seeing
a mysterious, egg-shaped flying object.
Dr.
J. Allen Hynek was sent to New Mexico after a rash of reports
that unidentified flying objects had been seen in the state.
Policeman
Lonnie Zamora said the object he saw Friday was brilliant
white. He said there was a red marking on it like an upside
down V with three lines across the top, through the middle
and at the bottom. He said that from a distance there appeared
to be two figures in white coveralls outside the object.
It flew off with a roar when he approached, he said.
Since
Zamora's experience at least six reports have been made
to authorities including one from a youth who said he fired
several shots at something about 100 feet in the air near
Moriarty.
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North
Bay, Ontario, NUGGET, 15 April 1966, Page 5
UFO
sighting confirmed by OPP constable
OWEN SOUND (CP) - An unidentified flying object with blinking
red, green and white lights was seen in the sky over Parry
Sound Thursday night by at least two persons, one a provincial
police constable.
Mrs. George Labben saw the object through binoculars and
called the police. The constable also reported sighting
the object.
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Sudbury,
Ontario, STAR, 18 April 1966, page 15
U.S.
Police Officials Follow Flying Object; 'Somebody Controls
It'
RAVENA, Ohio (AP) - "We were closer, closer than I
ever want to be again," said a deputy sheriff who chased
an unidentified flying object from Ohio into Pennsylvania.
Hundreds of persons in both states reported seeing the "brilliant
and shiny" object early Sunday morning.
Police Chief Gerald Buchert of Mantua, about eight miles
north of Ravena, said he took a picture of the object from
his front yard but the air force told him not to release
it.
Buchert said it looked like "two table saucers put
together."
Dale Spaur, Portage County deputy sheriff, said he and his
partner, W. L. Neff, "were close" to the object
in separate cars and chased it 86 miles for 90 minutes,
from near Ravena to Conway, Pa., near Pittsburgh.
Spaur said he clocked it at speeds up to 103 miles an hour.
From the ground Spaur said it looked like the head of a
flashlight, about 40 feet wide and 18 feet high.
Spaur said the lines of the object were distinct. "Somebody
had control over it," he said. "It wasn't just
floating around. It can manoeuvre."
The deputy said the chase slowed down near Rochester, Pa.,
when the cars "got tangled up in a mess of bridges
. . . but when I came out from under the bridge it came
down and waited for us, just as though it knew these two
cars were following it."
"I
know nobody's going to believe it, but it's true,"
he said.
Spaur said the only sound coming from the object was a steady,
faint humming, like an electric transformer. Near Conway,
Pa., Spaur said the object began hovering and "was
going for altitude, straight up."
He said the object disappeared after he and others went
to a police station to telephone air force officials.
The federal aviation agency's air traffic control centres
at Oberlin and Pittsburgh said they spotted no unknown objects
on their radar.
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Sudbury,
Ontario, STAR, 1 March 1967, page 1
Police
Chief Reports UFO Over Stryker
BLIND RIVER - An object, bearing red and green lights and
shining "brilliant white," hung "like a star
over the treetops," of Stryker Township near here Tuesday
night.
It was seen by Mrs. J. D. McLean of Stryker, Hernson Alan
and son-in-law James Collins who is police chief of Blind
River.
Mrs. McLean said she watched spellbound as the object hovered
motionless near her home. She phoned McLean and Collins
who rushed to the scene, and who both observed the phenomenon.
McLean rushed in his car to get a closer look but the object
moved away.
Later Collins received a telephone call from Sault Ste.
Marie which reported the unidentified object had been sighted
over the Soo city hall shortly after its appearance at Blind
River.
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Sault
Ste. Marie, Ontario, DAILY STAR, 1 March 1967, Page 37
Police
Sight UFOs
GRAND HAVEN (UPI) - It isn't often that sightings of unidentified
flying objects (UFOs) are confirmed by police officials.
But Tuesday night, most of the reports were made by police
in Southwestern Michigan.
Ottawa County Sheriff Bernard Grysen and five of his deputies
were among more than one dozen persons reporting reddish-orange
objects in the dark, but clear sky over Ottawa County along
the shores of Lake Michigan.
Grysen was reluctant to discuss his sighting because of
the publicity surrounding many of the sightings made in
Michigan in recent months.
"I've
heard so many kooks talk about them, I don't like to say
much about it," he said.
But he did describe a reddish-orange object that hovered
low over Lake Michigan a short distance from his cottage.
He said it moved quickly from side to side before disappearing.
Police officials in three counties bordering Ottawa County,
Allegan, Muskegon and Kent, said they had received no UFO
sighting reports. One deputy in Muskegon County said he
had watched an "exceptionally bright star" for
several minutes but added there was movement and no color.
Ottawa Deputy Dave Heerspink reported sighting the object,
or objects, at three different times at three different
spots in the county Tuesday night.
"It
looked like a cluster of lights with the centre intensely
bright and the outer edges reddish in color," Heerspink
said. "It seemed to be kind of oval shaped, more or
less."
Heerspink said he was listening on his two-way radio when
the first report came in from other deputies.
"I
heard them asking if other cars saw it," he said, "and
then I spotted my first one of the night."
The deputy said he came in to the station to pick up a pair
of binoculars after making his first sighting and then spotted
a second one with the binoculars. Heerspink said he saw
a plane go by and the object he was looking at "was
definitely not a plane."
Heerspink said he had never spotted a UFO before Tuesday
night and had always wondered just what people were reporting.
"Maybe
someone else knows more about these things. If they do,
maybe they can explain it," he said. "At least
now I know what other people have been talking about."
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Sudbury,
Ontario, STAR, 25 September 1967, page 1
OPP
Officer Chases 'Strange White Light'
WHITBY, Ont. (CP) - A provincial police officer today reported
seeing a "strange white light" and chasing it
for several miles along the Macdonald-Cartier Freeway.
Five officers of the Whitby division said they saw the light
which appeared to be about 450 feet above the highway.
The officer said he followed the light for several miles
before it suddenly stopped, then sped away at "terrific
speed," disappearing over Lake Ontario.
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Sudbury,
Ontario, STAR, 6 February 1969, page 3
UFO
Said Sighted in Noelville District By Policeman, Mason Twp.
Couple
"There
was definitely something up there. I wish I could say there
wasn't, but I did see something," said Cons. D. G.
White of the Noelville detachment provincial police of a
UFO reported last night in Mason Township.
He received what he thought at first was just a crank call
while at home eating dinner last night. Two Mason township
residents, Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Chartrand, had apparently
been watching an unidentified object in the sky for about
20 minutes before they worked up the nerve to call police,
and White decided that if there was something there it might
be worth seeing.
'HOVERING'
"It
was just unusual, that's all I can say. I can't tell you
what it was." He said that by the time he arrived at
the scene, just south of Noelville on Highway 69, the object
appeared to be hovering over trees a mile south of the Chartrand
home.
According to White, the Chartrands had first seen the object
when an orange glow from it reflected off the snow in their
fields. It appeared to be half-way between the house and
the trees when they first saw it, he reported.
"It
was a little larger than a star, and you could tell that
it wasn't by the color. It was first orange, then turned
a silver grey, and then back to orange. It was disappearing
over the horizon or behind the trees when I last saw it.
It was there for about three minutes."
BELL-SHAPED
He said that with the naked eye, it was impossible to tell
the shape of the object. White observed it through binoculars
and said that it was roughly bell-shaped.
"It
was not moving fast, like a plane or a shooting star,"
White said.
He said he could not tell how far away the object was, or
how large it was. He said there was no noise from it, and
that it appeared to be moving in a southwesterly direction.
REFLECTION
He said that when the Chartrands first noticed it, it was
high in the air, and they noticed its reflection in the
snow. He could not determine whether it had passed over
the house or whether it was dropping behind the horizon
or hovering behind the trees.
White said he called the Canadian Forces Base at Falconbridge.
"The man who took the message made no comment on the
sighting, and I didn't press the matter. I don't know if
they have anything or not."
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Sudbury,
Ontario, STAR, 7 February 1969, page 3
Just
Another UFO Report, Says Falconbridge Official
The unidentified object observed in the sky over Mason Township
Wednesday night is just one of many similar sightings, according
to officials at Canadian Forces Base, Falconbridge.
"It
was essentially the same as many of the other sightings
reported," said Chief Warrant Officer H. W. Grant.
"We don't bother much with them. We have orders to
take the information and pass it on to the National Research
Council in Ottawa."
He added that because of the automatic nature of the equipment
at Falconbridge, it would be very unlikely that an operator
would have noticed the object if it did appear on the screen.
TO
COMPUTER
He said that all data from the Falconbridge station goes
directly to North Bay and a computer which picks out any
suspicious objects. "The scopes are only used to check
the equipment," Grant said.
There was apparently a rash of sightings at one time in
the past, and reported sightings have become a common thing
for the men at the radar station. Grant said that it is
unlikely that the computer had picked up anything suspicious,
since it is programmed to pick up planes flying southwards.
"It may have kicked out something about this because
it didn't fit any programmed pattern," Grant said,
but he noted that he had heard nothing about such an occurrence.
The sighting Wednesday night was made first by Mr. and Mrs.
Lionel Chartrand, of Noelville, who saw the reflection of
the object in the snow on their field.
Cons. D. G. White, of the OPP, went to the scene expecting
a crank call, and instead observed the object through binoculars
for three to four minutes as it slowly sank behind trees
on the horizon.
He said that it was bell-shaped and was first orange, turning
a silver grey and then, back to orange again.
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North
Bay, Ontario, NUGGET, 7 February 1969, Page 9
OPP
sees UFO
SUDBURY (CP) - Constable D. G. White of the provincial police
detachment at nearby Noelville said Thursday he saw an unidentified
flying object Wednesday night after receiving a call from
two Mason township residents. "There was definitely
something up there," he said. He said an orange-glowing
object, which hovered above trees near Highway 69, was not
moving fast like a plane or shooting star.
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Sudbury,
Ontario, STAR, 14 July 1969, page 19
'Just
a Light', UFO Is Reported Near Pembroke
PEMBROKE (CP) - Two police constables and several other
persons reported sighting an unidentified flying object
near here early Saturday.
"It
was just like a large star . . . no body, no form, just
a light about 1,500 feet in the sky," said Constable
Jack McKay of the Pembroke OPP detachment.
The object was described as a "cylindrical-shaped brilliant
light in the sky over Petawawa," a town 10 miles north
of Pembroke. Constable McKay, his patrol partner Constable
Grant Chaplin, and several others, including three military
policemen at the nearby Canadian forces base, reported seeing
the phenomenon at about 5 a.m. Saturday.
The Canadian forces radar station at North Bay reported
Sunday it is checking the incident.
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Sault
Ste. Marie, Ontario, DAILY STAR, 22 October 1974, Page 2
RCMP
Saw Three UFOs over Rockies
TURNER VALLEY, Alta. (CP) - A blazing, white Unidentified
Flying Object roaring like a jet aircraft, has been reported
hovering near a farmhouse near Priddis, 10 miles west of
Calgary, an RCMP officer says.
An officer of the RCMP Turner Valley detachment, said he
went to the scene, Saturday, and saw three mysterious objects
flit about above the Rocky Mountains.
The officer said in a statement, this week, that "the
object is described as being 60 feet in diameter and 25
feet high, giving off a very white light as it hovered about
100 feet from the ground."
Constable Dave Grundy said the UFO was first reported at
2:30 a.m., Oct. 13, by a woman living on a farm near Priddis.
The woman did not want her name released.
SEES
OBJECTS
Constable Grundy said he went to the scene when the object
was again reported last Saturday, at 2:50 a.m. - and this
time, he saw it too.
"It
was oblong with a crown and windows on the crown giving
off a clear light. It was close enough, they (the woman
and her children) could compare it in size to their house.
Inside was a white, white light. It sounded like a jet engine
without the whine. After about two minutes, it took off
to the north, then west, very fast, they said."
The constable said that by the time he arrived, the object
had flown off to the west, watched by the woman and her
children through a telescope. Looking through the telescope,
the officer said he saw "three objects jumping around
all over the place, in the west, above the Rockies."
"They
appeared to be diamond-shaped," the constable said.
"That was quite an experience...I saw what I saw."
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Sudbury,
Ontario, STAR, 1 November 1975, page 2
POLICE
SEE LIGHT
NORTH BAY, Ont. (CP) - An unexplained bright white light
which has been sighted several times in the area during
recent weeks was active again Thursday night, provincial
police say. Police said they received reports late Thursday
that an unidentified flying object was sighted over Lake
Nipissing. Police, responding to the calls, said they saw
the bright white light hovering over Iron Island about 20
miles west of the North Bay government dock. It remained
stationary for about three hours, then disappeared.
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Sudbury,
Ontario, STAR, 3 November 1975, page 1
Two
UFO sightings over Lake Nipissing island leave OPP, civilian
observers baffled
STURGEON FALLS (Staff) - Policemen in this community of
6,600, which borders Lake Nipissing have begun seeing things
. . . and just don't know what to make of it.
The mystery began Thursday night with the initial sighting
of a light hovering over the lake, reported to be moving
up and down as well as from side to side but remaining in
the same general area.
Gerry Beaucage and Ben Goulet, both of the Garden River
Indian Reserve, and Frank Beaucage, 143 Michaud St., Sturgeon
Falls, reported the sighting.
The object was seen over Lake Nipissing from the Garden
River reserve at 8 p.m.
Intrigued by the report, provincial police Cons. Roger Patrois
and Corp. H. A. Wright later went out to the scene to verify
the occurrence.
TWO
LIGHTS
When they arrived at 11:40 p.m., the object was still there.
Using a 50 - mm telescope, the men were able to discover
that there were two lights involved and not only one as
seen without assistance of the telescope. But they were
not able to make out the object to which the lights were
attached.
The incident was reported to Canadian Forces Base North
Bay for verification. It finally disappeared at 12:55 a.m.
Friday.
The base later reported that the source of the light was
believed to be a cottage located on Sandy Island. Police
do not feel that the explanation is satisfactory, however,
as from observing the lights, they feel the source would
have been too high in the sky to have been a cottage.
SECOND
SIGHTING
Sunday, police again sighted a light hovering over the lake,
this time from a point eight miles east of Sturgeon Falls,
with the light seen in the southeast.
Cons. J. J. Culkeen made the initial sighting. He observed
the light, which seemed to be at a greater altitude than
that seen Thursday for a period of about 15 minutes and
called the North Bay provincial police detachment.
Cons. Len Decaire drove down to the scene and also observed
the object. Intermittent observation was maintained until
the object disappeared at about 4:30 a.m., an hour after
it was first noticed in the sky.
Police again notified CFB North Bay, but have not yet received
any possible explanation of the mysterious light.
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Kirkland
Lake, Ontario, NORTHERN DAILY NEWS, 11 November 1975, page
2
Police
And Armed Forces Personnel Sight UFOs Over Haileybury, Sudbury
SUDBURY, Ont. (CP) - Police reports say unidentified flying
objects were sighted early Tuesday over Sudbury and Haileybury,
about 90 miles northeast of here.
Reports on the sightings were compiled by regional police,
provincial police and staff at Canadian Forces Base, Falconbridge.
Regional police constables Bob Whiteside and Alex Keable
said they saw three objects in the sky Tuesday, and later
spotted a fourth.
Regional Constable John Marsh said he saw lights in the
sky to the southwest while on patrol on Highway 17 East
near Coniston, about five miles east of here. He said the
object moved in a jerking manner and had pulsating lights.
Four persons at the Falconbridge base said they sighted
objects in the sky and on radar. National defence headquarters
in Ottawa said four persons at the radar station reported
they saw three bright circles with two black dots in the
sky early Tuesday. The report says the objects were moving
upwards at an altitude between 42,000 and 72,000 feet.
In Haileybury, provincial police said Fred Sauve, a civilian
radio dispatcher, spotted a bright object over Lake Temiskaming.
Police said Mr. Sauve described the object as bright, white
and larger than a star.
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Sudbury,
Ontario, STAR, 20 December 1975, page 28
Police
from three counties pursue UFO
HASTINGS, Fla. (AP) - At least 12 policemen in three northeastern
Florida counties searched all night for what was described
as a multicolored, unidentified flying object (UFO) the
size of three football fields.
"We
just don't know what it is yet," a spokesman for the
Flagler County sheriff's office said. "One of the deputies
actually saw it. But then we lost it."
St. Johns County sent up a helicopter with residents from
the tiny town of Hastings who said they saw the object flying
sideways and landing in a wooded area.
Witnesses said the object flashed rainbow colors and was
three storeys high.
Area residents also joined the search on foot in the area
near the boundaries of St. Johns, Flagler and Putnam counties.
The Federal Aviation Administration said it knew of no planes
that had crashed in the area and could not speculate what
the object might be, a spokesman said.
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North
Bay, Ontario, NUGGET, 28 October 1978, Page 17
Officer
watches UFO for an hour
CLARENVILLE, Nfld. (CP) - An RCMP officer sat and watched
an unidentified flying object for more than an hour earlier
this week, another RCMP officer said Friday.
The sighting came after an officer answered a call early
Thursday. The officer then observed an oval-shaped object
hovering at about 1,000 metres for more than an hour above
Random Island, east of here, the spokesman said.
The name of the officer who saw the object was not released.
RCMP say that the officer watched the object through a telescope
and provided a detailed description of it.
It had a pyramid-shaped fin on the top of an oval-shaped
white body and it flashed red, blue, and white lights for
more than an hour before "it went straight up and disappeared."
A report on the incident has been filed with the National
Research Council in Ottawa.
Meanwhile, a spokesman at the Air Traffic Control centre
at the Gander International Airport, said nothing had been
logged to indicate that a UFO had been in the area.
"All
I can tell you is that nothing has been logged," he
said. However, if the object had stayed below 3,500 metres
and was relatively small, it could have eluded conventional
radar devices, he added.
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The
Nevada DAILY MAIL, September 9, 1979
Officer
suffers after encounter with UFO
MINNEAPOLIS
AP - Val Johnson's strange encounter on a dark, lonely road
last month has thrust him into the glaring light of nationwide
attention and put an emotional strain on his family.
The
Marshall County deputy sheriff is scheduled to appear Tuesday
on ABC-TV's "Good Morning America" program to
talk about a baffling UFO experience that he says burned
his eyes, damaged his car and stopped his watch.
And
Johnson's home in Oslo, Minn., has been flooded with telephone
calls from people around the
country telling him of similar experiences.
"It's
a tremendous strain on the family," said the 35-year-old
father of three young children. "My wife's run ragged
with phone calls. I hope this drops in a barrel and rests
quietly so we can go back to being parents and I can go
back to being a little town deputy sheriff."
Johnson
said he was on patrol near Stephen, Minn., about 2 a.m.
on Aug. 27 when he saw a beam of light above the road. The
beam sped towards him, his squad car was engulfed in light
and he heard glass breaking. Johnson said he was unconscious
for 39 minutes, and when he came to, he realized his watch
and the car's electric clock had stopped for 14 minutes.
The
windshield was shattered, a headlight and red light atop
the car damaged and a thin radio aerial bent back. Deputies
responding to Johnson's radio call for help found the squad
car sideways on the road. Johnson suffered burns to his
eyes which a physician called "welders' burns,"
caused by extremely bright light.
Because
of the damage and the injury, this incident differed from
most UFO reports, says Allan Hendry of the Center for UFO
Studies in Evanston, Ill.
Tests
will be run on the squad car, Hendry said Sunday, and infrared
pictures will be taken of the ground around the site of
the incident "to see if the intensity of the light
affected plants."
Hendry
is also intrigued by a similar UFO report that came from
Vermillion. S.D., two days after Johnson's close encounter
was reported.
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Kingman,
Arizona, DAILY MINER, September 10, 1979
'It's
a tremendous strain'
Close
encounter makes him famous
MINNEAPOLIS
(AP) - Val Johnson's strange encounter on a dark, lonely
road last month has thrust him into the glaring light of
nationwide attention and put an emotional strain on his
family.
The
Marshall County deputy sheriff is scheduled to appear Tuesday
on ABC-TV's "Good Morning America" program to
talk about a baffling UFO experience that he says burned
his eyes, damaged his car and stopped his watch.
And
Johnson's home in Oslo, Minn., has been flooded with telephone
calls from people around the
country telling him of similar experiences.
"It's
a tremendous strain on the family," said the 35-year-old
father of three young children. "My wife's run ragged
with phone calls. I hope this drops in a barrel and rests
quietly so we can go back to being parents and I can go
back to being a little town deputy sheriff."
Johnson
said he was on patrol near Stephen, Minn., about 2 a.m.
on Aug. 27 when he saw a beam of light above the road. The
beam sped towards him, his squad car was engulfed in light
and he heard glass breaking. Johnson said he was unconscious
for 39 minutes, and when he came to, he realized his watch
and the car's electric clock had stopped for 14 minutes.
The
windshield was shattered, a headlight and red light atop
the car damaged and a thin radio aerial bent back. Deputies
responding to Johnson's radio call for help found the squad
car sideways on the road. Johnson suffered burns to his
eyes which a physician called "welders' burns,"
caused by extremely bright light.
Because
of the damage and the injury, this incident differed from
most UFO reports, says Allan Hendry of the Center for UFO
Studies in Evanston, Ill.
Tests
will be run on the squad car, Hendry said Sunday, and infrared
pictures will be taken of the ground around the site of
the incident "to see if the intensity of the light
affected plants."
Hendry
is also intrigued by a similar UFO report that came from
Vermillion. S.D., two days after Johnson's close encounter
was reported.
Hendry
said Russ Johnson (no relation to Val Johnson) of Vermillion
said he was driving alone west of town about 2 a.m. when
he, too, saw a light just above the road.
Russ
Johnson, 33, told police the object suddenly accelerated
toward him and engulfed his car in bright light, Hendry
said. He kept his eyes closed as the light approached, but
opened them in time to see the light speed away. then suddenly
vanish.
Unlike
the deputy, Hendry said Johnson suffered no injury and his
car was not damaged. Hendry said Johnson told him he was
not aware of the Minnesota UFO report at the time.
"Only
rarely do I have a repeat experience which happens right
on the heels of another one," said Hendry.
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UFOs
and Law Enforcement Publication
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Timmins,
Ontario, DAILY PRESS, 12 April 1975, page 7
THE
UNEXPLAINED
Growing Science Challenge: UFO's
By ALLEN SPRAGGETT
Well, it's official. UFO's exist.
At least, it's as official as the publication of a serious
UFO report in the FBI bulletin, "Law Enforcement,"
can make it. And for many people that will be pretty official,
or as good as official.
The article in the February 1975 issue of the bulletin,
entitled "The UFO Mystery," by Dr. J. Allen Hynek,
is a sober, objective description of the evidence for UFOs.
It includes the urgent recommendation that any UFO reports
coming to the FBI's attention be directed to Hynek's organization
for further study.
CONSULTANTS
The organization called the Centre for UFO Studies (Northfield,
Illinois) is run by Dr. Hynek, the world's foremost scientific
ufologist, with assistance from consulting experts as such
universities of Chicago, Texas, Wisconsin, Utah, Johns Hopkins,
and Northwestern.
The latter school, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois,
is where Hynek serves as chairman of the astronomy department.
For some 20 years, he was the scientific consultant of UFOs
for the U.S. Air Force when it ran what was called Project
Blue Book to gather and assess such sightings and reports.
It was his experience with the Air Force, says Hynek, which
eventually led him to stop regarding UFOs as fantasy and
instead describe them as "the greatest challenge facing
science today."
POLICE
PURSUIT
In the article for the FBI bulletin, Hynek describes case
after case in which police have sighted and even pursued
UFOs.
On Oct. 16, 1973, the crew of a Delaware State Police helicopter
chased a UFO 14 miles before losing sight of it. At the
same time, the mystery object was being monitored on radar
by flight controllers at Dover Air Force Base nearby.
Several days later in Adams County, Ohio, two police officers
reported a "huge" UFO hovering some 200 feet above
the swaying ground, in a familiar "falling leaf"
motion.
CONFIRMATION
On Oct. 19, 1973, a Tulsa, Oklahoma police sergeant confirmed
another officer's report of a hovering multi-colored object
bigger than a Jumbo jetliner.
On Nov. 12, 1973, two Los Angeles policemen reported watching
for more than a minute the manoeuvre of a large, round bluish
object which suddenly "raced away and disappeared at
dazzling speed."
Were all these police officers hallucinating?
WITNESSES
Of course not, says Dr. Hynek. Add their accounts to the
hundreds-yes, hundreds more pouring in from military personnel,
commercial pilots and similar responsible witnesses and,
he says, they add up to an epidemic of "incredible
things being seen by credible people."
Are UFO craft from outer space?
Dr. Hynek doesn't say that. Nor, for that matter, does he
deny it. He says it's too early to speculate on what UFOs
ultimately may prove to be. They may represent a more profound
mystery than our human minds can even conceive, much less
clearly pose. In the meantime, maintains Hynek, they are
undeniably fact, not fiction.
MUTUAL
PROBLEM
Something real is going on, he says. "Science and law
enforcement are facing a mutual problem as they have many
times before."
The problem: Explaining the unexplained.
Hynek suggests that in the event of a UFO report, the FBI
or any other law enforcement agency should contact his Centre
for UFO Studies at the toll-free telephone number provided
for this purpose. (The number is not made public because
the UFO hot-line is reserved for police and other official
agencies.)
INVESTIGATOR
If the report is substantial enough, an experienced UFO
investigator will be despatched to investigate it.
Meanwhile, says Hynek, the police should keep the public
off the UFO landing site (if a landing was reported, and
they often are) to avoid the obliteration of possibly important
scientific evidence.
In most cases, Hynek points out, nobody or no thing is injured
or damaged by the UFO. However, he cautions that there are
instances - more than the public may realize - in which
persons near the UFO "can be temporarily paralyzed
or blinded and skin burns can occur; also plants, trees
and crops can be damaged, and so forth."
BURNT
RING
There are now, according to this leading authority, "hundreds"
of mysterious "burnt ring" cases. In these instances,
which come from all over the United States and Canada and
the world, huge burned or blasted circular areas appear,
sometimes as much as 40 feet in diameter, where something
appears to have scorched or desiccated the vegetation and
soil.
"It's
a sort of death ray effect," Hynek said.
Often these burnt rings are associated with eyewitness reports
of a UFO hovering or landing on the spot.
The UFO phenomenon is growing, concludes Dr. Hynek in his
article for the FBI and science needs the informed cooperation
of law enforcement agencies in coming to grips with "this
most perplexing modern mystery."
Will it be solved soon?
Or ever? (Copyright 1975, Toronto Sun Syndicate).
Allen Spraggett's new book, the World of the Unexplained,
a collection of sensational stories on ESP, life after death,
psychic healing, reincarnation and other astonishing and
absolutely true phenomena - is now available from this newspaper.
Send $1.25 with your name and address to: THE UNEXPLAINED,
The Daily Press, Timmins, Box 345, Station A, Toronto.
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Cartoons
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The
Sudbury Star - November 5, 1975
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News
clippings courtesy of The Sault Star, The Timmins Daily
Press, The Kirkland Lake Northern Daily News, The North
Bay Nugget and The Sudbury Star.
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