| aliens - ufo sightings - phoenix lights | ||||||
Phoenix
Lights
The strange lights were sighted during a three hour period between 7:30pm and 10:30pm on March 13. They covered a 300 mile corridor from the Nevada line through Phoenix to the Northern edge of Tucson. Since thousands of witnesses called local Air Force bases, news stations, and UFO organizations with their reports, we are able to glean the exact route that the mysterious object took.
One of the first reports came from Henderson, Nevada from a former Police Officer and his family. Witnesses noted the object moving in a southeast direction over their city. The object was described as "V" shaped, somewhat like a boomerang or wedge in shape. The object then passed over Paulden, Arizona. At this point the "V" shaped array of lights were described as being blue-white to yellow-white in color. All witnesses agreed on several common factors - the object was amazingly huge, triangular or "V" shaped, had several bright lights on it, and it moved silently through the nighttime skies. Some stated that the object seemed to "glide" through the air and that they distinctly had "strained their ears" trying to detect a sound emanating from the object. It was perfectly silent. Some indicated the object was so large you could have landed a 747 on its back. Measurements from 900 feet to 2 miles in width and over a mile in length were reported. The estimated altitude of the object ranged (at various points in its trek) from 1,000 to 10,500 feet.
From Paulden, the object moved to Prescott Valley, Arizona. In a little over a minute the object had moved thirty miles to the south. In Prescott Valley, witnesses noted that the object was seen as a single craft, equal in size to five 747s flying in a perfectly locked formation and moving silently through the sky. Reports from Prescott Valley cast doubt on the theories that the object may have been several planes flying in formation or flares fired by the Air Force. Prescott Valley sighters noted that the object passed directly overhead and that the object was definitely solid because it blocked out much of the starry sky as it passed over. It's interesting to note too that several sighters in Prescott Valley actually witnessed the object through binoculars. The National UFO Reporting Center received the following report:
The object was next sighted 10 miles south over the town of Dewey, Arizona. It was here that witnesses reported seeing a huge object or formation of lights moving silently about 1000 feet above the ground.
Calls continued to arrive from Chino Valley, Tempe, and Glendale. Then the object made its infamous appearance over Phoenix, Arizona...
In Phoenix the object was said to hover for 4-5 minutes over the intersection of Indian School Road and 7th Avenue. It was at this point that the many widely publicized videos and photographs were taken. One amateur astronomer in Phoenix noted that he felt the objects were a formation of planes and nothing at all out of the ordinary. But Bill Greiner (51), a cement driver hauling a load down a mountain North of Phoenix, felt differently. He stated:
After leaving Phoenix, the object continued on its southeasterly path towards Tucson, Arizona following Interstate 10 at a slow rate of speed. During this trek the lights were reported as being amber in color. One car on the Interstate noted that the huge object hovered over their car, which was moving at 65 MPH. Next the object was reported over Oracle where it was described as having a reddish-orange color. Witnesses said the object split up and each of the bright lights moved in a separate direction along the edges of the Tucson area. The last report came from the Kingston area where a man stopped his vehicle and called from a payphone to report the incident. "[The] young man, enroute to Los Angeles, called from a phone booth to report having seen a large and bizarre cluster of lights moving slowly in the northern sky".
As persons on the ground were reporting the strange array of lights, persons in the air were seeing a similar phenomena. The object passed over the Sky Harbor Airport where air traffic controllers spotted the object but were puzzled as to why it did not show up on their radar. At least one commercial pilot also saw the objects from the air as he passed over them. Radioing the Sky Harbor Airport, the American West pilot requested information on what "those nine lights were".
Meanwhile, as usually seems to be the case in these types of unusual airborne events, conflicting information arrived from the local Air Force authorities. Witnesses who called the Luke Air Force Base with reports noted that the female operator stated that they were being flooded with calls. Days later, on March 14, 1997, the same Luke Air Force personnel were quoted as stating they had received no calls concerning the matter. This statements was straightforwardly disproved by a local UFO researcher who produced phone records showing that he himself had called the base to report the lights on more than one occasion that night. The National UFO Reporting Center also noted that reports were pouring in from the Phoenix area. One man, who claimed he was a airman at the Luke Air Force Base, stated that the US Air Force had launched 2 F-15 fighters and that one of the F-15s had intercepted the object over Phoenix. Although cursory research on the inventory of F-15s at Luke Air Force base has proved inconclusive, this account was further collaborated by a truck driver who was delivering materials to a plant near the Luke base. He stated that he had watched the UFOs intently as he drove down Interstate 17. Upon arriving at his destination, he climbed on top of a pile of materials while the crew unloaded his truck. He stated that he was observing the strange amber lights when suddenly 2 F-16s (not F-15s) followed by a third "blasted out of Luke with their afterburners on full". He detailed how the planes banked sharply and headed straight towards the UFO which then shot straight upwards and disappeared in an instant. He noted that the aircraft passed right through the spot where the object had been. The man's story was somewhat collaborated by a UFO researcher's Freedom of Information Act request (FOIA) to the US Air Force. The Air Force admitted that they had indeed dispatched F-16s at that time but noted that the aircraft were on a "routine training mission" and had no involvement with the strange lights being reported all over the area.
After denying that they had heard of the incident, the Air Force released their official explanation of the sightings - military flares. They stated that military flares had been released from a USAF A-10 over the Gila Bend Bombing Range (located 60-80 miles southwest of Phoenix, on the other side of the bordering mountain range). They explained that the A-10 had released the flares at about 6,000 feet and that the flares had ignited at around 3,000 feet. They completely burnt out at around 500 feet. The Air Force stated that the A-10s were on a special training mission.
UFO researchers scratched their heads over the Air Force's explanation. Although highly unlikely, it may have explained the reports of lights over Phoenix, but it still left many unanswered questions. They quickly pointed out that the time the Air Force gave for the flares jettison was 42 minutes after the reported Phoenix sightings. They also noted that the flares explanation did nothing to explain the sights all over the Nevada and Arizona surrounding areas. How could the flares have been seen traveling over such a wide range of areas by so many people who claimed flatly that the object had passed directly over them. One witness, who lives under the customary A-10 flight path, noted that no A-10s landed or took off around 10:00PM that night. He knew this because he was in the habit of going outside whenever he heard the A-10s (to watch them land). He states that he definitely heard no A-10s landing during the time of the sightings. UFO researchers have filed FOIA requests with the US Air Force, requesting logs of departures and arrivals of A-10s during the night of March 13 - the USAF has yet to comply with their requests. Mike Fortson of Changler, Arizona further argues against the USAF flares explanation. Mike, a local witness of the extraordinary occurrence, states that he saw the object fly directly overhead and that he plainly saw a "solid object". He claimed that a 737 disappeared as it passed above the object (the American West airline?). Mike recounted that the object was over a mile wide and flew about 30-35MPH at around 1500 to 2000 feet above the ground. Furthermore, the flare explanation does not coincide with the calculated speed of the moving object. The National UFO Reporting Centers notes that:
Some, more radical persons, theorized that the objects were man-made and possibly built from crashed UFO technology. They explain how such a test flight would be highly beneficial to the US government in testing the reaction of the public. Phoenix, being a large city but not so densely populated, would make a excellent choice of locations to test fly the object over. Any public problems that could have occurred in Phoenix would have been much easier to control than larger and more populated areas such as Los Angeles or New York.
Sources (1) National UFO Reporting Center (Web)
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