324 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
324 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
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SUBJECT: CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE CHILLING KIND FILE: UFO2375
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PART 1
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ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ
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Nightmares or real? Some out-of-this-world stories of alien
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abductions
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04/04/93
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THE BALTIMORE SUN
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The nightmares wouldn't stop -- the sudden, bizarre, unsettling
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nightmares. They were always the same; they seemed almost real:
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Lea was sitting in a booth in a small, empty room with gray
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walls. A monotonic voice behind her said: "Don't move, or you might
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be hurt."
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She felt paralyzed. She heard clicking noises, like an X-ray
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machine. Suddenly she was lying on a table. A bright light shone in
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her eyes. She sensed people moving around, examining her.
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Then she was sitting up, facing a short creature so hideous
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she could not look at its face. From a box the strange being
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removed a shiny needle. At the tip was a silver marble. The
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creature moved closer toward Lea.
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At that point Lea would jerk awake in her bed, terrified and
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drenched with sweat. Her screams would awaken her parents. But her
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mother, Lea recalls, would always admonish her: "It's just a
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nightmare. Everybody has them. You shouldn't watch all that scary
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stuff on TV."
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Lea now believes it wasn't just a nightmare. She believes it
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was real. She is one of the people whose stories you might expect
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to see in a supermarket tabloid under the heading "Humans Who
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Believe They've Been Abducted by Aliens."
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Lea is 25, lives in Prince George's County, works at a bank
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and is engaged to be married. She is thin and has blue eyes. She
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is, in her words, average-looking and average in every way. Knowing
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that most people react with scorn and ridicule at the mention of
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UFOs and extraterrestrial life, she asked that her last name not
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appear in this story.
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"I used to think I belonged in a mental institution, to be
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honest with you," she says. "But I don't think anymore that I'm
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crazy. I go to school. I work full time. I pay my bills like
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anybody else. . . . I think other people think I'm crazy."
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The subject of abductions by space aliens is so far-out, so
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utterly fantastic that most people, even with their wildest
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imaginations, cannot begin to fathom it. Many will not take it
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seriously. It is unbelievable, unthinkable.
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The subject is also deeply disturbing. These are not pleasant
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stories of people out raking leaves suddenly beamed into a UFO,
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subjected to a little cosmos comedy and sent back to their yards
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chuckling.
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These are chilling accounts of people who say they've been
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kidnapped, confined in spaceship examination rooms, probed, prodded
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and examined by aliens who seem primarily interested in sexually
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related activities. Their stories more resemble reports of rape
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than they do a heartwarming visit by "E.T."
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Around these alien abduction stories, an industry has been
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launched. It soars far beyond the tabloids. There are best-selling
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books, popular films and prime-time television shows. Mental-health
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professionals gathered at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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last summer for a conference on abductions. In Maryland and across
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the country have blossomed support groups, where people who believe
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they've been abducted can share their stories -- away from the ears
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of those who might mock, exploit or be titillated by their anguish.
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And, of course, there are the scientists -- from the
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internationally known astronomer Carl Sagan to a Navy physicist
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from Maryland -- and a plethora of researchers, lining up on either
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side of the highly charged issue.
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What's really happening? No one knows for sure. But one thing
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is clear: Something has shattered Lea's and others' calm, secure
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existence on planet Earth. Whether the rest of us accept or reject
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their stories is irrelevant. We cannot assuage their fear: It is
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palpable. The torment is real.
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Lea's began while she was in the fourth grade. She remembers
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clearly:
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She was outside her apartment in Prince George's County
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playing with her sister and other children. It was dusk. They heard
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a hum, or a buzz, like a swarm of bees. They saw a disklike object
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-- wingless, silver-gray, a row of lights along the edge -- creep
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at treetop level over the apartment complex. It hovered above a
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parking lot between buildings, and then drifted away.
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Lea and her sister ran inside to tell their parents. The girls
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even drew pictures.
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"My father wanted to call somebody," Lea says. "But my mother
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said no, we'd made it up. But all of us saw it. We talked about it
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for days at school."
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Shortly after that, Lea says, the recurring nightmare began.
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She dreamed it on and off for a decade, from when she was 10 until
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about 20.
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Dreams are only part of her story. When she was 12 or 13, she
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and her sister, who is two years younger, were staying at their
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grandparents' house in St. Mary's County. They were in separate
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beds in the same room when a ball of lightning, as Lea describes
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it, passed through a window and curtain into the room.
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About the size of a tennis ball, it glided between the beds,
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bounced off a door and vanished. A couple of seconds later another
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lightning ball did the same thing, and then another. Lea says there
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might have been 20 in all.
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She and her sister screamed. Five other people were in the
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house, but no one heard them. Lea finally escaped into the hallway.
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Her next memory is of waking up in bed the next morning.
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None of this made sense. She says her sister remembers the
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balls of light, as well as the UFO over their apartment building
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years before. But her sister, Lea says, won't talk about it with
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strangers.
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For a long time afterward, Lea feared she was losing her mind.
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But then, five years ago, she and a friend were at a mall outside a
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bookstore. Lea spotted a display of books, the covers of which
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featured a drawing of a grotesque creature with big, black,
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almond-shaped eyes.
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The book was "Communion," the writer Whitley Strieber's
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account of his abductions by aliens. Lea pointed at the drawing and
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screamed: "Oh, my God! Oh, my God! That's them! That's them!"
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They were the creatures in her nightmare.
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"That's when it registered," Lea says. "That's when I said:
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`Wait a minute. Something's going on here.' "
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It was the first she had heard of abductions by space
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creatures. She read the book, and then a couple of others on the
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subject. She became convinced that the terrifying events -- the
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nightmares, the night of the lights, perhaps other unexplained
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events as well -- had been abductions.
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Lea's not alone.
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Some researchers estimate that thousands -- if not millions --
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of humans have been abducted and studied by aliens. They base that
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estimate on a 1991 survey of 5,947 Americans by the Roper polling
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organization. The survey was commissioned by believers in the
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abduction phenomenon.
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The survey asked 11 questions, including: Have you ever woke
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up paralyzed and sensing a strange presence in the room? Have you
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ever "lost" an hour or more you can't account for? Have you ever
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felt as if you were flying? Have you ever seen balls of light in
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your room? Have you ever found scars on your body you could not
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explain?
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Two percent of the respondents answered yes to at least four
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of those questions. From these results, the poll sponsors concluded
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that 2 percent of adult Americans may have been abducted by aliens.
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David M. Jacobs was a sponsor of the poll. The author of "The
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UFO Controversy in America," published in 1975, is an associate
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professor of history at Temple University. In recent years he
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interviewed 60 people who believe they've been abducted, and last
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year his book about them, "Secret Life," was published. From his
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office in Philadelphia, Mr. Jacobs says:
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"This subject is as far-out as it gets. It just seems too
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crazy, too out of the question. The skeptics say: `This could not
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be happening; therefore it is not happening.' But you have to go
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where the evidence takes you, even though kicking and screaming
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while en route."
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Evidence? Budd Hopkins, another of the poll sponsors, says he
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has interviewed witnesses and has found physical evidence, such as
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unexplained body scars and mysterious burn marks on lawns where
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spaceships may have landed. But primarily, he and other researchers
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rely on the abduction stories -- stories told by people of
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different races, all ages, both sexes; police officers,
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psychiatrists, scientists, lawyers, entertainers, nurses,
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journalists, farmers, an Army colonel, a golf pro.
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Mr. Hopkins, who is a painter and sculptor in New York City,
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became interested in aliens after seeing a UFO in 1964. Eleven
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years later, a 72-year-old friend told him of watching a spaceship
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land in a New York park, and of watching about 10 alien passengers
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take soil samples. Mr. Hopkins found others willing to tell their
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stories, and since the mid-1970s he has been at the forefront of
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abduction research. He has studied more than 400 cases and written
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two popular books, "Missing Time" and "Intruders," from his
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interviews with people who claim, sometimes while under hypnosis,
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to have been abducted.
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"The overall patterns in these cases are so remarkably
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consistent, often down to tiny details, and people reporting these
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experiences are often so inherently credible that the phenomenon
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simply cannot be dismissed," he wrote in "Intruders."
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Most abductees report being taken first as children, when a
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small implant, which could be remembered as a marble at the tip of
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a needle, is placed deep into the ear or nose, the researchers say.
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The implant's function is unknown, but these researchers say it
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might serve as a locater so the person can be abducted again later.
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The aliens described in the stories are small, no more than 4
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feet tall, and extremely thin. They are light-colored, often gray.
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Their heads are oversized, yet their mouths and noses are tiny;
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they have no ears or hair. Their eyes are large and black.
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Nearly all the stories involve spaceships parked on the ground
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or floating in the air. The victims are examined in a room
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resembling a hospital operating room. The methodical creatures use
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a variety of devices to examine humans from head to toe,
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occasionally leaving scars. But the aliens, it seems, reserve
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special interest for the human sexual organs.
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Here is where the story, if it hasn't already, "will almost
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certainly strain your credulity to the breaking point," Mr. Hopkins
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wrote in "Intruders."
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Through interviews with people who report abduction stories,
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Mr. Hopkins and Mr. Jacobs came to believe that these aliens are --
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and have been for several decades -- conducting some sort of
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breeding experiment with human beings.
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This involves the taking of sperm and egg samples; the
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implanting of a genetically altered embryo into women; the
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extraction of the fetus; and, finally, the external incubation of
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the fetus. Women have sometimes reported they were presented hybrid
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babies and expected to nurture, even breast-feed, them.
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"It's very hard to think of this as some wonderful, new
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adventure," Mr. Hopkins says.
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Maybe an extraterrestrial species is introducing a desirable
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human characteristic into its own evolutionary cycle, say the
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researchers. Maybe it is reducing the difference between its
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species and ours. Maybe it is seeding another planet, or maybe it
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has a plan completely beyond the comprehension and imagination of
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the human brain.
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Yeah, right, say the skeptics.
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The astronomer Carl Sagan says that he is open-minded to the
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prospect of intelligent beings living in space, but he doesn't
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believe they're sneaking into bedrooms and tormenting Earthlings.
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"Tell me," he says, "which is more plausible: We're victims of
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a massive invasion of alien sexual abusers, or people are seeing
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things that just aren't there?"
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Although abduction claims began surfacing nearly half a
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century ago, not one shred of indisputable physical evidence has
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surfaced, says Mr. Sagan, who recently wrote an article for Parade
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magazine debunking those claims.
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"Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence," he
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says. "Somebody telling a story is not evidence, even many people
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telling the same story isn't good enough. They're people, that's
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the point, and people intrinsically have certain fallibilities."
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Abduction accounts may say something about how the brain
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works, or how people can be deluded, or even how religions begin,
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he says from his office at Cornell University. But they say
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nothing, he says, about skinny, large-eyed aliens kidnapping humans.
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"There's a better chance of your getting hit on the head by
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one of Santa's reindeer than of you being abducted," says Philip J.
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Klass, a retired senior editor and now contributing editor at
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Aviation Week & Space Technology magazine. "I will say, slightly
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tongue-in-cheek, there is better evidence of the existence of
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mermaids and Irish leprechauns."
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Mr. Klass, who lives in Washington, says he has tried to
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verify UFO cases for nearly 30 years and has not found a credible
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one. In his 1989 book, "UFO Abductions: A Dangerous Game," Mr.
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Klass contended that people who believe they've been abducted by
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aliens need treatment by qualified psychotherapists, not UFO "cult
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gurus."
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Robert A. Baker, a retired professor of psychology at the
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University of Kentucky, has written derisively about abduction
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stories. He says some are simply fabrications or the recounting of
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stories gleaned from books or movies, while others are products of
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psychological disorders.
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The stories may be repressed memories of childhood sexual or
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physical abuse surfacing in disguised form, he says. Or they may be
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the type of vivid, realistic dreams occurring as a person falls
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asleep or wakes up -- hypnagogic or hypnopompic hallucinations.
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And, he says, some people who believe they've been abducted may be
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fantasy-prone or psychologically disturbed.
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"Anyway," Dr. Baker says, "if this phenomena were as common as
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Hopkins and Jacobs would have us believe, the sky would be filled
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with spacecraft abducting people back and forth. UFOs would be
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stacked up like aircraft coming in at O'Hare."
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The believers and skeptics counter each other point by point.
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Both sides publish newsletters buttressing their claims. And both
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produce mental-health specialists who pronounce judgment on the
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sanity of the victims.
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But in the end, what are we left with? The stories.
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Lea started out thinking she was dreaming or hallucinating.
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After coming to believe she had been abducted, she contacted a
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representative of the Mutual UFO Network, an international group
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interested in UFOs. She was referred to Bob Oechsler, a former
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National Aeronautics and Space Administration mission specialist
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who lives in Edgewater in Anne Arundel County.
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Mr. Oechsler, who became interested in UFOs as a boy, is
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intrigued with the technology of crafts from outer space: How do
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they get here from there? For the past two years he has researched
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UFO sightings full time. On his front door is a brass plaque that
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reads: UFOs are real!!!
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He invited Lea to his home. After a couple of meetings he
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suggested she undergo hypnosis. Some abductees remember only
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snippets of their experience, but find they can recall more during
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hypnosis. A psychologist hypnotized Lea at Mr. Oechsler's home, but
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Lea says few hidden memories emerged.
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Mr. Oechsler is starting a support group for abductees, one of
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dozens forming across the country, he says. About 30 people,
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including Lea, have signed up.
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Bruce S. Maccabee, a research physicist for the Navy, will
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also attend. The Frederick County resident has researched UFOs on
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his own for years, and is a longtime leader in UFO research groups,
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one of which, the Fund for UFO Research, in Mount Rainier, Md.,
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sponsored the abduction conference at MIT.
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At the organizational meeting of Mr. Oechsler's support group,
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Dr. Maccabee told the participants:
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"This subject is so weird, so misunderstood. All we can do is
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hold your hand and make you realize you're not alone."
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That would be a relief to Lea.
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Strange things continue to happen to her. Not long ago, she
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says, while visiting friends in the West Virginia mountains, she
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was floated out of the house, taken aboard a spaceship and handed a
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baby.
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It was a boy, with leathery skin, a thin neck and an oversized
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head with patches of red hair. It had huge eyes, she says, but they
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weren't coal black like those of the adult aliens. They were blue.
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"I don't know why, and I know this sounds strange," Lea says
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in a voice trembling with emotion, "but as soon as I held him in my
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arms, I knew he was mine. I felt like I was his mother."
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She rocked him and talked quietly to him, she says, as several
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aliens watched. Lea hesitates and says, almost apologetically: "I
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know this doesn't make any sense."
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Even though she has trouble sleeping and often feels as if
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she's being watched, she says she has "kind of gotten used to the
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idea" of being abducted.
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"I don't like it, but there's nothing I can do about it, as
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far as I can see," she says. "If they were going to hurt me, I
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think they would have done it a long time ago."
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She knows what the skeptics say. But, she says, they don't
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give people enough credit for knowing the difference between what's
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actually happened to them and what they might have imagined. Lea
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says she was never abused as a child. She says she has no reason to
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make up a story so crazy and bizarre.
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Why does she think the aliens chose her?
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"I have no idea," she says. "I don't know who they are, where
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they come from, what they're doing, nothing.
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"I just want people to understand that this is real, this is
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happening. It's out there, and you're going to have to accept it
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sooner or later."
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Is she absolutely sure that her torment has been caused by
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aliens?
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"There's no doubt in my mind," she says. "And I know they'll
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be back."
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**********************************************
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* THE U.F.O. BBS - http://www.ufobbs.com/ufo *
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