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This article is published with the expressed written consent of
Angelia Joiner
The world waited
for Mutual UFO Network's (MUFON) official report on the Stephenville
unidentified flying objects.
And waited. And
waited.
That was cool.
That meant a lot of work was going on and State Director Ken Cherry
and Chief Investigator Steve Hudgeons were pouring through hundreds
of eyewitness accounts, plotting on maps, coordinating radar data,
and organizing field investigators.
Finally, the
report was forthcoming in the May edition of the MUFON Journal.
Eagerly, those of the UFO community as well as those not so familiar
began scouring the document and Googling for news articles.
For what?
To find out, the
Stephenville investigation was the largest sighting the Texas group
had ever handled. And it showed. Crowds flooded the January Dublin
meeting, more than willing to share their experiences of the unusual
event.
Eight MUFON
investigators answered the call for volunteers to interview
witnesses. With all of the media attention, the job must have seemed
overwhelming.
We find out Texas
has had more than 550 sightings from 1947 to Nov. 1, 2007. The
author of the article said that information was for perspective, but
it seemed more like filler. Especially because the title of the
article leads the reader to believe he or she will find more out
about Erath County sightings. The title is, Stephenville: Report
of Cluster of UFO Sightings in Erath County, Texas, Nov. 2007 to
Feb. 2008.
Steve Allen is the
pilot who first brought the sightings to the attention of the world.
He and three friends saw something so unbelievably large and
absolutely silent on Jan. 8 they didn't feel it should remain
between friends. And, when a few minutes later the object appeared
for the second time, apparently being chased by F-16 jets, it made
the sighting all the more interesting. Allen is mentioned, but the
report does not recognize if his sighting was identified or is to
remain unidentified. And, what about those jets? Did they show up on
radar? Is there anything new in this report regarding Allen's
sighting that wasn't already known?
A map is included
with Allen's location in Selden along with the time (6:15 p.m.)
Allen claimed he saw something a mile long and a half-mile wide.
There are other anonymous witnesses plotted on the map at other
locations from Stephenville to Dublin, but no mention of sighting
times. There are arrows, which show directions of something
traveling along the path of the witnesses. But, where are numbers
like altitude and speed? Why isn't there any information in the
report to explain how the researchers knew the path this object
took?
The report says
that many of the sightings have been identified including one video
presented by an unknown witness that resembled a black snake "being
blown across the sky." MUFON identified this object as a "military
sleeve." Where's the data? Meanwhile, it's mostly recognized that
UFO sightings are eventually identified. James Fox, UFO filmmaker
believes as many as 95 percent are identified and he has been known
to say it's the other five percent we should be worried about.
What the report
does not say is which cases were not identified or give any exact
numbers.
Cherry has been
quoted as saying most of the people in Erath County saw planets,
stars or clouds. Maybe that is true, but where's the data? What
planets and stars did they see? It would seem easy for an untrained
observer to make that mistake.
The Doppler radar
information provided by William Puckett for the official report was
interesting. Puckett apparently found an object that piqued his
interest at 6:34 p.m. on Jan. 8. It was something that was not using
a transponder and something that did not show 10 minutes before or
10 minutes after this time period.
Puckett is quoted
as saying, "I found a fast moving target moving on an eastward
vector of about 700 mph. This was clearly not a passenger jet. It
could have been a military jet or an unknown object. The object was
not transponding."
Puckett goes on to
state weather conditions for the area on Jan. 8.
Well, we all knew
there were jets in the area. Even Maj. Karl Lewis with the Naval Air
Base finally admitted there were 10 from his base alone on the
evening in question after first denying there were any.
The report also
mentions three area law enforcement officers and their accounts on
Jan. 8, but mistakenly calls them "constables." A recent phone call
to one of the officers confirmed that none of the three ever made an
official report to MUFON investigators. Nor does the report state
how the information or the computer drawings was obtained.
Bruce Maccabee,
Ph.D., a ufologist studying the field for years was provided with a
copy of David Coran's video. Coran is a Stephenville resident and
first showed his film to Steve Allen. Allen gave Coran some money
and Coran told him to use the film as he pleased, according to
Allen.
Then Ken Cherry
arranged a meeting between Coran and UFO Hunters of the
History Channel to purchase the video. Maccabee is the
organization's state director for Maryland. Without the original
film or camera or being able to look through that camera at the
precise time and place the film was taken, Maccabee determined that
Coran was viewing an out-of-focus star. It's an analysis that many
in the UFO community agree with.
A conclusion,
Allen says, he will never believe. Allen said the tape he has shows
trees and rooftops clearly in focus while the "star" is putting on a
light show.
The report says
some of the sightings MUFON received dated back as far as thirty
years ago. That's nice. Now, more people feel they can come forward
without being ridiculed.
Thanks, Steve
Allen, for giving us all courage; courage to report, courage to
write, and courage to look deeply into the unknown.
In Ken Cherry's
short article for the Journal he says, "No doubt, this report
will not satisfy the skeptics or true believers."
No doubt, he's
right.
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