Crop Watcher 19 1993 Doug Bower at Neals' Meeting Yard, Covent Garden, London, August 3rd 1993 Following Doug Bower's lecture at Marlborough the previous Wednesday (described in CW18) this second meeting was held in the amphitheatre at Neal's Meeting Yard in Covent Garden. This summary of what took place is based on a tape recording of the meeting supplied by one of The Crop Watcher's many spies and agents. Sadly this second lecture was poorly attended, with only about 35 people in attendance compared with nearly 100 at the Marlborough meeting. In contrast to the earlier meeting the Covent Garden lecture was a more abusive and disruptive affair, largely due to the antics of Stanley Morcom, one of the original members of the Centre for Crop Circle Studies. Morcom bought himself and his subject no credit at all by engaging in repeated outbursts and slanderous attacks. On two occasions Morcom openly accused Bower and Brown of being "liars", an accusation which to my knowledge he has not withdrawn. Style The style and format of the lecture closely followed the Marlborough lecture, as Ken Brown had wisely planned the meeting by preparing written notes of what he was going to say. He again repeated his main theme "Tonight is intended to highlight the fact that corn circles were Doug Bower's original idea". Apology Doug Bower then repeated the statement he read out at the Marlborough meeting. It read "I would like for us to go down on the record for us to apologise to farmers and landowners, and thank them all for the tolerant and good-humoured way - I hope that's correct - in which they've viewed the escapades of two middle aged pranksters who became obsessed with an idea - it was nothing more than a practical joke from the start". Ken Brown continued:- "I don't ever want to criticise true faith, however much I might disagree with it. I don't wish to make a fool of anyone's sincere belief but I AM justified in criticising Colin Andrews, Pat Delgado and Terence Meaden and latterly George Wingfield, of course. But particularly all those who were around in the early years of circle investigations who made no effort to be entirely objective. It seems to me those so-called experts were everything but objective in their research of the circles. To my mind they all deserve the severest criticism. There was sufficient evidence around for this subject to have been wrapped up, packed away and forgotten completely in fact even before - well before - Colin Andrews came on the scene in the mid 80s. " "Anyhow, you can easily see, when Doug and Dave came clean in the TODAY newspaper in '91 it was far far too late. Doug and Dave had been swamped, overtaken. They'd become irrelevant to the religion of corn circles. And because they themselves hadn't seen the faith growing they were amazed their story wasn't taken seriously. Just try to imagine yourself in their shoes. You tell the truth, you KNOW its the truth, but the Pope and the Priest and the Parishioners will not give up their faith. But then why should they ? Faith is not about reason. Faith is not about being rational. Faith is [not] common sense. And much worse, Faith does not like to be questioned. So when I first met Doug Bower and Dave Chorley they still had no understanding of the diatribe being hurled at them. But after I'd earlier provided a few circle magazines and comments from a couple of lectures I'd been to their eyes began to open. I could see that the TODAY newspaper story gave only a brief and slightly distorted picture of a period which must have lasted over 20 years since Doug and Dave first met. Some of my more reasonable circle friends were raising questions about how much of the real truth these two guys from Southampton really were telling. I just happened to be there at the right time and the right place. " Ken Brown then repeated the claim that he made at the Marlborough Meeting, that on the 28th October 1991 he presented Colin Andrews and Pat Delgado with evidence which supported Doug and Daves' claim. According to Brown Colin Andrews stated that "There are probably only about a dozen circles out of all the circles we have ever had that I can put my hand on heart and say they are absolutely genuine". According to Brown Colin Andrews repeated this claim in a telephone conversation with Ken Brown on January 18th 1993. Then it was Doug Bower's turn. "Well, as Ken has already said to you, the thing that's upset us most of all is the opposition that we've had from these people. The general public I think - the majority of them anyway - accepted our story right from the start when it arrived in the paper in September 1991, but what was going on behind the scenes up until that time we had no idea until Ken came on the scene and he told us more or less about it. We only knew about four people which is the important people - these are the people that are still in opposition to us. I mean we've had nothing but insults over the telephone and in writing. My wife has been insulted. Its been nothing but insults ever since it all started in September '91. This is the thing that upsets us most of all. As Ken said just now we were hoping that the whole thing would have come to an end in September '91 they would have probably come up to us and shook our hands and say 'Thanks very much for what you've done, we've made a lot of money out of you and my God this is what's really behind it all' - its the pounds, shillings and pence - this is all that really matters. There was a statement only three days ago in the Southern Evening Echo - that Pat Delgado and Colin Andrews have now reached the 500,000 figure for his books -and translated into four languages. So I mean I can see really why the resistance and opposition has been put up towards us, they wanted to keep this going. And anyone with an income such as that are not going to accept our story." Ken Brown then presented Doug Bower's own photographs of crop circles from the early years - photographs of crop circles which Brown claimed had never been reproduced in the crop circle literature. He claimed that Doug Bower had numerous photographs of such circles and that this proved that Doug must have made these circles. He accepted the point that was made by Stanley Morcom and another member of the audience that had there been only one or two such photographs this would have proven nothing. His point was that there were numerous such photographs dating back to 1980-82 and that this was pushing coincidence beyond chance level. The Historical Photographic Evidence Ken Brown continued: "Some people have said that Doug and Dave must have copied an original idea - [They say] where did they get the idea from? They must have copied the same thing somewhere in their mind or seen somewhere - [This is] Not true. That's [a photograph of] Tully. Tully was some circles made in reed beds or circular impressions made in reed beds. The photographs - I've blown one up there - is of a dished side - a curved side, the reeds are bent in other words - curving in a little bit like the side of a cup. So that's what Tully looked like. Paul Fuller keeps coming up to me -and he came to Marlborough to bring out all his photographs - Paul lent me all his evidential photographs for pre Doug and Dave circles. All Paul Fuller's photographs are blown down - blown down - pretty flat - not even with a slant on like that - they are even more wind blown than this [Tully]. Paul Fuller says there are plenty of circles pre the mid 1970s. I don't deny that, but boy oh boy they're not circles as we know them. Circles as we know them -our crop circles - since the mid 1970s are straight rigid sided affairs. They are not wind blown with slanting sides. They are not dished like Tully was dished." Readers are invited to comment on this claim. The 2nd edition of "Crop Circles A Mystery Solved" (Robert Hale Ltd) carries three photographs of circles which we believe disprove Ken Brown's claim that Doug and Dave "invented" straight-edged crop circles in the mid 1970s. These three photographs were taken in Canada (1977) and Australia (1973). Doug and Dave have repeatedly confirmed that they only created crop circles in Britain. There is also a photograph of what looks very much like a sharply- defined crop circle at Aix-en-Provence, South-East France, on 20th May 1977, in The Probe Report, Vol 3, No 4, April 1983. Tracks Doug Bower was then invited to describe how he made crop circles. He and Dave always wore Wellington boots with deep treads. Apparently Dave Chorley used to be very concerned about the damage their boots left in the standing crop but this would normally be covered up by the circle they were creating. Ken Brown stated that he thought it was "remarkable" that the crop circle researchers had never noticed the tracks left by these boots. Lucy Pringle remarked that she possessed photographs showing tread marks underneath circles. In response to another question Ken Brown stated his belief that Doug and Dave had never made any "grapeshot" circles - the smallest circles they had ever made were only 8 feet across because the width of the security bar from Doug's shop was only four feet long. In response to another question Brown dismissed the claim that it was impossible to see where the tramlines were in the dark without the use of a torch. He went on to state that it was quite possible to walk through standing crop without leaving a trail. Stanley Morcom confirmed this. Doug Bower then explained that the centre of every circle he had ever made displayed a clockwise circle. The only exception was when making the outer rim. Ken Brown described how Doug Bower had created the "illusion" of a spiral pattern by laying down a sequence of straight lays. This method had been convincingly demonstrated to him by Doug in the field. In response to a question from the audience Ken Brown stressed that he had only examined the Bower and Chorley method of laying circles and that other groups of hoaxers undoubtedly used different methods which produced different characteristics. Doug Bower then explained that he had discovered that standing crop was often knotted into small patches where the wind had blown the crop to point against the direction he was pushing his 4 foot rod (the security bar from his picture framing shop). When this happened it was much harder work to push the rod through the crop as it had to be pushed at an angle. It was this angle which contributed towards the eccentricity of the overall crop circle. Sometimes this effect was so marked that Doug would have to use a piece of string to mark out the rim of the circle so that he and Dave Chorley could push the crop down into a more neat circle. This was exacerbated if he and Dave Chorley began making a circle from opposite positions within the initial eight foot circle. Ken Brown then prompted Doug Bower to repeat the story of "Von Ryan's Express" first told at the Marlborough Meeting. It seems that this story relates to the 1978 Headbourne Worthy circle - shown on page 16 of "Circular Evidence". As Doug Bower states this formation would certainly have been visible from the main Winchester to Waterloo railway line. Again Dave Chorley's Christmas Card that recorded this event was presented (Dave's inscription read "Must be something big going on in Micheldever tonight" - a reference to a remark by the ticket inspector at Winchester railway station). Ken Brown then stated that according to his calculations Doug and Dave made 42 of the circles that featured in the 61 colour photographs in "Circular Evidence", 27 of circles featuring in the 52 colour photographs in "The Latest Evidence" and 34 of the circles featured in the 68 colour photographs in "The Crop Circle Enigma". [This makes a total of 103 out of 181 (57 per cent). Of course some of these photographs are of the same formations so this percentage is an inflated estimate of the actual percentage, PF]. In response to a question from Alice Keen-Soper Ken Brown stated that in his opinion any circle which postdated Doug and Daves' first circles was by definition a man-made hoax. In response to a second question from Lucy Pringle Ken Brown admitted that there was no photographic proof that Doug and Dave made the circles but that he and Doug were "baring our souls" so that people could assimilate all the evidence that was available. A third member of the audience [Chad Deetken I think, PF] pressed Brown as to why he believed Doug and Daves' story simply because they had told him they had made the circles. Brown retorted that there was more than just their word, he had interviewed both men at length, had discovered their own photographs of circles they claim to have made in Doug Bower's scrap-book and had seen the result of a demonstration which convinced him of the truthfulness of their claim. Doug Bower responded to a further question about why he and Dave Chorley made so many circles over such a prolonged period in time. Doug Bower admitted that it had become an "obsession" that was fuelled by the media publicity. Ken Brown then prompted Doug to recount the early years of his circle-making. Many of the points raised at this point in the meeting had been raised at the Marlborough meeting so these points will not be discussed here. The only new revelation concerned Doug's own photograph of a previously unpublicised quintuplet event at Cley Hill in 1983. In response to another challenge by Chad Deetken Ken Brown pointed to the TODAY newspaper's own photographs of Doug and Dave half way through making their demonstration circle at Sevenoaks - the formation which featured in TODAY's exclusive story which had been promoted as genuine in such glowing terms by Pat Delgado. Ilene Bower was invited by Ken Brown to describe how it was the Alfriston formation of 1984 which alerted her to the fact that Doug Bower was involved in something secretive. She was alerted by the high mileage on the car, which Ilene noticed because she did the books for her husband's picture-framing business. Doug Bower went on to describe how he alone created the "first" circle in oilseed rape - at South Wonston in 1987. He rejected Chad Deetken's claim that he couldn't have made this circle without damaging the brittle thick stem. Ken Brown asserted that he had a list of 12 circles in 1987 which had not been made by Doug and Dave but which must have been made by copycat hoaxers. Later the audience were amused to learn that following Colin Andrews' request for information about new circles Doug and Dave would make a new formation and then telephone him with the news ! Flashpoint 1 The first flashpoint of the evening concerned a disagreement between Ken Brown and Stanley Morcom over the so-called Swastika formation. Ken Brown stated that the truth behind the appearance of these Swastikas was difficult to unravel as Doug and Ilene Bower were both convinced that Doug had made only the second formation, the one positioned north of the A303 trunk road. Ken Brown found this difficult to accept as it would imply that another group of hoaxers made the original circle and that Doug Bower then made the second formation less than a mile or so away by sheer coincidence. At this point Stanley Morcom interrupted and claimed that on a previous occasion Ken Brown had claimed to him that Doug and Dave did not make either of the two Swastikas. During the ensuing argument Morcom accused Brown of changing his story and "lying" to him. Brown dealt with Morcom's attack in his normal good-humoured way by admitting that he was actually an "M.I. 5 agent". Whilst this amused the audience it did nothing to deter Morcom's mounting disbelief in Doug and Daves' story. Morcom renewed his attack by referring to Doug Bower's earlier claim that he made most of his circles using the four foot long security bar from his picture-framing shop. Morcom stated that the 1989 Corhampton triplet displayed "seven or eight" concentric rings with an average width of 2 foot 2 inches. Morcom wanted to know how Doug Bower could make concentric rings 2 foot 2 inches across with a rod of 4 foot length. Ken Brown suggested that the rod could have overlapped adjacent lays. Morcom himself suggested that this effect could be produced if the rod was pushed through the crop at an angle. Morcom then returned to the controversy over the two Swastika formations and Brown concluded by saying that he thought that even though Doug Bower could not recall having made both Swastikas the facts suggested to him that Doug Bower must have been responsible for both formations. Flashpoint 2 Stanley Morcom again interrupted Ken Brown as he was discussing Doug Bower's construction of the first pictogram at Chilcomb in 1987. Morcom challenged Doug Bower as to how he constructed the "coffins". Doug Bower replied that he and Dave "jumped". Morcom took this to mean that Doug Bower jumped ten feet in one go - something Doug Bower had obviously not meant to imply. Ken Brown correctly pointed out that the TVS newscast of this formation showed that there was a trail linking the "coffins" to the rest of the formation but Morcom demanded that Doug Bower answer his question without Ken Brown's assistance. In the ensuing argument Morcom twice admitted that he believed that "all" crop circles were hoaxes. His questioning of Doug Bower to account for how he managed to jump "10 feet" from the spur to the "coffins" then became unnecessarily provocative and confrontational. Morcom concluded the argument by stating that "I've got a feeling that I've been told a lot of lies". Flashpoint 3 Subsequently, when describing the Hazeley Farm Fields pictogram both Morcom and Pringle challenged Ken Brown and criticised him for telling Doug's story despite the fact that he had not even been present when the circle making had allegedly been taking place. Brown defended himself by stating that he had examined the evidence at length with Doug and Dave and had managed to coax out of Doug facts and events which Doug himself had not understood. He justified his method of presenting the evidence by stating that he knew "more about Doug Bower's circle making than Doug Bower himself". Lucy Pringle then asserted that despite the fact that many circles may or may not be hoaxes she had still discovered unusual effects inside crop circles that she could not account for. Flashpoint 4 Doug Bower again stated his unhappiness with the way he had been treated by the "so-called experts". For years crop circles had been promoted as genuine then suddenly - once his story broke - he and Dave Chorley were being dismissed as "frauds" simply so that a few people could carry on making money out of his circles. Stanley Morcom countered by pointing out that he had spent a fortune investigating circles but Doug Bower never mentioned the sacrifice he and others had made to research the phenomenon. This only seemed to incense Doug Bower further as he forcibly pointed out to Morcom that he and Dave Chorley had never asked Morcom to spend money investigating their circles, it had been Morcom's decision to spend the money. Morcom challenged Bower as to whether his circle-making was intended to "fool" himself. "Yes - all of you. We fooled you all!" was Doug Bower's triumphant response. He continued, "My next hoax is going to fool the world even more than this one". This ominous statement was met with delighted applause from the audience. Stanley Morcom attempted his fifth attack of the evening when Doug Bower described how he and Dave Chorley left "meteorites" in some of the Stonehenge formations of 1991. Morcom appeared to believe that Brown and Bower had changed their story but eventually realised his error and withdrew his charge. When explaining the "DD" signature Doug Bower pointed out that "Every artist signs his own work". This immediately bought a question from Chad Deetken as to whether or not any formation had ever appeared with the "DD" signature which Doug Bower had not made. Doug Bower replied that to his memory there was none but that hoaxers had copied them before and it was therefore conceivable that they might be adding fake "DD" signatures to add authenticity to their hoaxes. This didn't satisfy Deetken or Morcom and another argument arose. At the end of this argument Ken Brown summarised the reasons why he and Doug Bower had organised the meeting:- "Things can get impossible with some people, I'm afraid. We're getting to that stage where we're going to have to say what we believe - and you're going to have to take it. Its no good taking a point for the next fifteen minutes - all we can say is what we have to say. We'll say what we have to say. If you don't like it you can lump it. You know we really don't care. We have come tonight out of good will, putting our money on the line. I'm saying this from the heart, not knowing whether we'll get our costs back. We are here to tell our story. Its only last week and tonight we're going to tell our story as far as we're concerned as after tonight I'm retiring from the corn circle fraternity, totally. I have no more interest in it because I'm a hundred per cent convinced that Doug is telling the truth, that Ilene's telling the truth, that these circles, (sic) photographs really are Doug's, that all this equipment is Doug's, that the story is true and therefore to me, beyond a shadow of doubt, the whole story is true that they started corn circles. A lot of you people may disagree, you may have your own belief systems, you may have your own reasons for disagreeing. That is no reason for us to fall out, that's no reason for us to hammer a point for ten/fifteen minutes .. we'll just have to agree to disagree, and frankly I don't give a toss because I'm getting out of it, and if you people want to go out in the fields swanning around, praying, whistling, listening to sounds in the dark, seeing lights in the sky, feeling better, feeling worse [that's] fine, I really don't mind - its your life its not my life, and I don't wish us to fall out about it tonight." Stanley Morcom's attempt to respond to this statement was objected to by the audience. Ken Brown then summed up how the Doug and Dave story broke in August/September 1991. Finally, in response to a question from Chad Deetken, Doug Bower admitted that he and Dave Chorley had both made # 3,000 from TV appearances and newspaper articles. At this point my bootleg copy of the meeting finished. Thanks for the tape recording M.I.5. PF. The 1993 Independent UFO Network's Sheffield Conference This year's IUN conference was held at Sheffield Hallam University - formerly Sheffield Polytechnic - so unlike previous years there was plenty of room for audience, speakers and the numerous bookstalls distributed around the hall. Both days began with a dazzling video sequence of major UFO-related topics - the Mandelbrot hoax, the NASA Shuttle [reputedly involved in a close encounter with a UFO], the CIA, the Roswell newscutting, Bob Lazaar, Secret Weapons, a Strieber entity, the Face on Mars, and so on. Accompanied by Jean Michel-Jarre's atmospheric music this was a superb piece of marketing which was met with warm applause from the audience. The first lecture on Saturday was by Ole Johnny Braenne from Norway, who described how the celebrated 1952 Spitzbergen UFO crash was nothing more than complete fiction. The story was invented by a West German newspaper and never featured in the Norwegian press. The original story was that six UFOs were detected on radar and chased by the Norwegian Air Force. The saucers crashed and were subsequently located half buried in ice. The UFOs were blue/silver disks which were transported to a Norwegian Air Force base where they were inspected by scientists from the UK and the USA. Already we can see all the key motifs of the early crash-retrieval reports - technologically superior UFOs that have a peculiar habit of crashing, UFOs that show up on radar, saucers being retrieved by the Air Force and then sent to a "secret" base, internationally renowned scientists flying in to examine the wreckage - exactly the same motifs which later resurfaced in Moore and Berlitz' resurrection of the Roswell myth. >From 1954 the myth took on a life of its own as several variations develop. Ole described four main variants, these were [1] the rumour that in fact the UFOs were secret German experimental craft, [2] that unknown non terrestrial metals were identified, [3] a French UFO article alleged that the saucer had been retrieved by Canadian commandos and taken to a Swiss base, and [4] a Norwegian newspaper altered the location to Heligoland and added a more detailed description of the interior of the craft. Ole noted yet another parallel with Roswell. The craft was allegedly composed of very tough material which could not be damaged. Despite its highly dubious nature the Spitsbergen case was subsequently promoted by a number of credulous but popular UFO writers in the 1950s and 1960s. In "Behind the Flying Saucers" Frank Edwards claimed that he had corresponded with the General who oversaw the recovery operation. Ole had tried but failed to track down this General and Edwards' correspondence. In 1968 Arthur Shuttlewood promoted yet another variation of the story in "Warnings From Flying Friends". In 1973 the Condon Committee tried to get to the bottom of the mystery by examining the UK Ministry of Defence's files and correspondence. Nothing relevant was found. There is no mention of a UFO crash in the Spitzbergen local press for the whole of 1952. The Norwegian equivalent of Who's Who contains none of the names of the military personnel supposedly involved in the recovery operation in all of its editions between 1912 and 1970. Military records contain none of the names of the people allegedly responsible for the recovery of the craft. According to Ole in 1952 the Norwegian Air Force had only two squadrons of Vampire jets - both of which could not carry enough fuel to fly to Spitsbergen. Despite this overwhelming negative evidence Ole had tracked down more than 200 UFO books and articles which continued to promote the Spitsbergen crash as fact. Ole's skeptical conclusion was that the entire story was fabricated. This was a superb piece of UFO research which deserves the highest praise. The next lecture was Philip Mantle of BUFORA and the Independent UFO network. This was another well presented lecture detailing many of the more well known British UFO cases over the past decade. Philip described his involvement in the Skipton hills flaps of the early 1980s, Tony Dodds' celebrated photographs, the York Minster Fire and the Peter Beard hoax. This was followed by the Ilkley Moor entity photograph, the 1989 Abingdon UFO film (which Philip suggested was possibly a Remotely Piloted Vehicle) and the BVM photographic hoax from Hungary. Philip was at pains to point out that many of the cases he had investigated turned out to have mundane explanations and that he had always believed the Gulf Breeze photographs to be hoaxes. The next speaker was Hilary Evans, the respected Fortean writer. The title of Evans' illuminating talk was "Whatever Happened to Flying Saucers?". Evans began by stating that once upon a time there really were flying saucer reports, but now all we have are abduction reports. Why ? In the 1950s George Adamski's tales of meeting blond-haired Venusians were dismissed by UFOlogists but now such tales would undoubtedly be accepted by the UFO community. Why ? Evans went on to describe what is known as the "psycho-social" explanation for alleged UFO abductions. Throughout history people have looked to the skies for proof of divine beings - from Biblical times through to H.G. Wells "War of the Worlds". From the rise of Spiritualism in the Victorian period to the "golden age" of science fiction epitomised by "Amazing Stories", a hugely popular science fiction magazine edited by Hugo Gernsbach in the 1920s. Evans talk drew heavily on slides of these early tales of what the spacemen and their spaceships looked like, and what they were capable of doing to mere mortals. According to Evans these stories primed society to accept the reality of alien intervention in human affairs which resulted in the mass panics induced by the infamous Orson Welles broadcast of 1938 and Kenneth Arnold's seminal sighting in 1947. Critically both events were misinterpreted by the world and then seized upon by Ray Palmer in his 1950s magazine "Strange Stories". Evans' talk went on to examine the way the alien myth developed following Ray Palmer's creation of the UFO myth. According to Evans' perspective Contact stories such as Adamski's were based on science fiction stories like Schirmer's "The Green Man". The Apollo landings of 1969 triggered the massive increase in contact claims of the early 1970s. Evans suggested that Whitley Strieber's contact story was originally presented as a factual account of a real flesh-and- blood meeting with aliens but that later Strieber had changed his mind and was unable to distinguish between his own fantasies and reality. This led to a discussion of the Fantasy Prone Personality, which affects 5 per cent of the population, and Altered States of Consciousness. Evans believes that alien abduction claims are the result of witnesses creating a socially acceptable myth. This would explain for example why visions of the Blessed Virgin Mary are only reported from cultures with deeply held Catholic views. According to Evans UFOlogists are guilty of reinforcing the alien abduction myth because they fail to see the claim in its historical context. At this point in the lecture I noticed Budd Hopkins slipping away in disgust. Evans went on to explain that UFO abduction claims are made by people who NEED to externalise their innermost crises. This is proven by the fact that some abductees have later admitted to inventing their claims for rather peculiar reasons. Carl Jung foresaw the alien abduction claim in his 1959 book "Flying Saucers", which was ignored by UFOlogists and misunderstood by his peers. Evans demanded to know why the vast majority of abduction claims were being made in white middle-class societies in developed nations. This, he believed, was because such claims were more acceptable in those communities than in other cultures. Evans' lecture was another brave exposition of the psycho-social model that met with somewhat muted applause. This was clearly not the sort of material that the audience wanted to hear, but Evans gave them a radically different perspective to that promoted by most mainstream UFO proponents. Next was Jenny Randles talking about "Wonderland" - a small area in north Cheshire that has produced countless paranormal claims over the past century or so. Randles admitted to being fascinated by what has become known as "window areas" - areas where the normal rules of time and space appear to occasionally break down. The Cheshire window area has already featured in CW12 but this lecture introduced a wide range of unusual phenomena that for some reason appear to cluster in this small undistinguished area. These phenomena include : - alien contact claims dating back to the "Zomdic" case at Runcorn in the 1950s, - several poltergeist cases, - sightings of green fireballs similar to those in New Mexico during the early 1950s and in East Anglia in the early 1980s, - crop circles dating back to the 1930s and 1940s, - accounts of meetings with fairies and pixies, - a phantom monk, - humming/screeching sounds at night [vortices?], - close encounter cases involving police officers, - UFOs that fade in and out of reality, - time lapse cases, - spontaneous human combustion, - ghosts, - car stop cases, - the famous "Cow nap" case from 1978 (at the "Devil's Garden"), and so on, and so on. All this evidence is presented in Jenny's new book "Mysteries of the Mersey Valley" (Sigma). It was interesting that Lewis Carroll, the author of "Alice In Wonderland", lived in this area. Were his fictional stories based on local folklore ? Did the area boast a history of paranormal claims dating back centuries ? Randles proposed that there is something special about this rural area - something which Science should be researching not ignoring. She challenged the audience to go away and search for more window areas to study and understand. Let us hope the study of such areas brings further clues about why apparently disparate phenomena should cluster in this way. Is this clustering an illusion due to sociological factors, or is there a common factor in these "window areas" which occasionally affects the way witnesses perceive the world ? This was a fascinating lecture which took us straight to the heart of the anomaly problem. Enter the Superstar. The public just love Budd Hopkins. Nothing Hopkins says is challenged - not even the ludicrous tripe dished up at the Sheffield Conference by one of the world's most well known UFO authors. Hopkins began his unabashed promotion of the "Linda" case by claiming that "We have reason to believe that there are many other witnesses". Unfortunately - according to Hopkins' reasoning - because the case hasn't yet been publicised these witnesses have yet to come forward to confirm "Linda's" claim that she and her children were floated into a giant brightly lit UFO hovering above Downtown Manhattan at 3 am in the morning. A colleague of mine was sat next to me and laughed out loud at this absurd statement - sadly one of only a handful of members of the 250 strong audience who knew the facts. At this someone in front of us turned round and told us to shut up, "Who are you ? Why do you people bother coming here ?". Why indeed ? According to material in my possession Linda's real name has been published in countless magazine articles whilst the case itself has been promoted in "Omni", the New York Times, MUFON UFO Journal and IUR, so why did Hopkins claim otherwise ? Hopkins' lecture continued on its merry way, oblivious to the major problems that have been voiced about the case by its critics. Here are some of Hopkins' latest claims:- - the nasal implant inserted into "Linda" 's nose by the aliens has been recovered, photographed and examined in laboratories. An intriguing slide was shown which purported to be a side-on view of one of these nasal implants; - 3 independent video tapes of the encounter allegedly exist [!!]; - several independent witnesses claim that they saw the UFO but mistakenly thought it was part of a movie with special effects [which rather conveniently explains why they didn't come forward at the time of the abduction to confirm that it "really" happened]; - "Dan" and "Richard" kidnapped "Linda" in order to determine whether or not she had webbed feet [apparently - according to "Richard" and "Dan" this would be proof that "Linda" was actually an alien - in fact it is surely proof that "Richard" and "Dan" know a great deal about the alien abduction literature than they are letting on]; - "Dan" has subsequently had a nervous breakdown [presumably this means he can no longer be contacted so that his story can be verified]; - the UFO was so bright that there was "enough light for thousands of people to see them", "the whole sky was lit up" [so why the distinct lack of independent witnesses ?]; and - the UFO abducted "Linda" and her two children and then crashed into the Hudson River but didn't resurface [note the same motif as the early crash-retrieval reports again]. A local coastguard unit failed to pick up the UFO on its radar system. At this point in Hopkins' lecture I have to admit I was laughing so much that I stopped taking notes. This is the kind of case which the Official Skeptics must take enormous delight in using to discredit UFOlogists and the fascinating phenomena we study. There are dozens of major objections to what is being claimed. For example, quite aside from the fact that "Richard" and "Dan" have only ever visited "Linda" [do they really exist], Jenny Randles has informed me that there is a major problem with the drawings which have been produced by "Janet Kimball" and "Dan". "Janet Kimball" -if she exists - claims she was driving her car over Brooklyn Bridge when her car stalled inexplicably. She claims that she observed the abduction from this vantage point along with other witnesses in stalled cars. "Dan" claims he was positioned much closer, less than 500 feet away. Both witnesses draw the "abduction" as if they were face on but in fact both groups of witnesses were viewing the alleged event from different angles. Why is this ? It seems strange that two of the three major witnesses have only ever corresponded with Hopkins - just as with the Gulf Breeze hoax "Dan" and "Richard" could be fabrications by the primary witness in an attempt to support her claims. Problems exist over the distance between "Janet Kimball" and "Linda" 's apartment block. According to Dr Willy Smith's important article in IUR Vol 18 No 2 it would have been impossible for "Janet Kimball" to have drawn the alleged sighting depicting "Linda" 's hair at a distance of 1560 feet - because at this distance human eye sight is incapable of distinguishing such detail. This argument is vigorously contested in IUR Vol 18 No 3. However, by far the most damning aspect of this celebrated case is the fact that there are some very striking similarities between the claimed "abduction" and the plot of a fictional novel, "Night Eyes". These major problems with the "Linda" case are so important that I have published a revised edition of the controversial paper by Hansen, Stefula and Butler which has been published on the MUFONET BBS. The original paper by Hansen et. al. has been challenged in very strong terms in both MUFON UFO Journal and International UFO Reporter. Despite the publication of these very negative findings the controversy seems destined to continue for some time. However, what is so sad here is that Budd Hopkins is actually a nice well- meaning researcher who genuinely believes he is helping the witnesses to come to terms with a real physical encounter with aliens. Hopkins' research - quite understandably - has been widely promoted on the international UFO lecture circuit and in numerous TV appearances and newspaper articles. What can UFOlogists do to persuade Hopkins that he is most definitely wrong to accept the literal interpretation of alleged alien abduction claims ? How much damage is Hopkins going to do before the penny drops ? In the crop circle business I have repeatedly criticised people I can prove to be cynical and outrageous liars. With Hopkins it is different as no one can doubt Hopkins' sincerity. What can we do ? The final lecture on Saturday was by Linda Moulton-Howe on animal mutilation cases. I admit that at this point I left the lecture hall - I never did like blood and gore. According to people I spoke to afterwards Moulton-Howe's lecture aimed to link crop circles, alien abductions and animal mutilations altogether ! Perhaps this is what people want to believe about UFOs ? On Sunday the first speaker was the Rev. Donald Thomas, someone who has been involved in the UFO scene for many years. This was basically a historical overview from someone who lived throughout the 1960s and who also accepted the literal truth of what was being claimed. Thomas' lecture featured classic case such as the Lakenheath-Bentwaters multiple radar-visual military encounter, the 1967 Police chase across Dartmoor [which has always been dismissed by most UFOlogists and skeptics as a mis-identification of the planet Venus, although I recall that it featured on the front page of several national newspapers] and the alleged landing of a spaceship at Broadlands Estate here in Romsey in the mid 1960s. Giving the first lecture on a Sunday morning is never very easy and Rev. Thomas' cause was not helped by the poor quality of the tape recordings he had faithfully kept of major UFO stories from this fascinating era. I didn't make copious notes of the remaining Sunday lectures as these were all basically repeats of earlier lectures at Sheffield and elsewhere. Following Cynthia Hind's description and video of an alleged abduction case from Zimbabwe there was more from Linda-Moulton Howe on alleged animal mutilations by evil aliens and much much more from Hopkins on the second greatest UFO abduction case on record. This too was a scream ! Hopkin's new case involved a "nervous" young couple - named at MUFON's July Symposium as "Sam" and "Jenny Washburn" and their two sons. Hopkins met the couple after one of his lectures in Brisbane, Australia in late 1992. They claimed that five days ago "Sam", "Jenny" and one of their sons had all suffered nosebleeds from the same nostril. For years "Sam" had suffered from a terrifying recurring nightmare which had begun in childhood. According to Hopkins these are both symptoms of repeated abductions. Hopkins then presented his ace card. The Washburns had given Hopkins a series of polaroid prints showing a playground scene with their children playing on swings and slides. Four of the prints were bright red and featured sand, sea and some palm trees. According to Hopkins these photographs were taken pointing directly at the sun so the bright red nature of these prints won't surprise anyone with a basic understanding of photography. Anyhow, the punchline was this. According to Hopkins these three prints SHOULD have included the young couple and their children but by some dastardly clever trick the aliens had managed to abduct them by making them invisible just as the camera's timer opened the shutter !! Subsequently, according to MUFON UFO Journal, Hopkins subjected both adults to regression hypnosis to discover what "really" happened. According to Sam the family were approached by two small silver balls which hovered above the beach. He saw Jenny and the two boys sucked up into a larger area of brilliance. The silver balls reminded Sam of earlier encounters with UFOs in his early childhood [important clue here]. Jenny's testimony was more explicit. She recalls standing on the beach and feeling something big hovering above the family. Then she and her two sons were levitated into the UFO whilst Sam stood on the beach holding the camera. Inside the UFO they were approached by two small figures and separated. Jenny was then subjected to the standard gynaecological examination. According to Hopkins, the aliens were capable of abducting all four members of the family by cloaking themselves inside a field of invisibility which lasted most of an hour. Of course this is all complete and utter nonsense but this didn't stop Hopkins from promoting this as yet another proven case of alien intervention. Just what can we do to stop this man ? How much more damage is Hopkins going to do to witnesses before his "respected" UFO research is exposed and condemned by the professional psychological community ? Some of these witnesses are children so what kind of psychological damage is Hopkins doing to them ? One final point. Cynics might also point out that polaroids don't produce negatives so potential UFO hoaxes are less easy to detect. Sadly despite his obvious sincerity Hopkins never stops to think for one second about problems like this. By leaving himself open to exploitation Hopkins has followed hundreds of his predecessors -all of them "respected" UFO researchers - into the valley of despair. Oh dear ! If you want to read the original promotion of this case see MUFON UFO Journal Number 293, September 1992 (103 Oldtowne Road, Seguin, Texas, 78155). If you want to see the critique of this case by Don Johnson and Dr Willy Smith plus Jerry Clark and Budd Hopkins' response to the controversial paper by Stefula, Butler, and Hansen get hold of vol 18 nos 2 and 3 of International UFO Reporter (write to the J.Allen Hynek Center for UFO Studies, 2457 West Peterson Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60659). I also recommend that you obtain the excellent Journal of UFO Studies, Vol 1 (1989) from the same address (# 18 including p&p) as this contains some important articles summarising the debate from both the pro-ETH angle and from mainstream psychiatric/psychological perspectives. On a more positive note Paul Devereux presented another excellent lecture covering earth lights, altered states of consciousness and UFO window areas. Like Evans Devereux's position is that UFOs are caused by natural mechanisms and processes rather than alien intervention. There is a major university study underway in the States examining the effect of what might be natural light phenomena on the brain. Some of this field research is based at Marfa in Texas, a location with a long established folklore of nocturnal lights. Interestingly our own Professor Ohtsuki visited this location in 1987 as part of his ball lighting research. Devereux also very properly withdrew his earlier promotion of the Hucker lights ["Earth Lights Revelation" page 135-6] which he now believes to be car headlights, a commonly-suggested explanation for anomalous light phenomena. During the break we were treated to the Alton Barnes video film reported in CW18 plus a sensational film of an out-of-focus UFO [an aircraft covered with bright lights ?] just before it allegedly crashed into a forest in Ottowa, Canada in either November 1989 or 1991. This is the "Guardian" film which has subsequently been shown on Breakfast Time TV. Apparently it was sent anonymously to Bob Oeschler by a "Commander X" - just like the bogus MJ-12 documents were seeded into the UFO community by someone with a warped sense of humour. I spoke to a young Canadian UFOlogist during the interval who told me that he had personally visited the site of the alleged UFO crash but found no evidence of ground traces that might confirm the story. It seems that nothing has been learnt from the disasters of promoting Roswell and Spitsbergen. Readers will recall that Bob Oeschler's previous involvement in major UFO stories has been widely criticised by numerous UFO researchers, who have variously dismissed him as a "crank", a "charlatan" and "a confidence trickster". Times don't change do they ! All in all I enjoyed the Sheffield Conference. It was fun ripping the alien intelligence believers to shreds with their daft theories and sensational research. Once again it seems that UFOlogy is actually a composite of two directly opposed subjects - a battle ground between the religious fervour of the uncritical all- believing alien intelligence movement and the sociological/folk- lore approach of the more rational geo-physical/psycho-social movement. As I reported in my review of the 1992 Conference in UFO Brigantia, what are UFOlogists doing by wedding these two diametrically opposed subject areas together ? How can we cut ourselves away from the popular presentation of the UFO evidence ? Isn't it time we publicly rejected the alien intelligence movement and called ourselves and our subject areas something else ? Alleged Alien Abductions The "Linda" Case I hope readers will bear with me as I make my first trip into the alien abduction "debate". I do so for a number of reasons. Firstly the following report gives a very different perspective to the claims being made by Hopkins and his supporters, and to my knowledge has not yet been published in Britain. Secondly there is much to be learnt from this case about the way UFOlogists repeatedly make critical errors by not asking the right questions. Thirdly this case demonstrates the serious problems of accepting the literal reality of highly exotic claims and then refusing to continually reappraise the case as new evidence emerges. And lastly because if the allegations in this paper are true then some proponents of this case have gone down that dark dingy lane of suppressing negative evidence - the same lane that certain crop circle researchers disappeared down several years ago. This article first appeared on the MUFON BBS system in June. It immediately sparked something of an argument between the system operator - John Komar - and Sheldon Wernikoff - remember him ? Wernikoff features in Meaden's "Circles From The Sky" (page 200). It appears that John Komar decided to restrict circulation of this material because of its controversial attack on Budd Hopkins, Jerry Clark and MUFON's Walt Andrus - arguably the three most influential US UFOlogists. Wernikoff argued that despite its controversial nature and stinging attacks the paper had a right to be posted as it contained important new evidence that was relevant to the debate. John Komar disagreed but eventually backed down. Komar recently resigned as the System Operator for the MUFONET BBS claiming that it was for business reasons. I won't bore readers with all the details of this apparent censorship. Instead, here is one of the world's most notorious UFO articles of recent years: -To: Those Interested in the UFO Problem From: Joseph J. Stefula, Richard D. Butler and George P. Hansen. Date: 08 January 1993 Re: Budd Hopkins' case of the abduction of Linda Napolitano. Enclosed is our report on the much acclaimed case of the UFO abduction of Linda Napolitano. We invite your comments. Hopkins' claims have generated enormous publicity and have been mentioned in the New York Times, Omni, the Wall Street Journal, and Paris Match, among others. As such, this case is likely to have a substantial impact on the field of ufology. Leadership in both the Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) and the J. Allen Hynek Center for UFO Studies (CUFOS) aggressively opposed our investigation, and both previously refused to publish our criticisms. This raises grave questions about the scientific and journalistic integrity of MUFON and CUFOS. Those organizations have many members, and we are unable to provide more than a few copies of this paper to others. We ask you to help us with the distribution. Please feel free to make copies of this article, post it on electronic bulletin boards, and print it in periodicals. A Critique of Budd Hopkins' Case of the UFO Abduction of Linda Napolitano by Joseph J. Stefula, Richard D. Butler, and George P. Hansen ABSTRACT: Budd Hopkins has made a number of public presentations of a purported UFO abduction case with multiple witnesses. The primary abductee is Linda Napolitano, who lives in an apartment building on the lower east side of Manhattan (New York City). She claims to have been abducted by extraterrestrial aliens from her 12th floor apartment in November 1989. It is claimed that three witnesses in a car two blocks away observed Linda and alien beings float out of a window and ascend into a craft. One alleged witness was United Nations Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar. It is also claimed that a woman on the Brooklyn Bridge observed the abduction. Linda has reported nose bleeds, and one X-ray displays an implant in her nose. To date, Hopkins has provided no full, detailed written report, but he did publish a couple five page articles in the September and December 1992 issues of the Mufon UFO Journal and made a presentation at the 1992 MUFON symposium. We have made use of that information as well as records from other presentations, and we have interviewed the abductee. A number of serious questions arose from our examination. The case has many exotic aspects, and we have identified a science fiction novel that may have served as the basis for elements of the story. Several prominent leaders in ufology have become involved, and their behaviour and statements have been quite curious. Some have aggressively attempted to suppress evidence of a purported attempted murder. The implications for the understanding of ufology are discussed. Budd Hopkins is the person most responsible for drawing attention to the problem of the extraterrestrial (ET) abduction experience. His efforts have been instrumental in stimulating both media attention and scientific research devoted to the problem. He has written two popular books (Missing Time, 1981, and Intruders, 1987), established the Intruders Foundation, and has made innumerable appearances at conferences and in the media. Although Hopkins is neither a trained therapist, an academic, nor a scientist, he has involved such people in his work. John E. Mack, M.D., a Pulitzer Prize winner and former head of the psychiatry department at Harvard Medical School, has praised Hopkins' work and acknowledged his indebtedness to him (Mack, 1992a, 1992b). Hopkins has collaborated with university professors in co-authoring an article in the book Unusual Personal Experiences (1992), which was sent to 100,000 mental health professionals. He has testified as an expert witness at a hearing regarding the medical competence of a physician who claims to have been abducted (McKenna, 1992). Because of such strong endorsements and impressive affiliations, and because of his untiring work on behalf of abductees, Hopkins has become the single most visible figure in the UFO abduction field. His contributions, positive or negative, will be quickly noticed by those inside and outside ufology. Last year, Hopkins made a number of public presentations about a spectacular UFO abduction case occurring in November 1989 and having multiple witnesses. The primary abductee was Linda Napolitano, a woman living on the 12th floor of a high-rise apartment building in lower Manhattan (New York City) [Hopkins has previously used the pseudonym "Linda Cortile" in this case]. It is claimed that three witnesses in a car two blocks away observed Linda and three ET aliens emerge from a window and ascend into a craft. Further it is claimed that a woman who was driving across the Brooklyn Bridge also saw the event. The case has generated enormous interest and drawn international attention. It has been discussed in the Wall Street Journal (Jefferson, 1992), Omni (Baskin, 1992), Paris Match (De Brosses, 1992), the New York Times (Sontag, 1992), and Hopkins and Napolitano have appeared on the television show Inside Edition. The Mufon UFO Journal labelled it "The Abduction Case of the Century" (Stacy, 1992, p. 9). Even the technical magazine ADVANCE for Radiologic Science Professionals carried a discussion of Linda's nasal implant (Hatfield, 1992). We should expect continuing coverage of the affair not only in the UFO press but also in the major media. In a short article previewing his 1992 MUFON symposium presentation, he wrote: "I will be presenting what I believe to be the most important case for establishing the objective reality of UFO abductions that I have yet encountered" (Hopkins, 1992, p. 20). During his lecture at the symposium he stated: "This is probably the most important case I've ever run into in my life" (tape recorded, July 1992). In his abstract for the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Abduction Study Conference held in June 1992 he wrote: "The importance of this case is virtually immeasurable, as it powerfully supports both the objective reality of UFO abductions and the accuracy of regressive hypnosis as employed with this abductee." Because of Hopkins' renown, and because of his evaluation, this case warrants our careful scrutiny. THE AUTHORS' INVOLVEMENT The first two authors had learned of the case before Hopkins had spoken publicly of it, and they decided to monitor its progress. They regularly briefed the third author as their investigation progressed. As the affair became publicized, all three became concerned about the long term effect it might have on abduction research. For several years Richard Butler attended Hopkins' informal meetings organized for abductees and abduction researchers. Butler became familiar with the case during those meetings, and he invited Stefula to a gathering in early October 1991. At the meeting, Hopkins outlined the case, and afterward, Stefula had a chance to chat with Linda about her experiences. Butler and Stefula gave Linda their telephone numbers. She was advised that if she needed any assistance she could contact them. Stefula told her that he had numerous contacts in federal and state law enforcement agencies that could be of aid to her. The same information was provided to Hopkins. On January 28, 1992, Linda requested a meeting with Richard Butler, and on February 1, 1992, Linda, Stefula and Butler met in New York City, and Linda provided additional details about her experiences (described below). During that meeting, she asked them not to inform Hopkins of their discussions. At the 1992 MUFON convention in Albuquerque, New Mexico in July, both Hopkins and Linda appeared on the podium and presented the case. Stefula attended the convention and heard the talk, and disturbing questions arose. Some of the statements directly contradicted what Linda had earlier told Stefula and Butler. We contacted Hopkins in an attempt to resolve these matters, but he declined to meet with us, saying that he didn't want to discuss the case until his book manuscript was submitted. Despite his initial reluctance, eventually a meeting was arranged on October 3, 1992 at Hopkins' home, and a few more details then emerged. SUMMARY OF CASE In order to compile this summary of alleged events, we have relied upon Hopkins' and Linda's talks from the podium of the 1992 MUFON symposium, on our interviews with Linda, on Hopkins' talk at the Portsmouth, New Hampshire UFO conference, September 13, 1992, and Hopkins' two five-page articles in the September and December issues of the Mufon UFO Journal. In April 1989 Hopkins received a letter from Linda Napolitano, a resident of New York City. Linda wrote that she had begun reading his book Intruders and had remembered that 13 years earlier she had detected a bump next to her nose. It was examined by a physician who insisted that she had undergone nasal surgery. Linda claimed that she never had such surgery, and she even checked with her mother, who confirmed that impression. Hopkins took an interest in the case because there was a potential for medical evidence and because Linda lived relatively close to Hopkins, which facilitated their meeting. Linda visited Hopkins and discussed her past experiences with him. She recalled some pertinent earlier events in her life but believed that she was no longer directly involved with any abduction phenomena. Linda then began attending meetings of Hopkins' support group for abductees. On November 30, 1989, Linda called Hopkins and reported that she had been abducted during the early morning hours of that day, and she provided some details. A few days later, she underwent regressive hypnosis, and Linda remembered floating out of her apartment window, 12 stories above the ground. She recalled ascending in a bluish-white beam of light into a craft which was hovering over the building. Richard and Dan Over a year later (February 1991), Hopkins received a letter signed with the first names, Richard and Dan. (We have no hard evidence that "Richard" and "Dan" actually exist. In order to avoid over-burdening the reader, we will typically omit the word "alleged" when mentioning them.) The letter claimed that the two were police officers who were under cover in a car beneath the elevated FDR Drive between 3:00 and 3:30 a.m. in late November 1989. Above a high-rise apartment building, they observed a large, bright reddish-orange object with green lights around its side. They wrote that they saw a woman and several strange figures float out a window and up into the object. Richard and Dan said that they had come across Hopkins' name and decided to write to him. They went on to say that they were extremely concerned about her well being, wanted to locate the woman, talk to her, and be assured that she was alive and safe. The two also mentioned that they could identify the building and window from which she emerged. After receiving the letter, Hopkins promptly called Linda and told her that she might expect a visit from two policemen. A few days later, Linda telephoned Hopkins to tell him that she had been visited by Richard and Dan. When they had knocked on her door, introducing themselves as police officers, she was not too surprised because she reports that police frequently canvass her apartment complex looking for witnesses to crimes. Even with Hopkins' prior call, she did not expect Richard and Dan to actually appear. After they arrived and entered her home, there was an emotional greeting, and they expressed relief that she was alive. However, Richard and Dan were disinclined to meet with or talk to Hopkins, despite the fact that they had written him earlier and despite Linda's entreaties to do so. Richard asked Linda if it was acceptable for them to write out an account of their experience and then read it into a tape recorder. She agreed, and a couple weeks later Hopkins received a tape recording from Richard describing their experience. Some time thereafter, Hopkins received a letter from Dan giving a bit more information. The letter reported that Richard had taken a leave of absence because the close encounter had been so emotionally traumatic. Dan also mentioned that Richard secretly watched Linda. (This information is from Hopkins' oral presentation at the 1992 MUFON symposium in Albuquerque. At the Portsmouth, New Hampshire conference, Hopkins said that he had received a letter from Richard saying that Dan was forced to take of leave of absence. It is not clear if Hopkins misspoke at some point, or whether both individuals took leaves of absence.) Hopkins received another letter from Dan which said that he and Richard were not really police officers but actually security officers who had been driving a very important person (VIP) to a helicopter pad in lower Manhattan when the sighting occurred. The letter claimed that their car stalled, and Richard had pushed it, parking it beneath the FDR Drive. According to Dan, the VIP had also witnessed the abduction event and had become hysterical. The Kidnappings Linda claimed that in April of 1991 she encountered Richard on the street near her apartment. She was asked to get into a car that Dan was driving, but she refused. Richard picked her up and, with some struggle, forced her into the vehicle. Linda reported that she was driven around for 3 1/2 hours, interrogated about the aliens, and asked whether she worked for the government. She also said that she was forced to remove her shoes so they could examine her feet to determine whether she was an ET alien (they later claimed that aliens lack toes). Linda did remember another car being involved with the kidnapping, and under hypnotic regression she recalled the license plate number of that car, as well as part of the number of the car in which she rode. Hopkins reports that the numbers have been traced to particular "agencies" (he gave no further details). At the MUFON symposium, Linda was asked if she had reported the kidnapping to the police. She said that she had not and went on to say that the kidnapping was legal because it had to do with national security. In conversations with Butler in early 1992, Linda had expressed concerns about her personal safety. A meeting was arranged with Stefula because of his background in law enforcement. During the afternoon and early evening of February 1, the three met in New York City, and Linda described further details of the kidnappings. She reported that on the morning of October 15, 1991, Dan accosted her on the street and pulled her into a red Jaguar sports car. Linda happened to be carrying a tape recorder and was able to surreptitiously record a few minutes of Dan's questioning, but he soon discovered and confiscated it. Dan drove to a beach house on the shore of Long Island. There he demanded that Linda remove her clothes and put on a white nightgown, similar to the one she wore the night of the abduction. He said he wanted to have sex with her. She refused but then agreed to put on the nightgown over her clothes. Once she did, Dan dropped to his knees and started to talk incoherently about her being the "Lady of the Sands." She fled the beach house, but Dan caught her on the beach and bent her arm behind her. He placed two fingers on the back of her neck, leading Linda to believe that it was a gun. He then forced her into the water and pushed her head under twice. He continued to rave incoherently, and as her head was being pushed under for the third time, she believed that she would not come up again. Then, a "force" hit Dan and knocked him back onto the beach. She started to run but heard a sound like a gun being cocked. She looked back and saw Dan taking a picture of her (Linda mentioned that pictures from the beach were eventually sent to Hopkins). She continued running, but Richard appeared beside her, seemingly out of nowhere. He stopped her and convinced her to return to the beach house and told her that he would control Dan by giving him a Mickey Finn. She agreed. Once inside, Richard put Dan in the shower to wash off the mud and sand from the beach. This gave Linda a chance to search the premises; she recovered her cassette tape and discovered stationery bearing a Central Intelligence Agency letterhead. In a brief conversation on October 3, 1992, Hopkins told Hansen that Linda came to him shortly after she arrived back in Manhattan after the kidnapping. She was dishevelled, had sand in her hair, and was traumatized by the experience. Further Contacts with Richard and Dan During the February 1 meeting with Butler and Stefula, Linda reported that she had met Richard outside a Manhattan bank on November 21, 1991. He told her of Dan's deteriorating mental condition. During the Christmas season, Linda received a card and a three page letter from Dan (dated 12/14/91). The letter bore a United Nations stamp and postmark (the UN building in New York has a post office which anyone can use). Dan wrote that he was in a mental institution and was kept sedated. He expressed a strong romantic interest in Linda. Some of his remarks suggested that he wanted to kidnap her, take her out of the country, and marry her; Linda seemed alarmed by this (she gave a copy of the letter to Stefula and Butler). Linda also asserted that on December 15 and December 16, 1991, one of the men had tried to make contact with her near the shopping area of the South Street Seaport. He was driving a large black sedan with Saudi Arabian United Nations license plates. During the first incident, to avoid him, Linda reported that she went into a shop. The second day a similar thing happened, and she stood next to some businessmen until he left the area. The Third Man At the February 1 meeting, Linda mentioned that Hopkins had received a letter from "the third man" (the VIP), and she was able to repeat entire sentences from this letter, seemingly verbatim. It discussed ecological danger to the planet, and Linda indicated that aliens were involved in ending the Cold War. The letter ended with a warning to Hopkins to stop searching for "the third man" because it could potentially do harm to world peace. Linda also related a few more details of her November 1989 abduction. She said that the men in the car had felt a strong vibration at the time of the sighting. Linda also claimed that in subsequent hypnotic regressions she recalled being on a beach with Dan, Richard, and the third man, and she thought somehow she was being used by the aliens to control the men. She communicated with the men telepathically and said that she felt that she had known Richard prior to the November 1989 abduction, and she suggested that they possibly had been abducted together previously. We also learned that the third man was actually Javier Perez de Cuellar, at that time Secretary General of the United Nations. Linda claimed that the various vehicles used in her kidnappings had been traced to several countries' missions at the UN. At the Portsmouth, New Hampshire conference, Hopkins spoke of the third man saying: "I am trying to do what I can to shame this person to come forward." Witness on the Brooklyn Bridge In the summer of 1991, a year and a half after the UFO abduction, Hopkins received a letter from a woman who is a retired telephone operator from Putnam County, New York (Hopkins has given this woman the pseudonym of Janet Kimble). Hopkins did not bother to open the letter, and in November 1991, he received another one from her marked on the outside "CONFIDENTIAL, RE: BROOKLYN BRIDGE." The odd outside marking and the fact that she had written two letters, seem to have raised no suspicions in Hopkins' mind. The woman, a widow of about sixty, claimed to have been driving on the Brooklyn Bridge at 3:16 a.m., November 30, 1989. She reported that her car stopped and the lights went out. She too saw a large, brightly lit object over a building; in fact, the light was so bright that she was forced to shield her eyes, though she was over a quarter mile away. Nevertheless, she claimed to have observed four figures in fetal positions emerge from a window. The figures simultaneously uncurled and then moved up into the craft. Ms. Kimble was quite frightened by the event, and people in cars behind her were "running all around their cars with theirs (sic) hands on their heads, screaming from horror and disbelief" (quoted in Hopkins, 1992d, p. 7). She wrote: "I have never travelled back to New York City after what I saw and I never will again, for any reason" (Hopkins, 1992d, p. 5). Despite her intense fear and all the commotion, she had the presence of mind to rummage through her purse to find her cigarette lighter to illuminate her watch in order to determine the time. Hopkins has interviewed this woman in person and over the phone. The woman claimed to have obtained his name in a bookstore; she called the Manhattan directory assistance for his telephone number and then looked up his address in the Manhattan White Pages. She alleges that she was reticent about speaking of the incident and had only told her son, daughter, sister, and brother-in-law about the event. The Nasal X-ray In November 1991 a doctor, whom Hopkins describes as "closely connected with Linda," took an X-ray of Linda's head because she knew about the story of the nasal implant and because Linda frequently spoke of the problem with her nose. The X-ray was not developed immediately. A few days later the doctor brought it to Linda but was very nervous and unwilling to discuss it. Linda took it to Hopkins, who showed it to a neurosurgeon friend of his. The neurosurgeon was astounded; a sizeable, clearly non- natural object could be seen in the nasal area. Hopkins has shown a slide of the X-ray during his presentations, and the implant is strikingly apparent, even to a lay audience. The object has a shaft approximately 1/4 inch long with a curly-cue wire structure on each end. Other Unusual Aspects of the Case During our meeting with Linda on February 1, she gave us additional miscellaneous details that might be pertinent. We were told that she believed that she was under surveillance and described a light silver-gray van that had parked near her apartment. She also claimed that she had once been a professional singer and the lead on a hit record, but she had lost her singing voice one day while in the shower. Linda mentioned that she was given to understand that her blood was quite unusual. A doctor had informed her that her red blood cells did not die, but instead they rejuvenated. She wondered whether this might be due to an alien influence; some time later she attempted to locate the doctor but was unable to do so. Linda seemed to imply that she now believed that she was part alien or somehow worked with the aliens. Linda also told us that she had an agreement with Budd Hopkins to split equally any profits from a book on the case. INITIAL PROBLEMS WITH THE CASE There are a number of obvious but unanswered questions that raise immediate doubts about the credibility of the case. The most serious problem is that the three alleged principal corroborating witnesses (Richard, Dan, and Perez de Cuellar) have not been interviewed face-to-face by Hopkins, although it has been over a year and a half since initial contact with Hopkins and over three years since the abduction. Richard and Dan allegedly met with Linda and have written letters to Hopkins. Linda has a picture of Dan. Yet Dan and Richard refuse to speak directly with Hopkins. No hard evidence confirms that Richard and Dan even exist. Though they initially expressed extreme concern over the well being of Linda, the alleged "Dan" and "Richard" waited more than a year before contacting Linda and Hopkins. Why ? Furthermore, they contacted Hopkins before they visited Linda. How did this come about ? After all, they knew the location of Linda's apartment, so it would seem that they would have had no reason to contact Hopkins. Why did they bother with him at all ? The woman on the bridge said that before contacting Hopkins she only discussed the matter with her son, daughter, sister and brother-in-law. Why didn't she contact other UFO investigators ? Why only Hopkins ? If there is some unclear reporting on this point and she did actually contact others, can such be verified ? Has there been any investigation of this woman such as checking with her neighbours, friends, family, or previous employers? What is her background ? Has she had any previous relationship with Linda ? These questions have not been addressed, and thus the credibility of the only directly interviewed, corroborating, first-hand witness remains in doubt. Dan has spent time in a mental institution. Richard suffered extreme emotional distress, forcing him to take a leave of absence from his job. Assuming that these two people actually exist, one must now be careful in accepting their claims (even if offered in good faith). Despite their debilitating mental problems, at least one of them was allowed to drive a car with UN license plates. Are we really to believe that they returned to active duty in a sensitive position (presumably carrying firearms) and were given use of an official car ? Who was the doctor who took the X-rays ? We are only told that this person is closely connected with Linda. Why isn't a formal report available ? Given the alarming nature of the outcome, why wasn't there an immediate examination ? Linda said that the doctor was "nervous" and didn't want to talk about the X- ray. It is not clear whether Hopkins has ever met this alleged doctor. Instead, Hopkins showed the X-ray to a friend of his. Some have speculated that Linda may have simply put some small object in her nose and had a friendly X-ray technician assist. We have seen no evidence to exclude this possibility. Linda claims that she was kidnapped twice, nearly drowned, and further harassed. Yet she refuses to contact the police, even after Hopkins' urging. During the February 1, 1992 meeting with Stefula and Butler, Linda asked if she had legal grounds to "shoot" Dan if he attempted another abduction of her by force. Stefula advised against it and recommended that she go to the police and make an official complaint. She declined. If she was afraid, why didn't her husband contact authorities ? The most plausible reason is that if a report was filed, and her story proved false, she could be subject to criminal charges. Linda's failure here raises enormous questions of credibility. OUR INVESTIGATION Despite the numerous problems outlined above, we believed it worthwhile to gain additional information because so many people had contacted us with questions. On September 19, 1992, Stefula, Butler, and Hansen travelled to New York City in order to visit the site of the alleged abduction. We found that Linda's apartment complex has a large courtyard with guard house manned 24 hours a day. We talked with the security guard and his supervisor and asked if they had ever heard about a UFO encounter near the complex. They reported hearing nothing about one. We also asked if the police routinely enter the complex and undertake door-to-door canvassing in order to find witnesses to crimes. They said that this was a very rare practice. We obtained the name and phone number of the apartment manager and called him a few days later. He reported knowing nothing about the UFO sighting, nor had he heard anything about it from any of the approximately 1600 residents in the complex. We also visited the site under the FDR drive where Richard and Dan purportedly parked their car. This was in a direct line of sight and nearly across the street from the loading dock of the New York Post. We spoke with an employee of the Post, who told us that the dock was in use through most of the night. A few days later, we called the New York Post and spoke to the person who was the loading dock manager in 1989. He told us that the dock is in use until 5:00 a.m. and that there are many trucks that come and go frequently during the early morning hours. The manager knew nothing of the UFO which supposedly appeared only a couple blocks away. Also in September, a colleague of ours contacted the Downtown Heliport, on Pier Six on the East River of Manhattan. That is the only heliport on the east side of Manhattan between Linda's apartment and the lower tip of the island. Our colleague was informed that the normal hours of operation of the heliport are from 7:00 a.m to 7:00 p.m. The Senior Airport Operations Agent researched the records and found that there were no helicopter movements on November 30, 1989 before normal hours. Our colleague was also told that about six months previously, the heliport authorities had been approached by a man in his fifties with white hair who had made a similar inquiry. That man had asked about a UFO that had crashed into the East River. The Meeting of October 3 On October 3, 1992, we met with Hopkins and his colleagues at his residence in Manhattan. Among those in attendance were David Jacobs, Walter H. Andrus, and Jerome Clark. During our meeting a number of questions were raised, and some of Hopkins' answers revealed a great deal about his investigations as well as the attitudes of Jacobs, Andrus, and Clark. Linda's statements also told us much. We inquired if Hopkins had asked the guards of the apartment complex whether they had seen the UFO. He indicated that he had not done so. This is quite surprising, considering that the UFO was so bright that the woman on the bridge had to shield her eyes from it even though she was more than a quarter mile distant. One would have thought that Hopkins would have made inquiries of the guards considering the spectacular nature of the event. We noted that Linda had claimed that police canvassing of her apartment complex was a common occurrence. We asked Hopkins if he had attempted to verify this with the guards or the building manager. He indicated that he did not feel it necessary. Although this is a minor point, it is one of the few directly checkable statements made by Linda, but Hopkins did not attempt to confirm it. We asked about the weather on the night of the abduction. Amazingly, Hopkins told us that he didn't know the weather conditions for that period. This was perhaps one of the most revealing moments, and it gives great insight into Hopkins' capabilities as an investigator. If the weather had been foggy, rainy, or snowing, the visibility could have been greatly hampered, and the reliability of the testimony of the witnesses would need to be evaluated accordingly. Even the very first form in the MUFON Field Investigator's Manual requests information on weather conditions (Fowler, 1983, p. 30). We ourselves did check the weather and knew the conditions did not impede visibility. But the fact that Hopkins apparently had not bothered to obtain even this most basic investigatory information was illuminating. He claims to have much supporting evidence that he has not revealed to outsiders; however, because of Hopkins' demonstrated failure to check even the most rudimentary facts, we place absolutely no credence in his undisclosed "evidence." During the discussions, Hopkins' partisans made allusions to other world figures involved in this event, though they did not give names. Hopkins' supporters, who had been given information denied to us, seemed to believe that there was a large motorcade that carried Perez de Cuellar and these other dignitaries in the early morning hours of November 30, 1989. At the meeting, we presented an outside expert consultant who for many years had served in dignitary protective services. He described the extensive preplanning required for moving officials and the massive coordination during the movements. Many people and networks would be alerted if there were any problems at all (such as a car stalling, or a delay in passing checkpoints). His detailed presentation seemed to take Hopkins aback. The consultant listed several specialized terms used by the dignitary protective services and suggested that Hopkins ask Richard and Dan the meaning of those terms as a test of their knowledge, and thus credibility. As far as we know, Hopkins has failed to contact Richard and Dan about that matter. During the beginning part of the October 3 meeting, Linda's husband answered a few questions (in a very quiet voice). He seemed to have difficulty with some of them, and Linda spoke up to "correct" his memory. He left the meeting very early, even though Linda was under considerable stress, and despite the fact that she was overheard asking him to stay by her side. His leaving raised many questions in our minds. Linda also responded to questions during the meeting. Early in the discussion, Hansen asked Linda's husband whether he was born and raised in the U.S. He replied that he had come to this country when he was 17. Linda promptly interjected that she knew why Hansen had asked that question. During a prior telephone conversation between Linda and Hansen, Linda had asserted that her husband was born and raised in New York. She acknowledged that she had previously deliberately misled Hansen. Later in the meeting the question arose about a financial agreement between Linda and Hopkins. Stefula noted that Linda had told him that she and Hopkins had an agreement to split profits from a book. Hopkins denied that there was any such arrangement, and Linda then claimed that she had deliberately planted disinformation. During the meeting, reports were heard from two psychologists. They concluded that Linda's intelligence was in the "average" range. One suggested that Linda would need the mind of a Bobby Fischer to plan and execute any hoax that could explain this case and that she was not capable of orchestrating such a massive, complex operation. Although these were supposedly professional opinions, we were not given the names of these psychologists. Ms. Penelope Franklin also attended the meeting. She is a close colleague of Hopkins and the editor of IF--The Bulletin of the Intruders Foundation. Hopkins had previously informed us in writing that Ms. Franklin was a coinvestigator on the Napolitano case. In a conversation during a break in the meeting, Franklin asserted to Hansen that Linda was absolutely justified in lying about the case. This remarkable statement was also witnessed by Vincent Creevy, who happened to be standing between Franklin and Hansen. Franklin's statement raises very troubling questions, especially given her prominence within Hopkins' circle of colleagues. Her statement appears to violate all norms of scientific integrity. We can only wonder whether Linda has been counselled to lie by Hopkins or his colleagues. Have other abductees been given similar advice? What kind of a social and ethical environment are Hopkins and Franklin creating for abductees? We also cannot help but wonder whether Hopkins and Franklin believe it appropriate for themselves to lie about the case. They owe the UFO research community an explanation for Franklin's statement. If such is not forthcoming, we simply cannot accept them as credible investigators. HOPKINS' REACTION TO OUR INVESTIGATION In concluding his Mufon UFO Journal paper, Hopkins wrote: "if rumours are true and there are officially sanctioned intelligence agents within the various UFO investigative networks, these people will also be mobilized to subvert the case from the inside, even before its full dimensions are made known to the public at large" (Hopkins, 1992c, p. 16). Hopkins apparently takes this idea quite seriously. After he learned of our investigation, he warned Butler that he suspected Butler and Stefula of being government agents and that he planned to inform others of his suspicions. A few weeks after our October 3 meeting, he told people that he suspected Hansen of being a CIA agent. This was not an off-hand remark made to a friend in an informal setting; rather this was asserted to a woman whom he did not know and who had happened to attend one of his lectures (member of MUFON in New Jersey who feared future repercussions if her name was mentioned, personal communication, November 7, 1992). A POSSIBLE LITERARY BASIS FOR ELEMENTS OF THE STORY This case is quite exotic, even for a UFO abduction. Government agents are involved, the UN Secretary General is a key witness, Linda was kidnapped in the interests of national security, concerns are expressed about world peace, the CIA is attempting to discredit the case, and the ETs helped end the Cold War. The story is truly marvellous, and one might wonder about its origin. We wish to draw the readers' attention to the science fiction novel, Nighteyes, by Garfield Reeves-Stevens. This work was first published in April 1989, a few months before Linda claimed to have been abducted from her apartment. The experiences reported by Linda seem to be a composite of those of two characters in Nighteyes: Sarah and Wendy. The parallels are striking; some are listed in Table 1. We have not bothered to include the similarities commonly reported in abduction experiences (e.g., implants, bodily examinations, probes, etc.). The parallels are sufficiently numerous to lead us to suspect that the novel served as the basis for Linda's story. We want to emphasize that the parallels are with discrete elements of the case and not with the story line itself. Table 1 - Similarities Between the Linda Napolitano Case and the Science Fiction Novel Nighteyes * Linda was abducted into a UFO hovering over her high-rise apartment building in New York City. Sarah was abducted into a UFO hovering over her high-rise apartment building in New York City. * Dan and Richard initially claimed to have been on a stakeout and were involved in a UFO abduction during early morning hours. Early in Nighteyes two government agents were on a stakeout and became involved in a UFO abduction during early morning hours. * Linda was kidnapped and thrown into a car by Richard and Dan. Wendy was kidnapped and thrown into a van by Derek and Merril. * Linda claimed to have been under surveillance by someone in a van. Vans were used for surveillance in Nighteyes. * Dan is a security and intelligence agent. Derek was an FBI agent. * Dan was hospitalized for emotional trauma. One of the government agents in Nighteyes was hospitalized for emotional trauma. * During the kidnapping Dan took Linda to a safe house. During the kidnapping Derek took Wendy to a safe house. * The safe house Linda visited was on the beach. In Nighteyes, one safe house was on the beach. * Before her kidnapping, Linda contacted Budd Hopkins about her abduction. Before her kidnapping, Wendy contacted Charles Edward Starr about her abduction. * Budd Hopkins is a prominent UFO abduction researcher living in New York City and an author who has written books on the topic. Charles Edward Starr was a prominent UFO abduction researcher living in New York City and an author who had written books on the topic. * Linda and Dan were abducted at the same time and communicated with each other during their abductions. Wendy and Derek were abducted at the same time and communicated with each other during their abductions. * Linda thought she "knew" Richard previously. Wendy "knew" Derek previously. * Dan expressed a romantic interest in Linda. Derek became romantically involved with Wendy. * Dan and Richard felt considerable vibration during the close encounter. During the UFO landing in Nighteyes there was much vibration. * Photographs of Linda were taken on the beach and sent to Hopkins. In Nighteyes, photographs taken on a beach played a central role [as they do in the "Washburn" case described on pages 10-11, PF]. THE REACTION OF UFOLOGY'S LEADERSHIP One of the most curious features of our investigation has been the reaction of several prominent leaders in ufology. Indeed, in the long run, this may turn out to be the most important part of the entire affair. After the MUFON symposium in July, Stefula had several conversations with Walter Andrus, International Director of MUFON. Andrus told him that MUFON had no interest in publishing any material critical of this case even though they had published an article describing it as "The Abduction Case of the Century." This is a most surprising statement from a leader of an organization which purports to be scientific. Andrus' statements should raise questions about the legitimacy of MUFON's claims to use objective, scientific methods. On September 14, 1992, Hopkins faxed Butler a letter saying that as a long-standing member of MUFON, he was issuing an "order" (his word). He "ordered" Stefula and Butler to stop their investigation of the case. We found this very curious, and we wondered how Hopkins, as a member of MUFON, could believe that it was in his power to issue such an "order." His letter seemed to reflect the mindset of a leader of a cult rather than that of an investigator searching for the truth. For the meeting on October 3 in New York City, Hopkins flew in his close friend Jerome Clark from Minnesota. Under the sway of Hopkins, Clark strenuously urged that outsiders cease investigations, thus seemingly trying to reinforce Hopkins' earlier "order" (despite the fact that the case already had been reported in the Wall Street Journal, Omni, Paris Match and the television show Inside Edition). Clark (1992a) later committed his position to writing, saying that this case may indeed involve a world political figure and have international consequences. Andrus and Clark are arguably the two most influential figures in U.S. ufology. Andrus is International Director of the Mutual UFO Network (MUFON), and he organizes the largest annual conference on UFOs in the country and regularly writes for MUFON's monthly magazine. Clark is a columnist for Fate magazine, editor of International UFO Reporter, vice-president of the J. Allen Hynek Center for UFO Studies, and author of books and even an encyclopedia on UFOs. Because of their eminence, their statements should be of special concern to the UFO research community. At the meeting on October 3, the kidnapping and attempted murder of Linda were discussed. We informed Hopkins and the other participants that we were prepared to make a formal request for a federal investigation of the government agents responsible for the alleged felonies. Hopkins, Andrus, and Clark appeared to literally panic at the suggestion. They vigorously argued against making such a request. We could only conclude that they wanted to suppress evidence of attempted murder. We wondered why. This situation seemed so outrageous that a few days later Hansen called Andrus, Clark, John Mack, and David Jacobs and asked them if they really believed Linda's story about the kidnappings and attempted murder. All of these individuals said that they accepted her account. We were forced to seriously consider their opinions because they had been given secret information not revealed to us. During the telephone conversations, Andrus and Clark again strongly objected to requesting an investigation by law enforcement authorities. A PSYCHO-SOCIAL PERSPECTIVE The Napolitano case brings into stark relief symptoms of deep problems within ufology: major figures in the UFO community aggressively sought to suppress evidence of a purported attempted murder; Hopkins failed to obtain and verify even the most basic investigatory information; his co-investigator, Penelope Franklin, approved of lying by the principal witness; and leaders in the field have willingly accepted and promoted the case despite its exotic features and lack of supporting evidence. This state of affairs raises perplexing questions and cries out for a plausible explanation. The thinking and motivations of ufology's leaders deserve at least as much attention as the abduction claims themselves. Did these leaders really believe, as they said, that they accepted the report of attempted murder? If so, they seem not to have acted as responsible citizens. However, these people do not appear to us to be delusional, in any usual sense of that word. They are highly functional members of society. They also do not appear to be perpetrators of a hoax or even "yellow journalists" with a "wink-wink, nudge-nudge" attitude who knowingly want to capitalize on it for their own temporary glory or financial gain. We believe that other motivating factors and concepts provide a better explanation and framework for understanding these seemingly bizarre actions. We would suggest that perhaps, at some semiconscious level, these individuals do not really believe their UFO investigations to be fully engaged with the "real world." Rather, their behaviour and statements seem more consistent with something like fantasy role playing, perhaps akin to the game Dungeons and Dragons (D & D). Both ufology and D & D allow direct, immediate involvement with powerful "other-world" beings and mythological motifs. Both endeavours have been known to overtake (possess?) the participants, though only occasionally to their detriment. Most "players" are able to successfully detach themselves from involvement, but occasionally the "game" becomes obsessive and interferes with "real-world" pursuits. This "role playing" taps archetypal images that hold great psychological power. The archetypes can become immensely attractive, even addictive, to those playing the game. The notions and images of powerful "other-world" figures are part of the human condition. Accounts of them are found in all cultures throughout history, this being one of the traditional domains of religion. Even atheists and those who deny the existence of such beings must still grapple with the ideas on some level, though this might not be consciously recognized by an individual. In the Napolitano case, the "other-world" figures include not only the ET aliens, but also the pantheon of agents of an unreachable, evil government conspiracy determined to prevent humankind's knowledge of the ETs. Intermediaries between flesh and blood humans and the powerful masters of the mystical higher orders are ubiquitous in the realm of religion. Angels and devils serve the centers of ultimate good and evil. So here we see the largely invisible minions "Dan" and "Richard" and the mysterious witness on the bridge furthering the cause of "Truth." Likewise, Hopkins discerns the skeptical investigators as agents of a secular satan. Thus the interactions of Hopkins, et al., with these players are seen to conform to the rules that historically control the interactions between humans and gods. Humans question and provoke the gods only at the greatest peril. The proper approach is to appease, mollify and supplicate these "entities." It should be no surprise that the simplest reality tests of the Napolitano story were not made in this case. Hopkins' failure to check the weather conditions during the abduction actually makes sense in the context of this cult-like thought process. Just as lice were called "pearls of heaven" by medieval religious devotees, the physical event-reality issues in the Linda story are transmuted by her supporters. The roles of high priest and acolytes are only too obvious when examining the behaviours of personages Hopkins, Clark, Jacobs, and Andrus. These aging white males patronizingly refer to Linda's "average" intellect, perhaps to reassure themselves that they are indeed in control. Yet the high priestess has, in effect, achieved the godhead (metaphorically speaking, of course). There are some differences between D & D and ufological pursuits. D & D has more restrictive and structured rules. The boundaries of appropriate behaviour are rather clearly defined. Ufology is more "unstructured," there are fewer "rules" about what is and is not possible, and the powers of the "other- world" figures are almost unbounded. This relative lack of structure makes the UFO game somewhat more "dangerous." In order to grapple with the phenomena, the paradigms adopted by many ufologists have "concretized" (i.e., structured) the beings as ET humanoids. In fantasy role playing, the rules are not questioned; they are accepted by the players at the beginning. Similarly in the Linda case, the basic evidence is not to be questioned. Andrus, Clark, and Hopkins have all urged that outsiders cease investigation (despite the massive publicity given to the case). Such challenging of "rules" leads to disruptions of the "game," and the dungeon masters need to keep order. Direct interfacing of the "fantasy role" with the "real-world" (i.e., direct allegations of attempted murder, verification of details of testimony), usually does not cause problems, except when the players do not act in accordance with consequential "real-world" concerns. Hopkins, Andrus, Clark, Mack, and Jacobs seem to have accepted a system of beliefs and assumptions that have led to a collision with the "real world." They have been unable to rationally defend their behaviour, and Jerome Clark's (1992a) "Torquemada" article is perhaps the single best example of that. In fact, his emotional attack labelling Hansen as "Torquemada" (director of the Spanish Inquisition) resurrects and reinforces religious themes, and it perhaps betrays his unconscious feelings of religious persecution. The above discussion derives from a psycho-social perspective, and we would like to encourage U.S. researchers to become more familiar the ideas generated from that approach. We admit that the psycho-social theorists have failed to address many aspects of the abduction experience generally. Exclusive use of that perspective can lead to positing simplistic and scientifically sterile explanations. On the other hand, those that shun the psycho- social perspective typically fail to recognize the explanatory power it possesses and its ability to illuminate risks faced by investigators. Those wanting more information about the psycho- social perspective may wish to read the book Angels and Aliens by Keith Thompson (1991) and the British magazine Magonia; almost without saying, the works of John Keel are also recommended. We are not denigrating ufology by such comparisons as those made above, nor are we attacking the existence of "other-world" entities. Regardless whether entities or ET aliens exist, the comparisons are useful and the consequences and insights are applicable. Such a comparative analysis should not be limited to only D & D players and ufologists; similar comparisons could be made for virtually everyone in the "real world." They can help serve as warnings about becoming too complacent regarding beliefs in our own "rationality." DISCUSSION The Napolitano case appears beset by an overwhelming number of problems. It was with some misgivings that we first embarked on this investigation because we did not wish to see UFO abduction research discredited. In fact, one of us, Butler, has had abduction experiences himself. It was our judgement that if we did not raise these issues for public discussion, there was a much greater risk for the field. The case was garnering considerable attention, and if it became widely regarded as evidential, it would reflect very badly on the field as a whole if it was eventually shown to be false. We were quite unprepared for the reaction to our work from leaders of the field. Walter Andrus and Jerome Clark aggressively tried to dissuade us from continuing our investigation, and so far they have failed to publish any material critical of the case. We were unaware that such belligerently antiscientific attitudes were so prevalent at the highest levels of ufology. When these same individuals attempted to suppress evidence of an alleged attempted murder, we concluded that their beliefs and actions were incompatible with "real world" events. However, we do not consider the label "deluded" appropriate here, and we remind the reader that these individuals are backed by people such as Harvard psychiatrist John Mack and David Jacobs, professor of history at Temple University. Despite our disappointment, we strongly support scientific research into the abduction phenomena and would like to call attention to high quality studies in the field (e.g., Ring & Rosing, 1990; Rodeghier, Goodpaster & Blatterbauer, 1992). We also believe that the core abduction experience has not been adequately explained within normal scientific frameworks. We commend the work of Hufford (1982) in exploring similar issues. The present case has significant implications for assessing the true nature of the abduction phenomena. The idea that actual extraterrestrial physical creatures are abducting people has been vigorously promoted in the scientific literature and in the media. Jacobs has promoted that view in the New York Times (Hinds, 1992) as well as in the Journal of UFO Studies (Jacobs, 1992). He suggests that the ET aliens are visiting earth in order to obtain human sperm and eggs. In his JUFOS article, Jacobs was bitterly critical of Ring and Rosing, saying that they ignored "cases of witnesses seeing others being abducted while not being abducted themselves" (p. 162). Surprisingly, Jacobs gave no citations for any of these cases. Hansen wrote to Jacobs requesting such citations but received no reply. Jacobs' article was lavish in its praise for Hopkins' work, and we suspect that Jacobs had in mind the Napolitano case when he wrote his article. We would like to remind the reader that it was Hopkins (1992a) who wrote: "The importance of this case is virtually immeasurable, as it powerfully supports both the objective reality of UFO abductions and the accuracy of regressive hypnosis." Because the argument for the "objective reality of UFO abductions" relies heavily on Hopkins' work, our findings call into question this entire theoretical perspective. In our judgment, conscious hoaxes are rare in the abduction field. The vast majority of those claiming to be abducted have had some kind of intense personal experience, whatever the ultimate cause. Nevertheless, the problems of fraud and hoaxing have long been a problem in ufology, especially for cases with high visibility. This will continue. Researchers must become more open minded to the potential for hoaxing, yet not be blinded to the genuine phenomena. This is a difficult balance. Some have questioned possible motives in this case; it is impossible to obtain certain knowledge here. Perhaps Linda really had some kind of an abduction experience (Butler believes this is likely to be the case). As she became acquainted with Hopkins and other abductees, she may have wanted to vindicate them--to save them from ridicule and derision. Perhaps money was the only motivation. Possibly there was a combination of factors. It does appear that if this was a hoax, it was not perpetrated by a lone individual. Collaborators would include the woman on the bridge, an X-ray operator, and a man (or men) preparing the tape recordings. However, we want to emphasize that we have no direct evidence to implicate Hopkins in attempted deception. Cynics might criticize Hopkins saying that he ignored the obvious problems because he was motivated by money that might accrue from books and movie rights. While this might possibly be an unconscious factor, critics rarely acknowledge that Hopkins does not charge abductees for his services (unlike some "professionals"). Hopkins has spent an enormous amount of his own time and money investigating the phenomena. Furthermore, he does not have an academic position subsidized by the tax payers. One should not begrudge him the profits from his books. Hopkins has been involved in considerable controversy, and some have disputed his methods. Nevertheless, he has done much to bring the abduction problem to the attention of scientists and the mental health community, and his efforts have made it much more acceptable to discuss such strange encounters. Abduction experiences are often emotional and traumatic, and the abductees need considerable support. Hopkins has attempted to provide much needed aid. The outside critic who is not directly involved in such activities almost never recognizes how difficult it is to serve as both a therapist and as a scientist. Those persons trying to help abductees emotionally need to provide warmth, acceptance, and trust. The scientist, however, needs to be critically open minded and somewhat detached and analytical. The two functions are not altogether compatible. We cannot realistically expect one individual to be 100% effective in both roles. By the nature of the endeavour, those trying to be helpful can be vulnerable to deception. APPENDIX A Note on the Hansen-Clark Communications One of the more entertaining aspects of this case has been the resulting missives by Hansen (1992a, 1992b) and Clark (1992a, 1992b) which have been widely circulated and posted on electronic bulletin boards. We encourage those interested to obtain copies. Clark's (1992b) most recent piece deserves comment. He now says that he now does not accept Linda's claims about the kidnapping and attempted murder by government agents. However, in a telephone conversation with him on October 6, 1992, he told Hansen that he accepted those claims. Hansen did not tape-record the conversation, but he is willing to provide a sworn statement to that effect. Hansen also talked with Marcello Truzzi who had spoken to Clark near the same time. Truzzi understood that Clark believed that Linda was sincere in her claims and was telling the truth to the best of her ability. The salient points are summarized as follows: 1. At the 1992 MUFON symposium, Linda Napolitano spoke in front of hundreds of people and claimed that she was kidnapped by government agents. 2. Clark told both Hansen and Truzzi that he accepted Linda's story (i.e., that she was telling the truth to the best of her ability). 3. Hopkins claims to have much evidence that could be used to identify the culprits. 4. Hopkins flew Clark to New York, whereupon Clark aggressively injected himself into matters and vigorously opposed continuing an outside investigation and reporting the alleged felonies to law enforcement authorities. He defended this position, in writing, saying: "if this story is true, it is not just a UFO case but a `politically sensitive' event because it supposedly involves a political figure of international stature...banging on the wrong doors could alert the relevant agency that two of its agents were leaking a huge secret." (Clark, 1992a, p. 1). We will let the readers decide whether Clark's initial position was compatible with "real-world" considerations. We are gratified that Clark has taken the time to comment, at length, on these issues, and in a style so typical of his level of dispassionate commentary. We caution readers that Clark perhaps may be currently acutely embarrassed by his statement quoted in point 4 and may feel the need to obscure this central issue. Nevertheless, we are pleased that he now seems to have made a cathartic conversion. REFERENCES Baskin, Anita. (1992). Antimatter: High-rise abductions: Alien abductions routinely occur in big cities and high-rise buildings around the world. Omni. April. Vol. 14, No. 7, p. 75. Clark, Jerome. (1992a). The Politics of Torquemada; or, Earth Calling Hansen's Planet. 612 North Oscar Avenue, Canby, Minnesota 56220. October 24, 1992. [This paper has been circulated and posted on electronic bulletin boards]. Clark, Jerome. (1992b). Wasting Away in Torquemadaville. November 30, 1992. [This paper has been circulated]. De Brosses, Marie-Therese. (1992). Enleves par les E.T.! Paris Match. 17 Sept., pp. 13, 14, 18, 96, 98. Drano the Sewerian [pseudonym]. (1992). SETI and military personnel monitor secret UFO abduction conference at MIT. Third Eyes Only. July-August, No. 4, pp. 42-44. Fowler, Raymond E. (Editor). (1983). MUFON Field Investigator's Manual. Seguin, TX: Mutual UFO Network. Hansen, George P. (1992a). Attempted Murder vs. The Politics of Ufology: A Question of Priorities in the Linda Napolitano Case. 20 October 1992. [This paper has been circulated and posted on a number of electronic bulletin boards and published in several periodicals including The New Jersey Chronicle, Vol. 3, Nos. 1/2, September-December, 1992; MUFON of Ohio Newsletter, No. 3, Second November 1992 Issue; Third Eyes Only, No. 6, November 1992; UFO Spotters Newsletter, No. 16, 1992; Minnesota MUFON Newsletter, No. 37, October 1992] Hansen, George P. (1992b). "Torquemada" Responds to Jerome Clark. 23 November 1992. [This paper has been circulated and posted on a number of electronic bulletin boards.] Hatfield, Scott. (1992). X-Ray Said to Show Alien Implant. ADVANCE for Radiologic Science Professionals. October 26, p. 11. Hinds, Michael deCourcy. (1992). Taking U.F.O.'s for Credit, and for Real. New York Times, 28 October, p. B9. Hopkins, Budd. (1981). Missing Time: A Documented Study of UFO Abductions. New York: Richard Marek. Hopkins, Budd. (1987). Intruders: The Incredible Visitations at Copley Woods. New York: Random House. Hopkins, Budd. (1991). Innocent bystanders. IF-The Bulletin of the Intruders Foundation. Vol. 1, No. 3, pp. 1-4. Hopkins, [Budd]. (1992a). A doubly witnessed abduction. Abstracts: Abduction Study Conference at Massachusetts Institute of Technology prepared by Andrea Pritchard. June 13-17, p. III- B. Hopkins, Budd. (1992b). An Open Letter From Budd Hopkins. Mufon UFO Journal, June, p. 20. Hopkins, Budd. (1992c). The Linda Cortile [Napolitano] Abduction Case. Mufon UFO Journal, September, pp. 12-16. Hopkins, Budd. (1992d). The Linda Cortile [Napolitano] Abduction Case: Part II "The Woman on the Bridge (sic). Mufon UFO Journal, December, pp. 5-9. Hufford, David J. (1982). The Terror That Comes in the Night: An Experience- Centered Study of Supernatural Assault Traditions. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press. Jacobs, David M. (1992). On Studying the Abduction Phenomenon Without Knowing What It Is. Journal of UFO Studies, New Series Vol. 3, 153-163. Jefferson, David J. (1992). A Harvard doctor offers trauma relief for UFO `abductees.' Wall Street Journal, May 14, pp. A1, A10. Mack, John E. (1992a). Helping Abductees. International UFO Reporter. July/ August, pp. 10-15, 20. Mack, John E. (1992b). Other Realities: The "Alien Abduction" Phenomenon. Noetic Sciences Review. Autumn, pp. 5-11. McKenna, Chris. (1992). Doc `Abducted by Aliens' Ruled Fit to Work. New York Post, November 21, pp. 5, 13. Reeves-Stevens, Garfield. (1989). Nighteyes. New York: Doubleday. Ring, Kenneth; & Rosing, Christopher J. (1990). The Omega Project: A Psychological Survey of Persons Reporting Abductions and Other UFO Encounters. Journal of UFO Studies, New Series Vol. 2, 59-98. Rodeghier, Mark; Goodpaster, Jeff; & Blatterbauer, Sandra. (1992). Psychosocial Characteristics of Abductees: Results From the CUFOS Abduction Project. Journal of UFO Studies, New Series Vol. 3, 59-90. Sontag, Deborah. (1992). Reverence and Rigidity in the New Age: At the Whole Life Expo the Spirits are Willing So Long as the Wallet is Not Weak. New York Times, October 5, pp. B1, B2. Stacy, Dennis. (1992). The 1992 MUFON Symposium. Mufon UFO Journal, August, pp. 3-10. Thompson, Keith. (1991). Angels and Aliens: UFOs and the Mythic Imagination. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley Publishing Company. Unusual Personal Experiences: An Analysis of the Data from Three National Surveys Conducted by the Roper Organization. (1992). Las Vegas, NV: Bigelow Holding Corporation. ----------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------------------- Acknowledgements: We would like to thank Philip J. Klass for assistance. We would also like to thank Vincent Creevy for providing materials and bringing the novel Nighteyes to our attention. Thanks are also due to several who provided help but do not want their names associated with the field of ufology. Joseph Stefula is a former Special Agent for the U.S. Army Criminal Investigations Command and is a former MUFON State Director for New Jersey. He resigned his directorship shortly after finishing this investigation. Richard Butler is a former law enforcement and security police specialist for the U.S. Air Force and now a UFO investigator researching abductions and government cover-ups. George Hansen has conducted parapsychological research and is author of the article "CSICOP and the Skeptics: An Overview" which appeared in the January 1992 Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research. Crop Circles in Sweden Tickle the Imagination by Clas Svahn, UFO Sweden At Harplinge north of Halmstad a woman sat down in the middle of a rye field to meditate. At Skyllberg south of Hallsberg curious people walked about in something that looked like a map of the sunken Atlantic. At Bracke near Hoganas a dowser decided that it was all due to the position of the planets. "I never thought that people could act in this way", says an 18- year-old from Borlange, who together with two school friends created a huge pictogram near Orsa. When the circle phenomenon came to Sweden this summer it did so with a bang. But maybe it was no surprise after all that Sweden would be "hit" by the circles. In several lectures and TV programmes the general public was informed of the phenomenon. A major programme on the circles was shown on the commercial Channel 4 in March. Then "Night Cafe" on National television (TV2) invited people to discuss the circles on July 29th. Following this there are few Swedes who are unaware of the phenomenon. Whereas almost a dozen crop circle cases were reported in Sweden not a single case was reported by UFO groups in Norway and Denmark. However one case was reported from Finland. At the beginning of August a circle was found at Luumaki. A fake pictogram was made here last year. This year's Finnish formation consisted of three circles, each six metres in diameter, forming a triangle. Two of them were connected by paths, half a metre wide. In England the number of circles is down to about forty this year. This compares with 600-800 at their peak. The Grand Old Man of British cereology - Pat Delgado - has become tired of the phenomenon, as have many others. Delgado has made a lot of money from the phenomenon with his three books, "Circular Evidence", "Crop Circles, The Latest Evidence" and "Crop Circles, Conclusive Evidence?" - the first two written with Colin Andrews. "Two Dozen Genuine Circles" Now Delgado has retired from cereology, Colin Andrews has emigrated to the USA to write about cattle mutilations and other mysteries. I gather that in a telephone conversation with Terence Meaden earlier this summer Pat Delgado accepted Doug Bower and Dave Chorleys' claims and that he now considers most circles to be fakes. The interest of the British media has also dropped to almost nothing. "As far as I know only some 40 circles have been reported this summer", reports the Editor of "The Crop Watcher" Paul Fuller, to UFO Aktuellt. He believes that every one of them must be fakes - and that includes the circles appearing in Sweden too ! UFO Aktuellt is the first Swedish source to talk to an 18-year- old high school student who admits that on the night of September 4th he and two friends created the big pictogram outside Orsa. He prefers to remain anonymous, but his name is known to UFO-Sweden. Just in case he and his friends from St Mikael School in Mora have apologised to the farmer, Erik Sundin. "When we heard people who had seen our circle talking about how it could not have been made by human beings - well, we didn't know what to think," he told me on the phone. The Story of a Hoaxer It was about 11 pm on Saturday September 4th that the three 18- year-olds went into a rye field at Knarrholen near Orsa. Equipped with some torches, a short plank, an iron lever and a compass they parked the car and entered a field belonging to Erik Sundin. It was wet and damp, which later turned out to be to their advantage. "I would say it took us one and a half hours before we were satisfied. It was rather tough on our backs as we didn't think of attaching the plank to any strings so we had to crawl about. The place was rather secluded, but if we saw a passing car we turned our torches off". "Later, when we saw the articles in the papers and heard people speculating about everything from earth radiation to aliens it felt kind of strange. I am interested in UFOs myself and have seen a few programmes about crop circles on the satellite channels. I guess that we got our inspiration from them." The 18-year-old hoaxer says that what is most surprising is how naively everyone acted. Some people visited the circle with dowsing rods and reported feeling earth energies. Others stood inside the circle and told how an unknown energy surged through their bodies. "I've learned a lot about psychology these last weeks," he said. A few days later Bertil Kuhleman had been interviewed by Barbro Hellberg from Radio Dalarna. He explained that it was his firm belief that the pictograms at Orsa represented messages from space. Kuhleman, who worked for many year with the contactee Sten Lindgren, believes that the circles are absolute proof that aliens are here on Earth. Richard Andrews Visits Sweden There has certainly been no inspiration for circle conmen this year. In late Spring one of the remaining enthusiasts held a series of public lectures in Sweden. With his angled branches ready at hand Richard Andrews described the formations of 1992 and presented his own thoughts on the subject to fascinated audiences in Stockholm and Gothenburg. Andrews and his colleagues believe that the circles have a direct connection to field lines of earth energy and prehistoric sites. I met Richard Andrews during my visit to England in 1991, when the circles were at their peak. Besides giving us a lesson in dowsing he told us that the phenomenon would develop into "bigger, more complicated formations". In fact it turned out to be quite the opposite. (According to recent quotes in a Swedish newspaper he has now changed his mind, "There will be fewer circles in England and more in Sweden"). As far as Sweden is concerned it all started very quietly around July 6th when two brothers in Sala discovered a couple of circles beneath a high-voltage transmission line. One of the brothers told UFO Sweden that he saw a light shifting in the sky and felt static electricity in the air early in the morning as he was out walking his dog. Later the other brother went to the place out of curiosity and discovered two circles in a rye field. After a lengthy discussion the younger brother decided to call UFO Sweden anonymously. A thorough investigation showed that the two circles (6 and 12 metres in diameter) had no traces of clay in them, though the surrounding ground was very muddy. Neither could the investigators from UFO Sweden find any traces leading to the circles from the edge of the field. Both circles were swept clockwise and Mats Nilsson, who investigated the site on the evening of July 6th, described the interior of the circles "as smooth as a ballroom floor". But this is only the beginning. UFO Sweden has since learnt of ten other locations in Sweden where crop circles appeared:- * July 17, Harplinge, 12 km NW of Halmstad. On circle 14.85 metre in diameter in a rye field. Counter-clockwise. * July 29, Skyllberg, 19 km SSW of Hallsberg. Complicated circle with two rings connected with spokes in barley. Clockwise at the centre. Counter-clockwise elsewhere. Total diameter 36.4 metres. * July 30, Asperud, 20 kms SSW of Hallsberg. Circle with two rings and a reversed letter F in autumn wheat. Total diameter 88.4 metres. Counter-clockwise. * July 30, Bracke, 20 kms NNW of Helsingborg, near Hoganas. Oval circle in a wheat field. Counter-clockwise. * July 31, Ljungby, 12 kms NE of Falkenberg. Slightly oval circle in barley. 14.88-16.29 metres in diameter. Counter-clockwise. * August 21, Save Depa, north of Gothenburg. Slightly oval circle in oats. 9.9-10.4 metres in diameter. Counter-clockwise. * August 21, Waro Norrgard near Linkoping. Circle 8 metres in diameter with a 20 metre long straight extension in autumn wheat. Clockwise. * September 3, Tjarna Angar, 1.5 kms from Borlange. 27.7 metres long pictogram in a barley field. There was a reversed F with a ring. * September 4, Knarrholmen, Orsa. 39 metre long pictogram. * Early September, Hamnas near Soderhamn. 7-8 rings. 3-4 metres in diameter in barley. he Gavleborg UFO Group "unmasked the villains" as roe-deers. Hoaxers Exposed The following circle formations have been exposed as hoaxes:- Skyllberg, Asperud, Save Depa, Orsa and Tjarna Angar. As for the circles at Harplinge, Bracke and Ljungby everything points to the fact that they were made by the same group of hoaxers. They were almost all identical in size, their location (by the side of a road) was chosen for maximum exposure and the sweeping (counter-clockwise) swirl is typical of a man-made circle. The circle at Waro Norrgard was in such poor condition that it was impossible to investigate it. The two circles in Sala are the only ones UFO Sweden consider to be potentially important. We have found no traces of clay inside the circles, although the field was very muddy and we were there before anyone else. Whether genuine or man-made the circles have attracted a lot of curious people, each with their own favourite theory. The most inured person is probably farmer Olle Johansson at Harplinge, whose almost 15 metre diameter circle became known all over Sweden following his appearance on the "Night Cafe" programme : "Lots of people have been here," he told UFO Aktuellt, "A woman even ate the rye believing it held supernatural powers". When Inga-Lill Wallin from UFO-Sweden visited the site another woman was meditating in the middle of the circle. The woman had flown down from Stockholm and taken a taxi out to Harplinge with the sole purpose of spending an hour or so in the circle. "What if it is not genuine ?", Inga-Lill Wallin suggested to the woman, "I really hope it is", she answered. Strange Lights When a circle is discovered, reports on other events - which are quickly linked to the circles, inevitably pop up. In several cases, including those at Harplinge, light phenomena have also been reported. But on closer scrutiny it can be demonstrated that these light phenomena were not seen when the the circles appeared. In the case of the fake circle at Save Depa, north of Gothenburg, a man claimed to have seen mysterious lights in the sky on the same night as the circle appeared. When Anders Persson interviewed the man it turned out that his sighting could not be linked to the circle as the man had probably seen spotlights reflected off clouds. Also, the fake circle at Orsa has been linked to observations of lights in the sky. This kind of linking of two unconnected events - "guilt by association" - is common in UFOlogy. Frequently the only common denominator is the fact that the two events concerned something unidentified. It is so easy to see a link which is not there. The link between UFOs and circles is very weak, all things considered. Not on any occasion has an unidentified object been observed at the same time as a circle has formed. A detail often presented as evidence that a circle is genuine - that is not made by humans - is the fact that the the stems are not broken. It is hard to understand this argument since stems only break when they are very dry. In moist weather, particularly like this, the straws are soft and lithe. The fake circle in Orsa is a good example of this. The problem is that even the most hardened sceptics soften at the sight of a circle. Many are sheer works of art. Even if most of the Swedish specimens this summer have been relatively simple and lacking the English extravagances, there have been exceptions, like the "Atlantis" circle at Skyllberg. Investigations conducted by UFO Sweden showed that the neighbouring circles at Skyllberg and Asperud were made by the same persons. In the latter circle obvious traces of the hoaxer's tools were found. crop circles are concerned. The most probable explanation is that almost all of them are made by men in order to deceive other men. Maybe a few of them are caused by some natural phenomenon, but after this year's crop of hoaxes I am no longer ready to bet on it. Clas Svahn, UFO Sweden, Stockholm. PF Notes:- I hope Clas Svahn will forgive me for some of the small grammatical changes I've made to his text. Also my super PC can't do any of those funny superscripts that feature heavily in Scandinavian place names. Sorry. Readers will be interested to learn that when Clas Svahn isn't investigating Sweden's outbreak of crop circle hoaxing he is covering world-shaking events like the siege of the White House in Moscow for Sweden's largest daily newspaper Dagens Nyheter. UFO Sweden has over a thousand members and is well known for adopting a sceptical approach to UFO research and investigation. Svahn's article tells us a great deal about how the UFO myth is being revived by people who don't give a damn about the farmers and their feelings. It also demonstrates how a whole new religion can be created and maintained by a handful of people who simply don't want to know the truth. Isn't anyone out there going to stop them ? Thanks to Clas Svahn and UFO Sweden. Fuller Resigns from BUFORA Its Official !!! Those readers who are also members of the British UFO Research Association - BUFORA - will be interested to learn that on September 11th 1993 I resigned my positions of Director, a member of BUFORA's National Investigations Committee and ordinary member. I had been members of these for 5, 10 and 15 years respectively. I won't go into all the details of this decision just yet but I will explain that I left BUFORA over important issues of principle. My letter of resignation should be held in BUFORA's records and I have asked Jenny Randles to retain a copy for the N.I.C. It is sad to leave an organisation I have supported for so long but recent events really left me with little alternative. I would like to record my continuing support for the invaluable work of the N.I.C., the only part of BUFORA that continues to hold my respect and admiration. My reasons for leaving can be best summed up by quoting the lyrics from "Animals", one of Pink Floyd's greatest and most cynical albums (now that really does date me !):- "You gotta be crazy, you gotta have a real need. You gotta sleep on your toes and when you're on the street. You gotta be able to pick out the easy meat with your eyes closed. And then moving in silently, down wind and out of sight. You gotta strike when the moment is right without thinking. And after a while, you can work on points for style. Like the club tie, and the firm handshake. A certain look in the eye and an easy smile. You have to be trusted by the people that you lie to, so that when they turn their backs on you, you'll get the chance to put the knife in...." The Beckhampton & District Informer This superb magazine has been doing the rounds for some time now -I've only been sent volume 1 nos 3 to 5 - but its a must for anyone who wants to know the truth behind the crop circles. As far as I can tell this is a free publication but if you want to get on the mailing list just write something stupid for "The Circular", "The Cerealogist" or "The Crop Watcher" - you're bound to get a copy ! Issue 3 is the least libellous. Apparently Peter Sorenson (see CW18 page 32) is shortly to have an operation to remove a video camera from his right eye. Unhappily Mr "Sarsen" has had a video camera "grafted to his face since birth". This has resulted in the growth of a "ridiculous beard" ! There is also a "Season Update" of "Genuine Formations" by James Chapman (a blank page) as well as a Doug and Dave "Propaganda Quiz". Issue 4 contains an expose of "Weaselgate" - the subject of George Wingfield's belated article in "The Cerealogist" about insider crop circle hoaxing in the CCCS. In an interview with The Informer's "disinformation correspondent" "The Weasel" (John Martineau) confesses to how he managed to "infiltrate a well known circle research group 'Circle Investigation Group And Research Examining The Extra-Terrestrial Entity Scam (CIGARETTES) and a smaller, more local group 'Phenomenon Action Group' (PhAG)." According to The Informer "Me and some mates would go out at night and hoax a major pictogram somewhere like East Field. The next day I would go out at night and record it in the CIGARETTES database as genuine. Everyone in the group knew what was going on. CIGARETTES would declare the pictogram as being genuine, 100 % confident that another hoaxing team could not produce any evidence that they had made it, thus revealing the truth about the nature of the crop circles. It was so simple !" There is also an excellent article about the Penis that appeared near Chequers. Apparently a "TW*T" seen taking photographs of the formation was Erik Beckjord ! This is followed by a hoaxer's vehicle registration quiz (won in the next issue by Grant Wakefield, who is disqualified because his car number is also included in the list). There's also a TIFINAG quiz, which is very amusing, as well as the "Waggon & Horses Top 10 Records". Judging from the '60s and '70s groups that feature in this "hit parade" from the jukebox shortly to be installed in the Tack Room at the Waggon & Horses it seems clear that the editors of this scurrilous rag must be a little older than myself, say 35 to 40. Now does that give you a clue to their identity ??? Issue Number 5 leads with an exclusive report on The Doug Bower Enigma. According to The Informer's "Crime Correspondent" Doug Bower is none other than Ernest Henry Bryant, who was contacted by Venusians at Scoriton in 1965 (another famous UFO case where a number of leading UFOlogists got their fingers badly burnt). Some of the comments in this issue are even more cutting than those that appear in The Crop Watcher ! In one article Grant Wakefield is described as "an arrogant little snot" whilst Maria Ward is described as a "l**r" who "dresses like a cheap t**t" and Richard Andrews is dismissed as a "c***l*t*n dowser". Listen carefully and you can hear the Libel Lawyers rubbing their hands with glee !!! There is also the full unabridged story of George Wingfield's angry response to the revelation that John Martineau was behind much of the hoaxing that undermined Project Argus ("this ridiculous so-called scientific exercise" according to Robert Irving). There is also a recap on the fabrication of the letter from "Roy Marks" -the one that dismissed Robert Irving as a "psychopath". This was allegedly written by Maria Ward as a ploy to discredit Irving, who features in another article disclaiming his circle-making activities and membership of M.I.5 ! All these issues are an absolute scream !!! Other News Chris Rutkowski has written in to comment on the "Squashed Porcupine" case discussed in CW17. According to Chris the carcass was never actually seen by Chad Deetken, the carcass was never examined by a veterinary pathologist and dead animals naturally "deflate" after death through decay and decomposition. For Deetken's own account of this bizarre case see "The Cerealogist" issue 10. Don't forget that despite Deetken's claims animal mutilation cases and crop circles HAVE been associated before (see CW17) Re-reading this case summary again it is not difficult to re-interpret this particular squashed animal case as a hoax. Why else would the farmer dispose of the carcass and THEN telephone a UFO investigator ??? The Yorkshire & Humberside CCCS has just produced an excellent case summary of the two known formations in Yorkshire during 1993. The first was a standard dumb-bell at Blansby Park near Pickering that formed in late July. The second was a ringed-star at Arras Hill near Market Weighton which appeared in late August. For copies of this material write to John Holman, 20 Newton Gardens, Ripon, North Yorkshire, HG4 1QF. Rumours and Rumours of Rumours Colin Andrews has given his United Nations talk about crop circles, the General Assembly was suitably alarmed ... In his recent visit to Malta Colin Andrews spoke to a "gathering" of "United Nations representatives" from several countries that keep "open minds on such matters from UFOs to circles in the corn"... Andrews expects to be offered a job by the United Nations to research the phenomenon ... The Ministry of Defence has joined in a "debate" with Andrews to discuss the "increasingly numerous sightings of UFOs with the corn circles" (all from the infallible "Andover Advertiser", 13th August 1993) ... George Wingfield's "hice" is up for sale ... There will be a special BBC documentary about crop circles in November ... this will be further disinformation from MBF Services to keep the truth about the crop circles from the public ... Reg Presley ("Wild Thing") is writing a book about crop circles with Colin Andrews ("Wild Thing") .... Robin Allen and George Wingfield exchanged pleasantries at the Dorchester Cornference ... Advertisments Crop Circles, A Mystery Solved has been completely updated and republished in a second edition. Available from Robert Hale Ltd, Clerkenwell House, Clerkenwell Green, London, EC1R 0HT, price # 7.99. Contains previously unpublished photographs of the Wokurna (1973), Bordertown (1973) and Rossburn (1977) circles, along with numerous historical cases, new eye witness testimony and a detailed account of the crop circle crash of 1991-1993. Wanted: During the late 1970s and early 1980s, a magazine called "PICWINNARD" was published in the west country. It was sub- titled 'a magazine of Wessex leys and folklore'. If anyone has copies of this magazine I'd like to buy them. Failing that, I'll be happy to pay for photocopies. For Sale: I have for sale, several masonic aprons, price on application. Please write to P.D. Rendall, 46, Partridge Road, Pucklechurch, Bristol, Avon, BS17 3SP. The Crop Watcher is an independent non-profit-making magazine devoted to the scientific study of crop circles and the social mythology that accompanies them. All articles are copyright to the authors and should not be reproduced without obtaining written permission from the authors. Articles appearing in The Crop Watcher do not necessarily reflect the views of the Editor or other contributors. Readers are welcome to submit articles for publication. Offers of exchange magazines are always welcome. Subscriptions The Crop Watcher is published six times a year and costs # 1.50 to UK subscribers and # 2.50 to overseas subscribers. A full year's subscription costs # 9.00 for UK subscribers and # 15.00 for overseas subscribers. Please make cheques payable to "Paul Fuller" not "The Crop Watcher". Overseas subscribers should not send cheques drawn on overseas banks as these attract a commission of about # 10.00 each. Subscriptions can be sent via an International Money Order. All correspondence should be sent to 3, Selborne Court, Tavistock Close, Romsey, Hampshire, SO51 7TY.