UFO: INVESTIGATORS SUSPECT NATIONAL SECURITY PINCH By Judith Karns, Observer Managing Editor
UFO:
INVESTIGATORS SUSPECT NATIONAL SECURITY PINCH
By Judith Karns,
Observer Managing Editor
They say it isn't so: there ain't no such
animal as a "flying saucer."
Even though our government spent a decade
deeply enmeshed in
investigation,
(Project Bluebook, Majestic 12), suddenly, one day, a
security lid was
clamped so tight on the subjec t of extraterestrial
visitors (some
even speculate them to be subterranean) that even the squeak
of a mouse
couldn't get out. And with that lid came
the "official" denial
of the
phenomenon's existence.
Why, then, asks Flushing residents Shirley
and George Coyne, state
directors of
MUFON (Mutual UFO Network based in Seguin, Texas), should they
be singled out as
subjects of what they call "intimidation", by what they
suspect might be
the National Se curity Administration (NSA), one of our
country's more
covert intelligence operations?
The Coynes had
long been aware that their delving into the touchy
subject of UFO
investigations could bring on some governmental attention;
they'd long heard
stories from others who had been involved with the
subject for far
more lengthy periods of time than they.
But it wasn't
until Sunday,
Jan. 10 of this year, at approximately 11:30 a.m., that they
were certain they
were targets of some considerable curiosity.
The Coynes were in the bedroom of their
two-bedroom mobile home.
Shirley was
seated on the floor, George in a nearby chair. Reclined on the
bed was a woman
deeply entranced by hypnotic suggestions brought on by
hypnotherapist
Virginia Tilly who sat in another chair
near the bed.
The scene wasn't an unusual one. The
Coynes, through the course of
their
investigations, often come in contact with subjects who have strong
suspicions that
their UFO sightings amount to more than just an eyeball
perspective. And
when this happens, "Ginny", a
school teacher and
hypnotherapist
from St. Joseph, is called in to assist in getting to the
bottom of the
murky puddle of speculation.
According to Shirley, this particular
regression session had been
arranged by two
telephone calls, one to the subject and one to Ginny Tilly.
As Ginny questioned the regressed subject,
in the far distance could
be heard the
approach of a helicopter. From her vantage point on the floor,
Shirley had been
entranced in her own way by the sequential flickers of
small,
voice-activated red light s on Ginny's tape recorder.
At about the same time they became aware
that the helicopter was not
simply passing
by, Shirley became aware that the red lights on the recorder
had stopped. And
not wishing to disturb the progression of the hypnosis,
she ran to an
adjacent room to get her own recorder,
which she activated.
It is on this
recorder that the helicopter's approach to a hovering
position above
their mobile home is recorded.
According to Ginny, the contents of her tape,
before it was "shut off",
contained the
subject's comments about the "hiders" who were at that very
minute
approaching in "that helicopter", and she also provided a
description of
the helicopter even tho ugh her eyes were closed and the
drapes were
drawn. It was learned later that the subject had previous
experiences with
such vehicles near her home in another part of the state.
And, "she named a time, a date, and a
beach in Virginia where,
supposedly,
aliens gave the U.S. government the technology to be able to
listen in (on
private conversations)", said Ginny.
Meanwhile, George
had gone to his car to retrieve his camera from the
trunk just as the
helicopter hovered. Shirley joined him in time to see the
helicopter
"tipped" down as it maneuvered away from them. Because of its
speedy exit,
George was unable
to get a picture.
It is the Coynes'
estimate that, though it did not directly hover again,
the vehicle
circled the mobile home community during the duration of the
hypnotic
regression, for approximately one to one and on half hours.
They described it as dull black, and
large--at least four to six
passenger. (Other descriptions withheld at request of
George and Shirley.)
The windows were
tinted dark. George noted a "wire" which was visibly
draped from the
rear of the helicopter to the front, and it was his
impression that
it was some type of antenna.
Indeed, the
hypnotized subject telephoned the Coynes some time later to
tell them she had
forgotten one detail of the helicopter--what appeared to
be a wire
connected from back to front.
"I was going
to tell you something, but I don't think I'd better," said
Wright. And he
went on to tell them that just prior to his call ringing
through, a man's
voice came over the line, "as if someone had picked up an
extension in my
own home. It w as a male voice--40ish--that said, "Just a
minute; I have to
handle this,", as if he were somewhere tapping into their
line and was
talking to someone else."
Wright says his
initial impression was that the Coyne's line was tapped,
however he says,
"It could have been my line rather than theirs. Their
phone had not
rung yet."
Ginny Tilly,
though she's certain her actions are monitored through such
means as
telephone tapping, feels the situation is more one of curiosity
and information
seeking rather than one of intimidation.
The Coynes have
their own ideas on phone tapping, and take into strong
consideration
their frequent (several each week) one-ring calls which
illicit nothing
more than a dial tone on answering, and they have given
consideration to
a bit of informatio n they've received regarding the
possibility that
those rings are designed to activate a 'bug" (a hidden
listening device)
in their home.
On March 29, the
Coynes were ready to leave on a short trip of several
days duration.
Before their departure, they made a telephone call to the
friend they were
about to visit, to indicate that they were on their way.
They then
proceeded to dirive s outhwest toward the state border.
As they neared
Bancroft, on their way toward Lansing, Shirley suddenly
noticed a
familiar sight--a black helicopter. It
was hovering beyond an
overpass under
which they had just driven.
At first,
speculation was that coincidence had befallen them. However,
their concern
mounted as they continued to drive and the helicopter
continued to stay
in their sight, but too far away to be photographed.
George decided he
wanted a closer look, and stopped the vehicle under an
overpass to
remove his binoculars from the trunk.
The helicopter,
which had continued on its way, suddently turned and came
back to pace them
for a total of approximately 90 miles. It was the
helicopter's
return that convinced them they were the subjects of no
coincidence.
On Tuedsday, April 5, the Coynes
witnessed an unmarked black plane
circle their
mobile home community, the incident possibly having some
connection to a
disturbance with their microwave oven clock, which stopped,
and blinked
constant at the time of the Coynes'
sighting of the plane.
The Coynes' recording of the helicopter's
initial visit to the
Flushing area has
received some scrutiny from both an FAA (Federal Aviation
Administration)
representative, and a member of the military.
Chuck Pine, an
FAA aviation safety inspector out of Kent County
Airport, had occasion
to hear the recording. He said, "It
has a definite
'whoomp'....to me
it sounded like a Huey." Pine was hesitant to be adamant
in his statement,
but did concede th at the "Huey" type of air vehicle does
have a
distinctive sound to it, and the recording did seem to contain that
sound. Pine is
also a commercial pilot and former air traffic controller.
"I took the
tape and drawing (Shirley's artistic rendition) to a fella
who's highly
placed in the military," said Dan Wright. "He said, 'There's
no question in my
mind; I'd stake my life on it being a Huey.'" Wright
said the
information he obtained on the "Huey" (made by the Bell
Corporation)
suggests that it is formilitary or intelligence use only, and
is not provided
to the private orcorporate sector.
Wright's had some
problems of his own lately. He has had reason to believe
the FBI was
keeping a file on himself, and had requested, through the
Freedom of
Information Act, a copy of that file.
However, before
he received their response that they found nothing on him,
he experienced a
nine-day period in which he received no mail. Wright
purposely waited
an extended period of time before contacting the post
office, feeling
that more credence could be lent to the situation if the
period of time
exceeded one week.
Upon contacting the post office, he was told
that he apparently had
gone on vacation,
and that the letter carrier probably noticed that lhis
mailbox was full
and simply held the mail back.
Wright's response
to this was a confession that he had gone on vacation.
However, the mail
delivery had stopped after his return. He did not have a
mailbox, but he
did have a slot in his door, and the letter carrier could
not have
determined how much mail had been stuffed into it. The mail was
promptly
delivered.
This--what is
happening to the Coynes--is very intimidating," said Wright.
"They want
the Coynes to know they are being monitored.
To me, it begins
and ends with all
of the documents we have requested, and they don't want
an open
discussion of the UFO issue.
"Whoever is
doing this,....if they want to rattle cages, we are not
totally
defenseless."
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