The Night Of The UFOs' - California, June 14th, 1992.

karl 12

Noble
Some pretty crazy police dispatch UFO recordings found in the vid below taken from 'the night of the UFOs' in California on June 14th, 1992.

Apparently over two dozen witnesses in more than ten different locations throughout Topanga Canyon (spaced no more than twenty miles apart) all reported very strange UFO activity on that evening and 'numerous people called the police, local newspaper and UFO groups'.

Pie / disc shaped objects putting out lightbeams (and a humming noise) are being described by some witnesses and researcher Preston Dennett goes into more detail below describing how UFOs were reported to be hovering over houses or chasing motor vehicles down the highway - police dispatch recordings played throughout the video.




Excerpts


Found in the NUFORC archives, researcher Robert Gribble also received a call from one of the witnesses who describes his experience, his almost hysterical girlfriend and the weeping blisters, sunburn and nausea they both experienced afterwards.




In 1974, Robert Gribble started the National UFO Reporing Center (NUFORC) near Seattle, Washington, U.S.A. The NUFORC's 24 hour hotline number was distributed to police, airports and military bases, with a request to refer claimed UFO witnesses to the NUFORC. Gribble or his associates took hundreds of telephone calls from people who claimed to have seen UFOs. The NUFORC still operates as of March, 2009, now with Peter Davenport as director. Witnesses range from ordinary citizens to pilots, military personnel, Federal Aviation Administration employees, police and scientists.
 

pigfarmer

tall, thin, irritable
Some pretty crazy police dispatch UFO recordings found in the vid below taken from 'the night of the UFOs' in California on June 14th, 1992.
Apparently over two dozen witnesses in more than ten different locations throughout Topanga Canyon (spaced no more than twenty miles apart) all reported very strange UFO activity on that evening and 'numerous people called the police, local newspaper and UFO groups'.
Pie / disc shaped objects putting out lightbeams (and a humming noise) are being described by some witnesses and researcher Preston Dennett goes into more detail below describing how UFOs were reported to be hovering over houses or chasing motor vehicles down the highway - police dispatch recordings played throughout the video.

Excerpts
Found in the NUFORC archives, researcher Robert Gribble also received a call from one of the witnesses who describes his experience, his almost hysterical girlfriend and the weeping blisters, sunburn and nausea they both experienced afterwards.


A few things to unpack here.

Any encounter involving multiple independent witnesses that leaves physical traces automatically wins the right to immediate attention. No idea what the hell those people saw or what happened to them.

When I listened to the phone call a few things came right out. He's been making calls to the FAA and Air Force to report this incident and finally gets the right guy on the phone to report this strange thing that has really upset him only to say he has to make it short because he has an appointment. WTF? For real? He couldn't have called this guy after he got back? That seemed odd and took a bit of gravitas away. Why bother to make this call only to remain anonymous? To get it off his chest? Maybe.

The investigator is clearly asking leading questions about the cone of light, time loss, vehicle troubles. He's already decided he has the answer and is just looking for bits to fit his theories. Confirmation bias. To my ear an anonymous caller and biased investigator asking questions like that add up to zero. Squat. The same as another 'I saw a strange light in the sky' report that you can do nothing with.

Before anyone sharpens pitchforks or heats the oil to pour on my head over that statement, it doesn't mean I dismiss the case at all. Damned interesting and I'd love to know what happened. What I'd like to see is reports from all witnesses involved and overlay that on a map for correlation. A witness who wants confidentiality rather than anonymity carries more weight. Let's see the hospital report, insurance claim, police reports etc. If I were trying to prove it happened to me I'd be offering that up along with phone records to prove I called who I said I did. Beyond that I'd think it would be the obvious - military and civilian traffic of all stripe, meteorological conditions, and I'd have to check where Venus was at that time. Not because I think it had anything to do with it but it's always such a pain in the ass it's best to check and get that out of the way. Inother words a little objecting investigating. Might not be able to prove what it is but you can still make a valid, credible report. All I heard on that video was a story.

As for the EM effects I'm specifically interested in those cases where a UFO stopped a car that may have later restarted itself. Cars are a hobby for me and without going off on a tangent they really are very different animals from what they were decades ago. There are loads of cases but the ones I'd be most interested in would be more current, at least after 2000. Actually, that vehicle in 1992 could have coughed up some data too, probably just less.

Stopping is one thing - hell, keeping those classic piles of s**t running is the real trick. With them, restarting normally requires very specific mechanical action or the application of potential across two leads of the starter. A modern vehicle does that and it leaves a record; depending on how you access it is how verbose it is. The one's the dealerships use will tell you what you had for lunch a month ago Tuesday. Well, almost.... Point is it could easily say 'yes at this time I stopped or restarted or some damned weird thing happened and here are the failure codes that may indicate why'

So yes, I'd take this seriously but stuff like this is what fuels debunkers. Skeptics are not the enemy they should serve to set the bar a little higher.
 
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