UFO Images

1963

Noble
gbone.jpg

Surely one of the most dubious offerings Nivek.... you wouldn't just be playing devil's advocate would you old mate? :Whistle:

Well respected UFO researcher Jerry Black investigated the case of the Gulf Breeze UFOs, and became suspicious of Walters and believed that the sightings and photographs may have been a hoax and then Jerry Black determined in the early 1990s a suspicious trail of money that led to Walters, giving indications of a hoax. Then, over the subsequent years, new evidence was discovered, including a model in one of Walters homes that seemed identical to the ones in the photographs.
Here's a snippet from a good interview that Jerry had with Kenny Young about the so-called case....

KENNY YOUNG: Why does Gulf Breeze remain controversial today?

JERRY BLACK: I think the only reason Gulf Breeze remains controversial is because it was very poorly investigated from the beginning on. The MUFON organization did not handle the case properly. Many of the investigators in the Gulf Breeze area were new investigators. Certainly Mr. Walt Andrus did not take charge and lead these investigators. Mr. Ray Fowler, who was MUFON's Director of Investigations, never worked on Gulf Breeze at all. I find that unusual. In reality, I think the Gulf Breeze case could have been handled much more efficiently had the investigators been seasoned investigators and been led properly by someone who had experience, such as Mr. Walt Andrus, but he certainly failed in that responsibility.
YOUNG/BLACK ATTACK

Gulf-Breeze-1159307.jpg


Of course, for those whom might believe that 'the finding of Ed's fake ..was fake', I often say that all things are possible, but then in such cases you have to study the character of the 'potentially-wronged witness' a little, and though it will still be practically impossible to be 100% certain that the guy/gal is either pukka or charlatan ...but you will at least be abled to satisfy your own believability parameters ... and the facts that the pictures do not look authentic at all to my mind... plus the guy's ... well let's say over-egging-the-pudding [a little like Kenneth Arnold] ... such as according to him the UFO didn’t visit Walters just once. [Which is always a red flag to me] ... but for whatever reason the space aliens paid him numerous visits over the course of the following months and years. The second time he spotted the UFO, Walters claimed that he could hear a humming sound, as though two people were having a quiet conversation nearby and he was just far away enough to be unable to distinguish words. Looking up, he saw a sparkling star that soon fell to earth and was revealed to be a space ship. With the reflexes of an old west gun fighter, he took a photo of the thing.
... And up until the night of 2 December, Walters had no idea what was inside the UFO. All he knew was that it could hit him with a blue beam that would talk to him and then knock him on his ass. But at 3 AM that night, he was awakened by his dog barking. Going to a pair of French doors, he “…pulled up the bedroom window shade to see this small, shielded being standing just on the other side of the glass, looking in to Walters' eyes. And apparently, the aliens, with all their advanced technology, decided to send one of their guys disguised as a Knight of the Round Table to peep into Walters’ bedroom. It was about 4 feet tall, and encased in metal plates. Unable to distinguish between the hand and fingers on the thing, he was able to see a pair of all-black, terrifying eyes behind a clear visor section of his helmet. His sketch has an outline of what he suspected the head to really look like; it is the light-bulb shape a la the Andreasson abduction. The creature also held a long, thin silver rod in its hand.
Then the alien just stood and looked at him for a moment, turned, and sauntered off. Walters then displaying nerves of steel, gave chase to the armoured alien creature, but as soon as he left the safety of his back porch, was once again struck by the blue beam that immobilized him until the creature was safely away. Then in a field near his house, he saw a second blue beam descend, which he suspected was the UFO retrieving the interrupted Alien peeping Tom. As soon as the beam dissipated, Walters retrieved his camera and duly photographed the departing spaceship.
Three days later, aliens were again at work in Walter’s neighbourhood. A ship, which he of course photographed, came to a stop either just above the ground or actually landed. It allegedly left behind a cone-shaped impression ....[which has since been debunked]
hoaxmobile%202.jpg


...And there's more 'fantastical stories' from Walters that I can't be bothered to go into... but suffice to say that the motive for such dastardly subterfuge is very clear and telling to me at least.... $$$$ .... Yes, the answer is, [as always in these such cases] .. for the money. For instance , William Morrow the head of the publishing company that produced Whitley Streiber’s book Communion stated that he paid out a $200,000 advance for a book that Walters was to write. The National Enquirer ran a series on Walters in March 1990, and though the exact numbers remain unclear, I think it’s safe to say that he did not walk away from them empty-pocketed. ABC-TV is also said to have paid out $400,000 for rights to a never produced miniseries. .. And that's just a starter for the earning potential for the guy at the centre of a 'story' like... 'The Gulf Breeze UFO Photo's'. [he's published at least three books about his many UFO/Alien encounters and been a paid guest at UFO conventions since his alleged encounter].

Cheers Buddy.
 

Sheltie

Fratty and out of touch.
Yes, the model was found in the attic crawl space by the residents who lived there after him. I remember seeing a story about in on Inside Edition or Hard Copy or one those type shows about 30 years ago.
 

August

Metanoia
Surely one of the most dubious offerings Nivek.... you wouldn't just be playing devil's advocate would you old mate? :Whistle:

Well respected UFO researcher Jerry Black investigated the case of the Gulf Breeze UFOs, and became suspicious of Walters and believed that the sightings and photographs may have been a hoax and then Jerry Black determined in the early 1990s a suspicious trail of money that led to Walters, giving indications of a hoax. Then, over the subsequent years, new evidence was discovered, including a model in one of Walters homes that seemed identical to the ones in the photographs.
Here's a snippet from a good interview that Jerry had with Kenny Young about the so-called case....


YOUNG/BLACK ATTACK

Gulf-Breeze-1159307.jpg


Of course, for those whom might believe that 'the finding of Ed's fake ..was fake', I often say that all things are possible, but then in such cases you have to study the character of the 'potentially-wronged witness' a little, and though it will still be practically impossible to be 100% certain that the guy/gal is either pukka or charlatan ...but you will at least be abled to satisfy your own believability parameters ... and the facts that the pictures do not look authentic at all to my mind... plus the guy's ... well let's say over-egging-the-pudding [a little like Kenneth Arnold] ... such as according to him the UFO didn’t visit Walters just once. [Which is always a red flag to me] ... but for whatever reason the space aliens paid him numerous visits over the course of the following months and years. The second time he spotted the UFO, Walters claimed that he could hear a humming sound, as though two people were having a quiet conversation nearby and he was just far away enough to be unable to distinguish words. Looking up, he saw a sparkling star that soon fell to earth and was revealed to be a space ship. With the reflexes of an old west gun fighter, he took a photo of the thing.
... And up until the night of 2 December, Walters had no idea what was inside the UFO. All he knew was that it could hit him with a blue beam that would talk to him and then knock him on his ass. But at 3 AM that night, he was awakened by his dog barking. Going to a pair of French doors, he “…pulled up the bedroom window shade to see this small, shielded being standing just on the other side of the glass, looking in to Walters' eyes. And apparently, the aliens, with all their advanced technology, decided to send one of their guys disguised as a Knight of the Round Table to peep into Walters’ bedroom. It was about 4 feet tall, and encased in metal plates. Unable to distinguish between the hand and fingers on the thing, he was able to see a pair of all-black, terrifying eyes behind a clear visor section of his helmet. His sketch has an outline of what he suspected the head to really look like; it is the light-bulb shape a la the Andreasson abduction. The creature also held a long, thin silver rod in its hand.
Then the alien just stood and looked at him for a moment, turned, and sauntered off. Walters then displaying nerves of steel, gave chase to the armoured alien creature, but as soon as he left the safety of his back porch, was once again struck by the blue beam that immobilized him until the creature was safely away. Then in a field near his house, he saw a second blue beam descend, which he suspected was the UFO retrieving the interrupted Alien peeping Tom. As soon as the beam dissipated, Walters retrieved his camera and duly photographed the departing spaceship.
Three days later, aliens were again at work in Walter’s neighbourhood. A ship, which he of course photographed, came to a stop either just above the ground or actually landed. It allegedly left behind a cone-shaped impression ....[which has since been debunked]
hoaxmobile%202.jpg


...And there's more 'fantastical stories' from Walters that I can't be bothered to go into... but suffice to say that the motive for such dastardly subterfuge is very clear and telling to me at least.... $$$$ .... Yes, the answer is, [as always in these such cases] .. for the money. For instance , William Morrow the head of the publishing company that produced Whitley Streiber’s book Communion stated that he paid out a $200,000 advance for a book that Walters was to write. The National Enquirer ran a series on Walters in March 1990, and though the exact numbers remain unclear, I think it’s safe to say that he did not walk away from them empty-pocketed. ABC-TV is also said to have paid out $400,000 for rights to a never produced miniseries. .. And that's just a starter for the earning potential for the guy at the centre of a 'story' like... 'The Gulf Breeze UFO Photo's'. [he's published at least three books about his many UFO/Alien encounters and been a paid guest at UFO conventions since his alleged encounter].



Cheers Buddy.


Hi 1963 . Do you think if they made it a mandatory 35 years hard labour in jail for faking a UFO report that the sightings of UFOs would dry up, considering the fraudsters and shonky reports that we keep getting . ?
 

1963

Noble
Hi 1963 . Do you think if they made it a mandatory 35 years hard labour in jail for faking a UFO report that the sightings of UFOs would dry up, considering the fraudsters and shonky reports that we keep getting . ?

Hi Auggie, 35 years hard labour seems a tad draconian to me. lol... But yes I do think that some kind of hard-line discouragement would serve to clean up the ETH/UFO scene, such as public shaming combined with a harsh income-related monetary forfeit which would potentially defeat the perpetrator's aim. :furious:

Cheers Auggie.
 

nivek

As Above So Below
Surely one of the most dubious offerings Nivek.... you wouldn't just be playing devil's advocate would you old mate? :Whistle:

Well respected UFO researcher Jerry Black investigated the case of the Gulf Breeze UFOs, and became suspicious of Walters and believed that the sightings and photographs may have been a hoax and then Jerry Black determined in the early 1990s a suspicious trail of money that led to Walters, giving indications of a hoax. Then, over the subsequent years, new evidence was discovered, including a model in one of Walters homes that seemed identical to the ones in the photographs.
Here's a snippet from a good interview that Jerry had with Kenny Young about the so-called case....


YOUNG/BLACK ATTACK

Gulf-Breeze-1159307.jpg


Of course, for those whom might believe that 'the finding of Ed's fake ..was fake', I often say that all things are possible, but then in such cases you have to study the character of the 'potentially-wronged witness' a little, and though it will still be practically impossible to be 100% certain that the guy/gal is either pukka or charlatan ...but you will at least be abled to satisfy your own believability parameters ... and the facts that the pictures do not look authentic at all to my mind... plus the guy's ... well let's say over-egging-the-pudding [a little like Kenneth Arnold] ... such as according to him the UFO didn’t visit Walters just once. [Which is always a red flag to me] ... but for whatever reason the space aliens paid him numerous visits over the course of the following months and years. The second time he spotted the UFO, Walters claimed that he could hear a humming sound, as though two people were having a quiet conversation nearby and he was just far away enough to be unable to distinguish words. Looking up, he saw a sparkling star that soon fell to earth and was revealed to be a space ship. With the reflexes of an old west gun fighter, he took a photo of the thing.
... And up until the night of 2 December, Walters had no idea what was inside the UFO. All he knew was that it could hit him with a blue beam that would talk to him and then knock him on his ass. But at 3 AM that night, he was awakened by his dog barking. Going to a pair of French doors, he “…pulled up the bedroom window shade to see this small, shielded being standing just on the other side of the glass, looking in to Walters' eyes. And apparently, the aliens, with all their advanced technology, decided to send one of their guys disguised as a Knight of the Round Table to peep into Walters’ bedroom. It was about 4 feet tall, and encased in metal plates. Unable to distinguish between the hand and fingers on the thing, he was able to see a pair of all-black, terrifying eyes behind a clear visor section of his helmet. His sketch has an outline of what he suspected the head to really look like; it is the light-bulb shape a la the Andreasson abduction. The creature also held a long, thin silver rod in its hand.
Then the alien just stood and looked at him for a moment, turned, and sauntered off. Walters then displaying nerves of steel, gave chase to the armoured alien creature, but as soon as he left the safety of his back porch, was once again struck by the blue beam that immobilized him until the creature was safely away. Then in a field near his house, he saw a second blue beam descend, which he suspected was the UFO retrieving the interrupted Alien peeping Tom. As soon as the beam dissipated, Walters retrieved his camera and duly photographed the departing spaceship.
Three days later, aliens were again at work in Walter’s neighbourhood. A ship, which he of course photographed, came to a stop either just above the ground or actually landed. It allegedly left behind a cone-shaped impression ....[which has since been debunked]
hoaxmobile%202.jpg


...And there's more 'fantastical stories' from Walters that I can't be bothered to go into... but suffice to say that the motive for such dastardly subterfuge is very clear and telling to me at least.... $$$$ .... Yes, the answer is, [as always in these such cases] .. for the money. For instance , William Morrow the head of the publishing company that produced Whitley Streiber’s book Communion stated that he paid out a $200,000 advance for a book that Walters was to write. The National Enquirer ran a series on Walters in March 1990, and though the exact numbers remain unclear, I think it’s safe to say that he did not walk away from them empty-pocketed. ABC-TV is also said to have paid out $400,000 for rights to a never produced miniseries. .. And that's just a starter for the earning potential for the guy at the centre of a 'story' like... 'The Gulf Breeze UFO Photo's'. [he's published at least three books about his many UFO/Alien encounters and been a paid guest at UFO conventions since his alleged encounter].

Cheers Buddy.

I guess I was playing devil's advocate lol, unknowingly since I didn't know these tantalizing morsels of information you brought out to the light here, I had no idea lol...
 

nivek

As Above So Below
ufo_picture_29.jpg
 

nivek

As Above So Below
Any chance you can point out where it says that.....most of that was in a language I can't even identify.

Use Google translate and you can read the entire page...Its in Indonesian...
 
Top