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UFO Crash At Southaven Park?
Newspaper: South Shore Press
Issue: Vol X, No 7
Date: Tuesday, May 25, 1993
Formatted By CammoDude
04-12-00
A local investigative group that has been researching accounts of
unidentified objects on Long Island for the past five years released a
report (with photos and a video tape) yeaterday that claims an alien space
craft crashed into a remote area of Southaven Park in Shirley just before
Thanksgiving last year.
The incident happened just after 7:00 P.M. on the night of November 24,
according to John Ford, chairman of the Long Island U.F.O. Network, who
said that it has taken his group six months to do a thorough
investigation. It was just recently, though, that his group was able to
acquire the video and the photos. "We knew that something crashed
into the park that night and we have, bit by bit," said Ford,
"been able to finally put the picture together."
Several motorists who were traveling along Sunrise Highway that night,
according to Ford, contacted his organization and described what they
thought was a plane that was going down into the park. And many local
residents whose homes border Southaven report that they heard loud
rumbling sounds and saw strange lights.
"Eyewitness accounts have confirmed that a fire was reported
immediately after," noted Ford. "In addition, the roads around
the park were blocked off to travel by county and park police. The next
day, and for a few days after, the park was closed to the public."
One local resident who lives near the park said that for a five to six day
period after the incident, his house experienced numerous power surges and
the phone would ring strangely without anyone on the other end. "I
ride horses in the park so I'm pretty familiar with the activities
there," said the 45- year-old man who requested anonymity because of
the sensitive nature of his job ("they would fire me if they thought
I believed in flying saucers"). "For the next few days there
were a lot of military helicopters going over the park --- and I couldn't
get in."
Records show that Southaven Park was closed between November 25 and 28.
According to park officials, the park was closed to the general public
that week because it was reserved for duck hunting.
Although some of the area fire departments were initially called, they
were turned back and the fire was handled by the federally controlled
Brookhaven National Laboratory Fire Department, said Ford.
Ford's group finally gained admittance into the park a week later.
"We found an area that was burned out and some trees were bent
over," Ford recalled. "A section looked like it had been plowed
over by machinery." But two things were of particular interest to
Ford. "We were getting a higher than normal radiation reading in the
area, higher than regular background radiation, and the fence line in that
area," said Ford, "had no magnetic reading." Ford explained
that metal fences maintain a magnetic charge from the Earth.
"Something had stripped away the magnetic charge of the fence."
Last week Ford received what he had been waiting and hoping for: a video
film of the crash. "I can't say where I got it from because these
people who supplied the tape are afraid that the government will go after
them." Because of the poor quality of the tape, Ford has been working
with video specialists to try and enhance the quality of the picture and
to produce stills.
The video, a copy of which was given to South Shore Press, shows people
examining a bright reddish, metallic-type object about four-square feet
that appears to be emitting a white, cloudy gas, and a hissing sound can
be heard --- a sight and sound that resembles dry ice that has been
exposed to warmer temperatures. The next shot shows what appears to be a
person trying to lift up a body near a tree, but the poor quality of the
film makes positive identification impossible. In a final scene, three
uniformed men (wearing dark jackets and rounded caps similar to federal
swat teams) are seen placing a large shiny spread (similar to mylar) over
something on the ground. Ford makes no apologies for the poor quality of
the video: "Things are happening fast and the guy who took the shots
doesn't want to be too obvious." And he confesses that it is hard to
get people to come forward and admit what they've seen. "One of the
major problems in researching UFOs is that people are afraid of sounding
like lunatics when describing strange, unexplained events." But an
even greater fear, notes Ford, is the government. "You get involved
with things that the government doesn't want people to know and they can
make life pretty tough for you."
What are Ford's conclusions about the Southaven incident? "We are
still very actively investigating this event. We believe that an
extraterrestrial craft, with aliens, crashed that night in the park ---
and we are out to prove it."
The Long Island U.F.O. Network has a 24-hour hotline number (286-3212) to
which Ford encourages people to call if they have any information on the
(Southaven) incident or any other (unexplainable) phenomenon. Or you can
call this reporter at 281-PRESS he would love to know what happened that
night. |
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