481 lines
27 KiB
Plaintext
481 lines
27 KiB
Plaintext
SUBJECT: KLASS ON WALTON FILE: UFO3339
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Fri 19 Mar 93 23:18
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By: Don Allen
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To: All
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Re: Klass on Walton
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Dear Folks,
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It is *rare* indeed that I agree with Phillip Klass, but it's my personal
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opinion that Klass is right-on-the money with this case. I just don't
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buy into Walton's so-called 'abduction'. Further, I tend to agree with
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Klass's assessment that the case is a hoax. What PROOF does Walton
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offer to substantiate his claims? This is just for starters, as I could
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produce a list of 'outpoints' that just don't add up in the case.
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It's UNFORTUNATE that there *are* those in UFOlogy who have proclaimed
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this case as 'rock solid' and one that will stand up under intense
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scrutiny. I dis-agree. I think it's a total sham and a tremendous waste
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of our time, but as I mentioned above, this is but my own opinion.
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If -anyone- can provide hard evidence to convince me that Walton's case
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can be verified as 'authentic', then please do. Otherwise, my opinion
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stands.
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I took the liberty of scanning in this excerpt from Klass's book,
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"UFO- Abductions A Dangerous Game" on Travis Walton. This is
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Chapter 3 of the book. This book was written in 1988. See what you think.
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=====================================================================
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** Begin excerpt **
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Travis Walton-Eager Abductee
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NBC-TV's prime-time movie "The UFO Incident," starring James Earl Jones in
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the role of Barney Hill and Estelle Parsons as Betty, first shown on
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October 20, 1975, was tastefully done. It conveyed some of the Hills'
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emotional problems that Dr. Simon had uncovered, which had resulted from
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their interracial marriage in a small New England town at a time when such
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marriages were less common- place than they are today. It also provided
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useful details for those who later would claim that they too had been
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abducted.
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Shortly after the show aired, a young North Dakota woman named Sandy Larson
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contacted a local UFOlogist to report that she, her boyfriend, and her
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young daughter had been victims of a UFO-abduction that she claimed had
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occurred two months earlier. Later, under hypnosis administered by Dr. Leo
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Sprinkle, Mrs. Larson described how she and her two companions had been
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"stripped naked and all parts of our bodies examined ... even our heads
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were opened up and all parts of our brains looked at ... We were dissected
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like frogs." Yet several hours later, when the three "victims" returned
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home, they were none the worse for their alleged ordeal, and there were no
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physical scars to substantiate Mrs. Larson's tale.
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Then on the evening of November 5, 1975, barely two weeks after the NBC
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movie, six young woodcutters called Under-sheriff L. C. Ellison, in Heber,
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to report that they had been working in Sitgreaves National Forest, in
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east-central Arizona, and that another woodcutter, named Travis Walton, had
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been "zapped" by a hovering UFO. They told Ellison they had driven off in
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fright but then had mustered enough courage to return, only to find young
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Walton gone -- seemingly a UFO-abduction victim.
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Not until five days later did Travis reappear, a few miles from the site
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where he reportedly had been zapped, to tell a story of having been taken
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aboard a flying saucer and given a superficial physical examination. The
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case was unique in several respects. Not only was it the first in which the
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alleged abduction was reported to law-enforcement authorities while the
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"victim" was still missing, but it was the first in which there were six
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supporting witnesses. Three months later, on February 7, 1976, it was
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announced that Travis Walton and his older brother Duane had taken
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lie-detector tests, administered by polygraph examiner George J. Pfeifer,
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which they had passed.
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Seemingly this was the best substantiated of all UFO-abduction stories to
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date. Perhaps it was only coincidence that UFOs should kidnap Travis Walton
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barely two weeks after NBC-TV showed "The UFO Incident." The leaders of
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APRO, James and Coral Lorenzen, based in Tucson, quickly and strongly
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endorsed young Walton's abduction case, calling it "one of the most
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important and intriquing in the history of the UFO phenomena." (Several
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months earlier at the Fort Smith UFO Conference, Jim Lorenzen had announced
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that in the future APRO would focus its efforts on abduction cases and let
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competing UFO groups investigate the far less interesting "lights-in-the-
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night-sky" type UFO reports.)
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MUFON (MutuaI UFO Network), headed by Walter Andrus, cautiously straddled
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the fence with its appraisal: "Because of inconsistent factors, it is
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impossible to determine whether the case is authentic or a hoax." NICAP,
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now under new and even more conservative management, expressed the
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reservations of some of its investigators who warned that the Travis Walton
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case might be a hoax. William Spaulding of Phoenix, head of a small UFO
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group called Ground Saucer Watch (GSW), quickly became suspicious and
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promptly called the incident a hoax.
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This cautious attitude in late 1975 by most of the leaders of the UFO
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movement to what seemed on the surface to be the best substantiated
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UFO-abduction case of all time contrasts sharply with the credulity that
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would be shown a decade later.
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Spaulding's suspicions were heightened by a tape-recorded interview with
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Travis's older brother Duane, who had assumed the role of father to Travis
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after their mother's two divorces. Also participating in the taped
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interview was Mike Rogers, who headed the team of woodcutters. The
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interview was conducted on November 8, while Travis was still missing, by
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Fred Sylvanus, one of Spaulding's associates, near the site of the alleged
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abduction.
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If Duane really believed that his young brother had been abducted by a UFO,
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for all he knew Travis might now be on his way back to the UFOnauts' native
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planet-perhaps to be dissected like a frog or to be stuffed and put into a
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museum. Yet never once during the 65-minute interview with Sylvanus did
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either Duane Walton or Mike Rogers express the slightest concern over
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Travis's well-being.
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Despite the report by Rogers and other members of his crew that the UFO had
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zapped Travis with something like a bolt of lightning that allegedly
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knocked him into the air, Duane volunteered, "I don't believe he's hurt or
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injured in any way." When Sylvanus asked if he believed Travis would be
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returned, Duane replied: "Sure do. Don't feel any fear for him at all.
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Little regret because I haven't been able to experience the same thing."
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Duane added: "He's not even missing. He knows where he's at, and I know
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where he's at." An understandably surprised Sylvanus then asked where Duane
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believed Travis was. Duane replied, "Not on this earth." After Duane began
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to philosophize about UFOs, Sylvanus asked if he had "read much about flying
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saucers." Duane replied, "As much as anybody."
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Duane went on to explain: "I've been seeing them all the time. It's not new
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to me. It's not a surprise." And he added that he and Travis had earlier
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agreed that if either of them ever saw a UFO up close "we would immediately
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get directly under the object... We discussed this time and time again! The
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opportunity (to go aboard a UFO) would be too great to pass up ...and
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whoever happenned to be left on the ground-if one of us didn't make the
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grade -- to try to convince whoever was in the craft to come back and get
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the other one."
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Duane said that this explained why Travis (allegedly) had run under the
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hovering UFO, despite warnings from his companions, resulting in his being
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zapped and abducted. Duane added, "He's received the benefits for it." A
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much more worried Sylvanus said, "You hope he has."
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During the course of my own investigation I learned that Travis, Duane, and
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their mother, Mary Kellett, were avid UFO buffs who frequently reported
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seeing UFOs. More important, I learned that shortly before the UFO incident
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Travis had told his mother that if he were ever abducted by a UFO she need
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not worry because he would come back safe and sound.
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After searching for several hours in darkness, Navajo County
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law-enforcement officers failed to locate Travis. Deputy sheriff Kenneth
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Coplan drove late that night to a nearby ranch house where Mrs. Kellett was
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staying to break the tragic news that her youngest son seemingly had been
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abducted by a UFO. Coplan was surprised at how calmly she took the news, as
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he later told me.
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Travis's earlier prediction to his mother that he would return safely from
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a UFO-abduction came true shortly after midnight on November 12, when he
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called his sister from a Heber gas station pubIic telephone. Other than
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being a little groggy, he seemed none the worse for his alleged experience.
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There was no sign of burns or injury from the lightning-like bolt that
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reportedly had zapped him.
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On March 13, 1976, early in my own investigation into the case, I called to
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talk with Pfeifer, the polygraph examiner employed by Tom Ezell & Associates,
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in Phoenix, who had tested and passed Travis and Duane in early
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February. I learned from Tom Ezell that Pfeifer no longer was employed
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there. Ezell told me he had been out of town when the tests were given and
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he offered to examine the polygraph charts and give me his appraisal of the
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examination and of Pfeifer's appraisal.
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As we wound up our telephone conversation, Ezell casually dropped a
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bombshell: "Let me give you a little information that might help you.
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Walton was given another [polygraph] examination before George [Pfeifer]
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gave him one." When I asked who had given Travis this heretofore secret
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test, Ezell replied, "I believe Jack McCarthy, who I would say is one
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helluva good examiner, in Phoenix." Ezell had learned of the prior test
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from Pfeifer, who learned of it from representatives of APRO, who had
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arranged the second test which Walton had passed.
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The timing of my call to McCarthy on March 15 was fortuitous because he had
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just received from a friend a newspaper clipping reporting that Travis
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Walton and his brother Duane had passed Pfeifer's lie-detector test with
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flying colors. While the friend did not know that McCarthy had tested
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Travis earlier, he knew that McCarthy was the most experienced and one of
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the most respected polygraph examiners in Arizona.
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McCarthy and his wife also had chanced to watch Travis Walton's first
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public reponse of the incident on a Phoenix television program shortly
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after he had reappeared. McCarthy had heard APRO's Jim Lorenzen say that
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three psychiatrists who had examined Travis had "concluded that he is not
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party to any hoax, and that he's telling the truth." McCarthy had good
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reason to disagree.
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When I told McCarthy that Ezell had informed me that he had earlier tested
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Travis, he acknowIedged that he had. When I asked for his conclusions,
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McCarthy replied: "Gross deception!" I learned that shortly after Travis
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had reappeared, APRO's Lorenzen had called to ask if McCarthy would give
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young Walton a polygraph test. Lorenzen explained that the tabloid
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newspaper National Enquirer would pay for the test, which would be given
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secretly in a nearby Scottsdale hotel where Travis was being sequestered to
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avoid the news media and to protect the National Enquirer's exclusive
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rights to Walton's abduction story.
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Final arrangements were worked out with APRO's Dr. James Harder. When
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Harder mentioned that he had subjected Travis to regressive hypnosis to try
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to learn more about his experiences, McCarthy asked if Travis had been
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given any post-hypnotic suggestions that might possibly influence the test
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results. The experienced examiner also asked Harder if he believed that
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Travis was mentally and physically able to undergo the test, and he was
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assured that he was.
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McCarthy spent approximately two hours with Travis, briefing him on the
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polygraph test procedure, going over each question to be sure Travis felt
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able to answer with an unequivocal yes or no. When McCarthy finished around
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4:00 P.M. he reported his findings to National Enquirer reporters and
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APRO's Harder: "Gross deception." Further, McCarthy reported, Travis was
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resorting to tricks, such as intentionally holding his breath, in an effort
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to "beat" the test.
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While Harder telephoned Lorenzen to report the bad news, the National
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Enquirer reporters asked McCarthy to wait and adjourned to another room.
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When they returned they asked McCarthy to sign a hastily typed "secrecy
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agreement," which he did. Because the secrecy agreement was hurriedly
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typed, it was erroneously dated February 15, 1975 instead of November 15,
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and thus was not legally binding. Yet McCarthy held his tongue until I
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called on March 15, 1976, and said that Ezell had told me he had earlier
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tested Walton. McCarthy was too honest a man to deny it.
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Several weeks after Travis had flunked the McCarthy lie-detector test, the
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National Enquirer ran a large feature story about his "UFO-abduction." The
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article headlined the fact that the six woodcutters had taken polygraph
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tests while Travis was still missing to determine if they might have killed
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him and hidden his body. Five of the six passed the test. There was no
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mention of McCarthy's test that Travis had flunked badly.
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On March 21, less than a week after I had talked with McCarthy, I talked by
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telephone with APRO's Lorenzen. Without revealing what I had just learned,
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and after we had discussed the test given by Pfeifer, I asked Lorenzen, "Do
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you know if Travis has taken any other polygraph tests?" The APRO official
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replied, "No, never." I opted not to challenge his veracity-yet.
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The next day, March 22, I called Ezell back to get his appraisal of the
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Pfeifer test that Travis and Duane reportedly had passed. Ezell told me
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that after careful examination of the polygraph charts it was his opinion
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that it was impossible to tell if Travis and Duane were responding
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truthfuliy to test questions. More important, Ezell told me, was Pfeifer's
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notation on the charts that he had allowed Travis to "dictate" some of the
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questions he would be asked. This, Ezell assured me, was a violation of one
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of the basic principles of polygraphy.
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Thus, the results of the lie-detector test that Travis had flunked,
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conducted by the most experienced polygraph examiner in Arizona, were being
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withheld from the public by the National Enquirer and by APRO. But the
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results of the Pfeifer-administered test that Travis had passed, which
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Ezell now had disavowed, had been carried by the wire services and
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published in many newspapers. Therefore, millions of newspaper readers
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could readily conclude that the abduction tale was true.
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My continuing investigation provided useful insights into Travis Walton and
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members of his family. For example, I discovered that about five years
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before the UFO incident, on May 5, 1971, Travis Walton and Charles Rogers,
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brother of the woodcutters' crew chief, had pleaded guilty to charges of
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burglary and forgery. They had broken into the offices of Western Molding
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Co., stolen company checks, forged signatures and cashed them. After
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agreeing to make restitution, Travis and Charles Rogers were placed on
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probation for two years. After living up to the conditions of the probation
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under the terms of Arizona law, they were allowed to "cleanse the record"
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by appearing in court and pleading "not guilty" to the charge to which they
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had originally pleaded guilty.
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From Mrs. Richard Gibson, of Heber, I learned that her father- in-law
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earlier had taken pity on Mrs. Kellett and her family and allowed them to
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spend the summer rent-free in his small ranch house a few miles from the
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alleged UFO abduction site. (Mrs. Kellett was living there at the time of
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the incident even though it was then early November.) Mrs. Gibson told me
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that in return for this kindness, members of the Walton family repeatedly
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perpetrated hoaxes on the Gibson family.
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On one occasion, she told me, "they called and said, 'Somebody has killed a
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whole bunch of your cows. They are dead all over the meadows here.' " But
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when the Gibsons drove up from Heber, they found "there wasn't one dead
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cow...It was a complete hoax." In view of Mrs. Gibson's first-hand
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experience with the family, I was not surprised when she said she suspected
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the UFO abduction was also a hoax.
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If the UFO abduction story was a hoax, as I now suspected, what was the
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motive? Was it simply a prank concocted by young men for laughs? Crew-chief
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Mike Rogers unwittingly provided an important clue to a more likely motive
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during his taped interview of November 8 with Sylvanus when he said: "This
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contract we have (with the U.S. Forest Service] is seriously behind
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schedule. In fact, Monday [November 10] the time is up. We haven't done any
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work on it since Wednesday because of this thing [UFO incident], and
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therefore it won't be done. I hope they take that into account."
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My further investigation revealed that Rogers was sorely in need of an "Act
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of God" or its practical equivalent, which the alledged UFO-abduction, it
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was hoped, could provide. In all probability, the inspiration for the hoax
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was provided by the NBC-TV movie about the Hill case, which Rogers admitted
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to me he had seen the same night that he wrote a letter to the U.S. Forest
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Service attempting to explain why he was so delinquent on his contract. In
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that letter, as I would later discover, Rogers had resorted to deception
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and falsehood.
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More than a year earlier, on June 26, 1974, Rogers was one of three bidders
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to the Forest Service for a contract to thin out small trees in an area
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known as Turkey Springs. When the bids were opened, Rogers discovered that
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he had won the job, but his bid of $27.40 an acre for the 1,277-acre site
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was less than half his price quoted by one experienced competitor and 27
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percent below that of another. Clearly, Rogers had bid too low. Rogers was
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committed to complete the job within 200 "working days," which took into
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account that mountain snows typically arrive by early November and extend
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into May. The contract later was reduced to 1,205 acres, with no reduction
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in time.
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By early August 1975, the 200 working days had expired and Rogers had
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completed only about 70 percent of the job, leaving 353 acres still to do.
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To avoid a contract default, Rogers had requested and been granted an 84
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working day extension, to November 10, 1975. During the previous year,
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Rogers and his crew had averaged slightly more than four acres a day. If he
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could maintain the same average, he could finish the Turkey Springs job by
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November 10 -- providing the first snows had not arrived. But in return for
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this time-extension, Rogers would be penalized $1.00 an acre on his
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original, already too low, price.
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Under the standard Forest Service policy, 10 percent of Roger's payments
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were withheld until the job was completed satisfactorily. If he failed to
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complete the Turkey Springs job by November 10, then this "10 percent
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retention" fund -- which amounted to about $2,500 -- could be used to pay
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another contractor brought in to complete the job. Thus, if Rogers failed
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to complete Turkey Springs thinning by November 10, he had serious
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problems. He could request still another contract extension, which might be
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granted, but his payment per acre would be reduced still further. And
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because of the long winter, it would not be until the following summer that
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he could hope to complete the job and collect his $2,500 retention fund.
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As of October 16, Rogers had used up roughly 80 percent of his contract
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extension time, but he had completed only 37 percent of the remaining 353
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acres. There was no possible way in which Rogers could hope to complete the
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baIance in the several weeks remaining. This was obvious to the Forest
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Service inspector, Tom Hentz, who visited Turkey Springs, and he so
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reported to Maurice Marchbanks, the Forest Service contracting officer, on
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October 16. Rogers already had one contract default on his Forest Service
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record and did not want another that could cost him his $2,500 retention
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fund on a job for which he had bid too little. More important, another
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default might disqualify him for future Forest Service jobs.
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On the same night that Rogers saw the NBC-TV movie about the Hills UFO
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abduction, he wrote a letter to his Forest Service contracting officer
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saying: "I cannot honestly say whether or not we will finish on time.
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However, we are working every day with as much manpower as I can hire. I
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will not stop work until the job is finished or until I am asked to stop. I
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have had considerable trouble keeping a full crew on the job. The area is
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very thick and the guys have poor morale because of this...We will keep
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working and trying hard."
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What Rogers failed to tell his contract monitor was that the principal
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reason he was so delinquent on the Turkey Springs job was that he was using
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his crew to work for other Forest Service contractors who had not underbid
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their jobs and who therefore could pay Rogers more than he could earn on
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his own job. Rogers inadvertently admitted this to me during one of our
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many long telephone conversations.
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Forest Service contracts, like most contracts, have Act of God provisions,
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which provide relief to a contractor in the event of entirely unforeseen
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occurrences of grave cnnsequence. If a UFO should abduct a member of the
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Rogers crew near Turkey Springs, it would be understandable if Rogers and
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other members of his crew were fearful of returning to the area. It could
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be hoped that the Forest Service would consider this an Act of God, would
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give Rogers an extension without price penalty, and would not use his
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$2,500 retention-fund for another contractor. And thus Rogers would avoid
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another black mark on his Forest Service record.
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Fortunately for Rogers, a member of his crew was a UFO buff who was
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sufficiently familiar with the subject to be able to invent an account of
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what had happened to him aboard a flying saucer. But the incident wouId
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have to occur near Turkey Springs so that crew members later could claim to
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be afraid to return to their there. If Travis were abducted by a UFO near
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Heber or during the drive back to Snowflake, that would not provide a
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reason the crew to refuse to return to Turkey Springs. If Travis really was
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abducted, it is clear that the UFOnauts selected the site to meet Rogers's
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Act-of-God requirements for his seriously delinquent Forest Service contract.
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There was another potential motivation for Rogers and his crew. As a UFO
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buff, Travis would certainly have read many UFO articles featured in the
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National Enquirer. Almost certainly he would have known that this tabloid
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was then offering an award of $100,000 for convincing evidence of even one
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extraterrestrial visitor and a consolation prize of $5,000 to $10,000 for
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the most impressive UFO case of any year. That could help compensate Rogers
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and his crew for his original too-low bid. Perhaps the tale could be sold
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to Hollywood for a movie, providing added incentive. (In June 1987, I
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learned that a Hollywood producer had plans to make such a movie and that
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the script would be written by Tracey Torme, who ardently believes in
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UFO-abductions.)
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The National Enquirer did select the Walton case as the most impressive UFO
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incident for 1975, giving Rogers and his crew a $5,000 prize, which was
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announced in its July 6, 1976, edition. Its feature story announcing the
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award contained endorsements of the case by Hynek, Harder, and Sprinkle,
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but made no mention of the McCarthy lie-detector test that Travis had
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flunked. Sprinkle's endorsement said: "It's probably one of the most
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spectacular abductions that has ever been reported anywhere.... Thanks to
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the many witnesses and the polygraph examinations of those witnesses, we
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have pretty good reason to take the Walton case at face value." Harder was
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quoted as saying, "Beyond any reasonable doubt, the evidence is as valid as
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any that would be accepted in an American criminal court."
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Harder's reference to "criminal court" was more appropriate than perhaps he
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realized, considering Travis Walton's problems five years before the UFO
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incident. Another member of Rogers's crew, Alan Dalis, would later plead
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guilty in Mariopa County Superior Court to three armed robberies to support
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his hard-drug habit and would be sentenced to serve three five-year
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concurrent sentences.
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Shortly before the National Enquirer's July 6 issue hit the stands I
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decided the time had come to make public the results of my investigation.
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My conclusion that the incident was a hoax and the evidence to support that
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conclusion were offered to the Phoenix newspaper Arizona Republican, which
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carried a feature story on my findings in its July 12 edition. But the wire
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services, which had carried so many earlier articles on the Walton
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incident, ignored the new information.
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However, NICAP published highlights of my findings and MUFON and Spaulding
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published my entire White Paper. APRO informed its members briefly and
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tried to explain why its leaders had gone along with the National
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Enquirer's desire to cover up the results of the McCarthy polygraph tests.
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Rogers promptly proposed new polygraph tests for all members of his crew,
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as well as for Duane Walton and Mrs. Kellett, which I would pay for if they
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passed and which APRO would fund if they failed. I readily agreed. But in
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subsequent negotiations over arrangements for the new test, Rogers and
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APRO's Lorenzen tried to trick me into having the new tests performed by a
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polygraph examiner with whom they had already secretly made arrangements.
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The polygraph examiner was a man who claimed to have run tests that showed
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his household plants had "feelings"and reacted negatively when he killed
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brine shrimp in another room.
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When I discovered this effort to trick me, I refused to accept this
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particuIar examiner. Rogers flatly refused to agree to new tests unless
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they were conducted by the man whom they had earlier, and secretly,
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selected. So Rogers terminated further negotiations for new lie-detector
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tests.
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Shortly afterward, Travis Walton and Allen Hynek were interviewed on the
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ABC-TV network talk-show "Good Night America." When Hynek was asked for his
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opinion of Walton's abduction story, he offered a qualified endorsement:
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"It fits a pattern, see. If this were the only case on record then I would
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|
have to say, well, I couldn't possibly believe it. But at the Center for
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UFO Studies now we have some two dozen similar abduction cases currently
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being studied. Something is going on!" Hynek was correct, but not in the
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sense he intended.
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Extraordinary claims require extraordinarily convincing evidence to support
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them if they are to be accepted as fact. Hynek, and growing numbers of
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UFOlogists, were mistaking the repetition of extraordinary claims for
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extraordinary convincing evidence to support those claims. In so doing,
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they were demonstrating the validity of Francis Bacon's sage observation:
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"A credulous man is a deceiver."
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The trickery, subterfuge, and outright falsehoods used by Rogers in dealing
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with the U.S. Forest Service and in our negotiations for new polygraph
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tests convinced me that he would not hesitate to resort to a UFO-abduction
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hoax if it would serve his needs. (The sordid details are covered at
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considerable length in my earlier book UFOs: The Public Deceived.)
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** End of excerpt **
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Don
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