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CIA RDP81R00560R000100010001 0
Page 48
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Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP81R00560R000100010001-0
Int: When you said ****(garbled), was it low, or was it low for
a jet?
Neff: Well, it was low and it was also low for ajet. There
happened to be an overcast that evening which eliminated
the possibility of a star right off the bat, and ****(gar-
bled) the way I understand it a jet burns up three or four
times the amount of fuel at low altitude than it does at high
altitude. I don't think a jet could stay down that long with -
out using up a considerable amount of gas.
Int: How fast were you going?
Ryan: About 250 miles per hour.
Int: ****(garbled) then did they slow down or why didn't****
(garbled)
Ryan: They must have slowed down.: "They" or "it" must have
slowed down.
Neff: We trailed out as far as Oswego whichis right onthe south
shore of Lake Ontario andwe passed up our point of land-
ing at Syracuse and we weren't sure we should hold the
passengers up any longer, and of course we didn't ad-
vise them.
Ryan: We called them (Griffiss AFB) and they said they were
"about off,''and that was about 8 minutes and we couldn't
work them any longer, and we turned over with Syracuse
tower, and they were giving--relaying the messages back
and forth, and it was then about 10 to 12 minutes and
they're still not off yet. And we can't--I don't know, we'd
probably still be flying. I just don't know where the jets
were. Why didn't they get the jets up?
Int: Well what happened to the object?
Ryan: It went off, it just went to the northwest and it went out of
sight.
Foster: Was it more vapid? All of a sudden did it accelerate its
Speed?
Ryan: It did appear to--after it got over the water it appeared
really get out of sight very fast.
Neff: It did, in the direction of Toronto--in that direction.
Int: Was this object saucer-shaped or not?
Ryan: Oh I don't know; I couldn't say.
Neff: There was no definite shape to it, it was just a brilliant
light.
Radar-Visual Sighting by PAA Flight
March 29, 1957: About 7:30 p.m. local time, Pan American
flight 206A was northbound off the east coast of Florida, at 30
degrees N. Latitude. The plane was enroute to New York from
Nassau at 16,000 feet, moving through the tops of cumulus clouds,
on a heading of 25 degrees magnetic. At the controls was Capt.
Kenneth G. Brosdal. The engineer, John Wilbur, was in the
co-pilot’s seat. The co-pilot, George Jacobson, was navigating.
“‘About 50 miles east of Papa-3, a checkpoint between Nassau
and Tuna,’’ Capt. Brosdal stated, ‘‘we (the co-pilot, engineer and
myself) saw this very bright white light. It seemed to grow in
intensity to the point where it would be about 3 or 4 strengths of
a rising Venus, then would subside. This happened about 3 or 4
times, during which I came to enough to check on the radar
Screen. Sure enough, a target showed up at 3 o’clock between
45-50 miles away.
“Using the curser on the face of the radar, I checked the
angle of sighting and it checked with the visual angle. This light
appeared to be stationary, or moving in a N.E. direction (same
as uS). I observed this on the scope long after the light went out.
I checked with Miami ATC [Air Traffic Control] but no other
traffic or firing was in the area, to their knowledge.’’ [40]
The radar set, tuned to the 50 mile range, tracked the uni-
dentified target for 20 minutes. The visual observation lasted
4-5 minutes. The blip on the scope, Capt. Brosdal added, indi-
cated an apparent size in excess of the size of normal aircraft.
The altitude of the light, on the basis of angle of sight and radar
ranging, was estimated to be 20,000 to 25,000 feet.
Capt. Brosdal indicated that he was most impressed by the
exceptional intensity of the light during the bright phase of pul-
sation.
Pilot Reports High-Speed Light
October 8, 1957: Another Pan American pilot sighted an
unidentified light. Capt. Joseph L. Flynn, bringing a DC-7C
flight into New York from Paris, noticed the UFO at 7:05 a.m. about
25 miles southwest of Boston. The object, ‘like a star travelling
very fast,’’ showed up to the right of the plane. ‘‘The sun was
directly behind the plane and the object glowed a very bright
silver,’’? Captain Flynn said. ‘‘It was much brighter than the
morning star.’’ The pilot turned the plane and, for five minutes,
tried to follow the UFO. But it sped out of sight.
At first Captain Flynn assumed the object was the Russian
satellite, Sputnik I. But a check withthe Smithsonian Institution’s
astrophysical observatory revealed that the satellite had passed
over the New York areaat 8:03a.m., nearly an hour after the UFO
sighting. [41] Nor would a satellite be so readily visible or
appear to travel at high speed as described.
Gyrating Light AScends After Crossing Path of Plane
February 4, 1959: Over the Western Caribbean, 3:00 a.m.,
Capt. H. Dunker, Pan American Airways, was piloting a DC-6-B
from New Orleans to Panama. He and the crew saw a reddish
light speed across their course from right to left (west to east).
About 45 degrees to their left the light stopped suddenly, fading
in luminosity. Seconds later it sped back across and stopped
about 10 degrees to the right. Then the UFO moved again to the
left. After remaining visible about 45 seconds, the object went
straight up out of sight at tremendous speed. [42]
Airliners Paced by Three UFOs
The sighting of three glowing objects by several airline crews
February 24, 1959 is one of the most thoroughly investigated (and,
ironically, one of thé most controversial) on record. The key
witness, Capt. Peter W. Killian, was interviewed by NICAP per-
sonnel. A detailed investigation report, including weather data,
airy navigation maps, etc., was submitted to NICAP by the New
York City Affiliate. The Akron UFO Research Committee co-
operated in the investigation, adding valuable details. Other pub-
lished references are listed in the Section Notes [43].
The Air Force later attributed the sighting to a refueling mis -
sion involving a tanker aircraft and jet bombers flashing brilliant
lights. Discrepancies in this explanation are discussed in Section
IX,
February 24, 1959: Captain Killian and First Officer James
Dee, American Airlines, were flying a DC -6B nonstop from Newark
to Detroit. It was a clear night, with stars brightly visible and no
moon. At 8:20 p.m. EST the plane was approximately 13 miles
west of Williamsport, Pennsylvania, flying on a heading of 295
degrees at 8,500 feet. Off the left wingtip, Captain Killian noticed
three bright lights, which he first thought were the three stars
making up the belt of the constellation Orion. But then he real-
ized that Orion was also visible, higher overhead. The UFOs
were about 15 degrees above the plane.
As he and F/O Dee continued to watch, the objects pulled
ahead of the wingtip. At this point, in the vicinity of Erie,
Pennsylvania, Captain Killian contacted two other American
Airlines planes in the area. One at the Dolphin checkpoint (over
the northern shore of Lake Erie) saw the objects directly to the
south over Cleveland. The other aircraft, near Sandusky, Ohio,
and headed toward Pittsburgh, spotted the objects a little to the
left of their heading, to the southeast. [See map in Section IX]
As the DC-6B continued west, the UFOs occasionally pulled
ahead and dropped back until they were in their original position
with respect to the left wingtip. Then Captain Killian began letting
down for landing in Detroit, and the crew no longer had time to
watch the objects.
During the 45 minute observation, the UFOs continuously
changed brightness, flashing brightly ‘brighter than any star,’
and fading completely. This didnot occur in any apparent pattern.
The color fluctuated from yellow-orange to a brilliant blue-white
at their brightest. The last object in line moved back and forth
at times, independently of the generally western motion of the
formation.
Approved For Release 2001/04/02 CIA-RDP81R00560R000100010001-0
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