170 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
170 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
![]() |
SUBJECT: 3/88 LAKE ERIE UFO REPORT - MUFON FILE: UFO1396
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
N.E. OHIO FLAP by Richard P. Dell'Aquila
|
||
|
|
||
|
Richard P. Dell'Aquila and Dale B. Wedge, MUFON State Section
|
||
|
Directors for Cuyahoga, Lake, Geauga and Ashtabula Counties (Ohio) have
|
||
|
been investigating a series of sightings, beginning about March 4, 1988
|
||
|
and seemingly centered around the Perry Nuclear Plant, and the CEI coal
|
||
|
burning plant at Eastlake, both on the shore of Lake Erie, east of
|
||
|
Cleveland, Ohio. March 4th was a clear, crisp nigh t and the stars were
|
||
|
clearly visible, especially to the north over the lake where there are no
|
||
|
city.
|
||
|
|
||
|
lights. Venus and Jupiter were bright and in close proximity to each
|
||
|
other in the western sky. At about 6:30 P.M., S.B. (name and address
|
||
|
provided to MUFON) and her children were driving home to Eastlake along the
|
||
|
lake shore when they observed a large blimp-like object with bright white
|
||
|
lights at each end, hovering over the lake and rocking end to end l ike a
|
||
|
"teeter-totter." One light was brighter t han the other and was strobing.
|
||
|
On arriving home, she asked her husband to accompany her to the beach about
|
||
|
200 yards north for a closer view of the object which they later described
|
||
|
as "larger than a football held at arm's length." She and her husband
|
||
|
walked onto the beach. The noiseless object was gun metal gray and seemed
|
||
|
to cause the ice on the lake to rumble and crack loudly in an unusual way
|
||
|
which frightened her. The witnesses had to shout to be heard by ea ch
|
||
|
other, and were surpr ised that no dogs were out barking as would have been
|
||
|
expected.
|
||
|
|
||
|
After observing the object for a while, the couple became concerned for
|
||
|
the safety of their children in the car when the object revolved slowly
|
||
|
about 90 degrees, coming almost overhead (about 1/4 mile high) and pointing
|
||
|
its "front" end down toward them. They drove the children home and
|
||
|
continued watching the object from their living room window which fac es
|
||
|
the lake. A neighbor was phoned and she and her son went to the beach,
|
||
|
reporting the same thing. They took photographs which did not turn out.
|
||
|
The object began to descend and the witnesses returned to the beach, where
|
||
|
it was now observed to have red and blue blinking lights along its bottom
|
||
|
edge. It emitted 5 or 6 noiseless, intensly bright yellow triangular
|
||
|
lights from its side. They intermittently hovered around the larger
|
||
|
object, darted and zig-zagged into the night sky at velocities far in
|
||
|
excess of known aircraft. Mr. B stated the triangular objects we re smaller
|
||
|
than a one-seat Cessna and "crossed 50 mile stretches low over the ice in
|
||
|
the snap of a finger." They were said to be able to approach the shore,
|
||
|
turn abrupt right angles due east toward the Perry Nuclear Plant about 12
|
||
|
miles away, climbing rapidly and returning again, all within several
|
||
|
seconds. By this time, a Coast Guard patrol vehicle had arrived on the
|
||
|
beach in response to S.B.'s several phone calls. The triangular objects
|
||
|
came closer t o the shore, causing the witnesses to become concerned that
|
||
|
the lights on the Coast Guard vehicle would attract the objects and the
|
||
|
lights were turned off. The triangles continued to fly off at high speed
|
||
|
northward over the lake and eastward toward the Perry Nuclear Plant. About
|
||
|
an hour later, they returned one at a time into the large ship, which then
|
||
|
landed on the ice. Several multi-colored lights now came on for about 5
|
||
|
minutes
|
||
|
(Page 1 of 3) on the bottom of the object "in a wave like a mo vie theater
|
||
|
sign" and the brighter white light on the end began strobing red and white.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When these went off, the ice stopped making noise and everything became
|
||
|
"dead silent." The object could no longer be seen within about a half hour
|
||
|
and it was assumed to have gone below the surface. The next day, unusually
|
||
|
huge pieces of broken ice were observed in the area of the landing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Coast Guard informed Mr. and Mrs. B the followi ng day that the Army
|
||
|
and NASA, whom S.B. had also phoned, instructed them no t to investigate
|
||
|
the matter further or go out on the lake in their cutter to examine the ice
|
||
|
in the area of the landing, since the matter was "out of their league and
|
||
|
out of their hands." They informed the couple that all information was
|
||
|
being forwarded to Wright-Patterson Air Force Base and a facility in
|
||
|
Detroit, Michigan. In response to a Coast Guard inquiry, Wright-Patterson
|
||
|
refused to confirm or deny any interest in these activities. O n the next
|
||
|
night, the same witnesses observed sever al triangular objects over the
|
||
|
lake for about 45 minutes. By the time Coast Guard personnel arrived on
|
||
|
the scene, the objects were gone. On March 7, 1988, the Cleveland Plain
|
||
|
Dealer and Lake County News-Herald carried articles which attributed a
|
||
|
series of reports of large brightly lit objects over Lake Erie on the prior
|
||
|
weekend to several witnesses'misidentification of the planets Venus and
|
||
|
Jupiter. The newspaper accounts indicated that the Fairport Harbor Coast
|
||
|
Guard went to the area and saw a large bright object that seemed to
|
||
|
dispurse smaller, bright multi-colored objects. But when they called the
|
||
|
local air traffic controllers, they were "informed" that Jupiter and Venus
|
||
|
were in alignment and that the colors were the result of "spontaneous gas
|
||
|
emissions from the two planets." One article even attributed this amazing
|
||
|
explanation to a professor of astronomy at a local university. On reading
|
||
|
the articles, Dell'Aquila felt it was unlikely that U.S. Coast Guard
|
||
|
personnel, trained in navigation and identification of basic celestial
|
||
|
objects such as the planets, could have made such a gross
|
||
|
misidentification. Likewise, the statement attributed to the professor of
|
||
|
astronomy was equally unacceptable, in that no other similar "spontaneous
|
||
|
gas emission" from the planets cited, of the necessary magnitude, had ever
|
||
|
been noted, particulary on this weekend. In the course of the follow-up
|
||
|
investigation by Dell'Aquila and Wedge, a Coast Guard incident report was
|
||
|
found (p res ently in MUFON's possession) which states that Coast Guard
|
||
|
personnel responded to several calls reporting UFOs over Lake Erie on the
|
||
|
night of March 4, 1988. When the Coast Guard arrived, the report confirms
|
||
|
that a large object "dispersed 3-5 smaller flying objects that were zipping
|
||
|
around rather quickly. These objects had red, green white, and yellow
|
||
|
lights on them that strobed intermittently. They also had the ability to
|
||
|
stop and hover in mid-flight." The incident report confirms Mr. and Mrs. B
|
||
|
's reports, including the abnormal cracking of the ice as the object came
|
||
|
closer to it and apparently landed. "The smaller objects began hovering in
|
||
|
the area where the large object landed (about 1/4 mile east of the CEI
|
||
|
power plant) and after a few minutes they began flying around again." The
|
||
|
report states that, "One of the small objects turned on a spotlight where
|
||
|
the large object had been, but [the Coast Guard personnel] could not see
|
||
|
anything, and then the object seemed to disappear. Another ob ject
|
||
|
approached [these personnel] approximately 500 yards offshore about 20 feet
|
||
|
above the ice, and it began moving closer as [the Coast Guard] began
|
||
|
flashing its headlights, then it moved off to the west."
|
||
|
(Page 2 of 3)
|
||
|
A subsequent Coast Guard report (also in possession of MUFON) prepared
|
||
|
after the sightings of the following night attributes the sightings to
|
||
|
misidentifications of the planets Venus and Jupiter and says, "the fla
|
||
|
shing lights are gases in the at mosphere...Request incident closed this
|
||
|
unit." In response to a classified advertisement placed by the
|
||
|
investigators, other witnesses contacted Dell'Aquila and Wedge, and
|
||
|
have been interviewed as the investigation continues. On the same night
|
||
|
(March 4th) at about 10:00 P.M., and continuing until approximately 10:30
|
||
|
P.M., C.H. (name and address provided to MUFON) also reported a UFO near
|
||
|
her home, which is a few miles south of the lake shore and just east of
|
||
|
the Perr y Nuclear Plant. C.H. was walking a puppy when she noticed the
|
||
|
stationary triangular object in the southeasterly sky. It was much
|
||
|
brighter than the moon, and seemed to upset the puppy, which she took back
|
||
|
indoors. Returning outdoors, she reported that the object began
|
||
|
sequentially flashing multi-colored lights, suspended in rows below the
|
||
|
base of the triangle. The witness responded by flashing her cigarette
|
||
|
lighter and the UFO's light pattern beca me more erratic. At one point,
|
||
|
the triangle revolved clockwise, turning it s apex about 90 degrees to
|
||
|
a horizontal position, but still flashing the rows of light. After several
|
||
|
minutes, it turned back counter-clockwise as it simultaneously accelerated
|
||
|
away to the south at a high rate of speed, disappearing behind some trees.
|
||
|
No noise or odor was reported. At about 10:30 P.M. that night T.K. (name
|
||
|
and address provided to MUFON), took a photograph in his back yard, within
|
||
|
a few miles of the Perry Nuclear Plant, showing a portion of a brightly lit
|
||
|
triangular object travelling across the sky (Photograph in possession of
|
||
|
MUFON). This object was later confirmed by Mr. and Mrs. B and C.H. to be
|
||
|
identical to the triangular objects they were also observing about the same
|
||
|
time a few miles away, and is also similar to one reported to Phil
|
||
|
Imbrogno as having been near the Indian Point Nuclear Power Plant in New
|
||
|
York State on the same night. T.K. and his friend were outdoors on the
|
||
|
night of March 4th, observing the stars throu gh his telescope. Venus and
|
||
|
Jupiter were reported to be in the western sky behind a stand of trees.
|
||
|
While looking southward through the telescope, out of the corner of his
|
||
|
left eye, T.K. noticed a bright, moving object in the sky. He and his
|
||
|
friend were awe-struck by the triangular object, but he did have the
|
||
|
presence of mind to take 3 photographs with a small "snapshot" type camera
|
||
|
loaded with Kodak 110 color film, with which they had intended to
|
||
|
photograph stars through the telescope. Only one photograph turned out. It
|
||
|
is the l ast in the series, taken while panning ahead of the object, and
|
||
|
shows the front portion of the triangle. The object was described as about
|
||
|
3-4 inches tall at arm's length and glowing an intense yellow/orange to
|
||
|
white, with a bright orange/red glow behind it. It seemed to pulse
|
||
|
brighter and dimmer, moving in a roughly southwesterly direction until it
|
||
|
was obscured by trees. As it moved, it accelerated, slowed and accelerated
|
||
|
again. No sound or smell was noted, although his dog had a strong reaction
|
||
|
, running in circles and tugging on T.K.'s sleeve, apparently in an attempt
|
||
|
to urge him away from the object.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Total time of observation was a few minutes. Dell'Aquila and Wedge continue
|
||
|
to receive reports of additional UFOs over the same period, some supported
|
||
|
by photographs, as the sightings continue to the date of this writing.
|
||
|
Supplementary reports will be provided as the investigation of the flap
|
||
|
progresses.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
**********************************************
|
||
|
* THE U.F.O. BBS - http://www.ufobbs.com/ufo *
|
||
|
**********************************************
|