185 lines
9.8 KiB
Plaintext
185 lines
9.8 KiB
Plaintext
|
An article published on April 24, 1988 in the Flushing, Observer
|
|||
|
(Flushing,MI) dealing with "black helicopter" harrassments of MUFON
|
|||
|
investigators. (Reprinted with permission)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
From The Flushing Observer (Flushing, Michigan), Sunday, April 24, 1988.
|
|||
|
[Reprinted with permission]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
UFO: INVESTIGATORS SUSPECT NATIONAL SECURITY PINCH
|
|||
|
By Judith Karns, Observer Managing Editor
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
They say it isn't so: there ain't no such animal as a "flying saucer."
|
|||
|
Even though our government spent a decade deeply enmeshed in
|
|||
|
investigation, (Project Bluebook, Majestic 12), suddenly, one day, a
|
|||
|
security lid was clamped so tight on the subjec t of extraterestrial
|
|||
|
visitors (some even speculate them to be subterranean) that even the squeak
|
|||
|
of a mouse couldn't get out. And with that lid came the "official" denial
|
|||
|
of the phenomenon's existence.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Why, then, asks Flushing residents Shirley and George Coyne, state
|
|||
|
directors of MUFON (Mutual UFO Network based in Seguin, Texas), should they
|
|||
|
be singled out as subjects of what they call "intimidation", by what they
|
|||
|
suspect might be the National Se curity Administration (NSA), one of our
|
|||
|
country's more covert intelligence operations?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Coynes had long been aware that their delving into the touchy
|
|||
|
subject of UFO investigations could bring on some governmental attention;
|
|||
|
they'd long heard stories from others who had been involved with the
|
|||
|
subject for far more lengthy periods of time than they. But it wasn't
|
|||
|
until Sunday, Jan. 10 of this year, at approximately 11:30 a.m., that they
|
|||
|
were certain they were targets of some considerable curiosity.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Coynes were in the bedroom of their two-bedroom mobile home.
|
|||
|
Shirley was seated on the floor, George in a nearby chair. Reclined on the
|
|||
|
bed was a woman deeply entranced by hypnotic suggestions brought on by
|
|||
|
hypnotherapist Virginia Tilly who sat in another chair near the bed.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The scene wasn't an unusual one. The Coynes, through the course of
|
|||
|
their investigations, often come in contact with subjects who have strong
|
|||
|
suspicions that their UFO sightings amount to more than just an eyeball
|
|||
|
perspective. And when this happens, "Ginny", a school teacher and
|
|||
|
hypnotherapist from St. Joseph, is called in to assist in getting to the
|
|||
|
bottom of the murky puddle of speculation.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
According to Shirley, this particular regression session had been
|
|||
|
arranged by two telephone calls, one to the subject and one to Ginny Tilly.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As Ginny questioned the regressed subject, in the far distance could
|
|||
|
be heard the approach of a helicopter. From her vantage point on the floor,
|
|||
|
Shirley had been entranced in her own way by the sequential flickers of
|
|||
|
small, voice-activated red light s on Ginny's tape recorder.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
At about the same time they became aware that the helicopter was not
|
|||
|
simply passing by, Shirley became aware that the red lights on the recorder
|
|||
|
had stopped. And not wishing to disturb the progression of the hypnosis,
|
|||
|
she ran to an adjacent room to get her own recorder, which she activated.
|
|||
|
It is on this recorder that the helicopter's approach to a hovering
|
|||
|
position above their mobile home is recorded.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
According to Ginny, the contents of her tape, before it was "shut off",
|
|||
|
contained the subject's comments about the "hiders" who were at that very
|
|||
|
minute approaching in "that helicopter", and she also provided a
|
|||
|
description of the helicopter even tho ugh her eyes were closed and the
|
|||
|
drapes were drawn. It was learned later that the subject had previous
|
|||
|
experiences with such vehicles near her home in another part of the state.
|
|||
|
And, "she named a time, a date, and a beach in Virginia where,
|
|||
|
supposedly, aliens gave the U.S. government the technology to be able to
|
|||
|
listen in (on private conversations)", said Ginny.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Meanwhile, George had gone to his car to retrieve his camera from the
|
|||
|
trunk just as the helicopter hovered. Shirley joined him in time to see the
|
|||
|
helicopter "tipped" down as it maneuvered away from them. Because of its
|
|||
|
speedy exit, George was unable
|
|||
|
to get a picture.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It is the Coynes' estimate that, though it did not directly hover again,
|
|||
|
the vehicle circled the mobile home community during the duration of the
|
|||
|
hypnotic regression, for approximately one to one and on half hours.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
They described it as dull black, and large--at least four to six
|
|||
|
passenger. (Other descriptions withheld at request of George and Shirley.)
|
|||
|
The windows were tinted dark. George noted a "wire" which was visibly
|
|||
|
draped from the rear of the helicopter to the front, and it was his
|
|||
|
impression that it was some type of antenna.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Indeed, the hypnotized subject telephoned the Coynes some time later to
|
|||
|
tell them she had forgotten one detail of the helicopter--what appeared to
|
|||
|
be a wire connected from back to front.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"I was going to tell you something, but I don't think I'd better," said
|
|||
|
Wright. And he went on to tell them that just prior to his call ringing
|
|||
|
through, a man's voice came over the line, "as if someone had picked up an
|
|||
|
extension in my own home. It w as a male voice--40ish--that said, "Just a
|
|||
|
minute; I have to handle this,", as if he were somewhere tapping into their
|
|||
|
line and was talking to someone else."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Wright says his initial impression was that the Coyne's line was tapped,
|
|||
|
however he says, "It could have been my line rather than theirs. Their
|
|||
|
phone had not rung yet."
|
|||
|
Ginny Tilly, though she's certain her actions are monitored through such
|
|||
|
means as telephone tapping, feels the situation is more one of curiosity
|
|||
|
and information seeking rather than one of intimidation.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Coynes have their own ideas on phone tapping, and take into strong
|
|||
|
consideration their frequent (several each week) one-ring calls which
|
|||
|
illicit nothing more than a dial tone on answering, and they have given
|
|||
|
consideration to a bit of informatio n they've received regarding the
|
|||
|
possibility that those rings are designed to activate a 'bug" (a hidden
|
|||
|
listening device) in their home.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On March 29, the Coynes were ready to leave on a short trip of several
|
|||
|
days duration. Before their departure, they made a telephone call to the
|
|||
|
friend they were about to visit, to indicate that they were on their way.
|
|||
|
They then proceeded to dirive s outhwest toward the state border.
|
|||
|
As they neared Bancroft, on their way toward Lansing, Shirley suddenly
|
|||
|
noticed a familiar sight--a black helicopter. It was hovering beyond an
|
|||
|
overpass under which they had just driven.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
At first, speculation was that coincidence had befallen them. However,
|
|||
|
their concern mounted as they continued to drive and the helicopter
|
|||
|
continued to stay in their sight, but too far away to be photographed.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
George decided he wanted a closer look, and stopped the vehicle under an
|
|||
|
overpass to remove his binoculars from the trunk.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The helicopter, which had continued on its way, suddently turned and came
|
|||
|
back to pace them for a total of approximately 90 miles. It was the
|
|||
|
helicopter's return that convinced them they were the subjects of no
|
|||
|
coincidence.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On Tuedsday, April 5, the Coynes witnessed an unmarked black plane
|
|||
|
circle their mobile home community, the incident possibly having some
|
|||
|
connection to a disturbance with their microwave oven clock, which stopped,
|
|||
|
and blinked constant at the time of the Coynes' sighting of the plane.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Coynes' recording of the helicopter's initial visit to the
|
|||
|
Flushing area has received some scrutiny from both an FAA (Federal Aviation
|
|||
|
Administration) representative, and a member of the military.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Chuck Pine, an FAA aviation safety inspector out of Kent County
|
|||
|
Airport, had occasion to hear the recording. He said, "It has a definite
|
|||
|
'whoomp'....to me it sounded like a Huey." Pine was hesitant to be adamant
|
|||
|
in his statement, but did concede th at the "Huey" type of air vehicle does
|
|||
|
have a distinctive sound to it, and the recording did seem to contain that
|
|||
|
sound. Pine is also a commercial pilot and former air traffic controller.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"I took the tape and drawing (Shirley's artistic rendition) to a fella
|
|||
|
who's highly placed in the military," said Dan Wright. "He said, 'There's
|
|||
|
no question in my mind; I'd stake my life on it being a Huey.'" Wright
|
|||
|
said the information he obtained on the "Huey" (made by the Bell
|
|||
|
Corporation) suggests that it is formilitary or intelligence use only, and
|
|||
|
is not provided to the private orcorporate sector.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Wright's had some problems of his own lately. He has had reason to believe
|
|||
|
the FBI was keeping a file on himself, and had requested, through the
|
|||
|
Freedom of Information Act, a copy of that file.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
However, before he received their response that they found nothing on him,
|
|||
|
he experienced a nine-day period in which he received no mail. Wright
|
|||
|
purposely waited an extended period of time before contacting the post
|
|||
|
office, feeling that more credence could be lent to the situation if the
|
|||
|
period of time exceeded one week.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Upon contacting the post office, he was told that he apparently had
|
|||
|
gone on vacation, and that the letter carrier probably noticed that lhis
|
|||
|
mailbox was full and simply held the mail back.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Wright's response to this was a confession that he had gone on vacation.
|
|||
|
However, the mail delivery had stopped after his return. He did not have a
|
|||
|
mailbox, but he did have a slot in his door, and the letter carrier could
|
|||
|
not have determined how much mail had been stuffed into it. The mail was
|
|||
|
promptly delivered.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This--what is happening to the Coynes--is very intimidating," said Wright.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"They want the Coynes to know they are being monitored. To me, it begins
|
|||
|
and ends with all of the documents we have requested, and they don't want
|
|||
|
an open discussion of the UFO issue.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Whoever is doing this,....if they want to rattle cages, we are not
|
|||
|
totally defenseless."
|
|||
|
|