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Large
silent
object
with
bright
lights
was
flying
low and
fast
By
Angela
K.
Brown
The
Associated
Press
updated
6:51
p.m.
MT,
Mon.,
Jan.
14,
2008
STEPHENVILLE,
Texas - In
this farming
community
where
nightfall
usually
brings
clear,
starry
skies,
residents
are abuzz
over
reported
sightings of
what many
believe is a
UFO.
Several
dozen people
— including
a pilot,
county
constable
and business
owners —
insist they
have seen a
large silent
object with
bright
lights
flying low
and fast.
Some
reported
seeing
fighter jets
chasing it.
"People
wonder what
in the world
it is
because this
is the Bible
Belt, and
everyone is
afraid it's
the end of
times," said
Steve Allen,
a freight
company
owner and
pilot who
said the
object he
saw last
week was a
mile long
and half a
mile wide.
"It was
positively,
absolutely
nothing from
these
parts."
While
federal
officials
insist
there's a
logical
explanation,
locals swear
that it was
larger,
quieter,
faster and
lower to the
ground than
an airplane.
They also
said the
object's
lights
changed
configuration,
unlike those
of a plane.
People in
several
towns who
reported
seeing it
over several
weeks have
offered
similar
descriptions
of the
object.
Machinist
Ricky
Sorrells
said friends
made fun of
him when he
told them he
saw a flat,
metallic
object
hovering
about 300
feet over a
pasture
behind his
Dublin home.
But he
decided to
come forward
after
reading
similar
accounts in
the
Stephenville
Empire-Tribune.
"You hear
about big
bass or big
buck in the
area, but
this is a
different
deal,"
Sorrells
said. "It
feels good
to hear that
other people
saw
something,
because that
means I'm
not crazy."
Sorrells
said he has
seen the
object
several
times. He
said he
watched it
through his
rifle's
telescopic
lens and
described it
as very
large and
without
seams, nuts
or bolts.
Maj. Karl
Lewis, a
spokesman
for the
301st
Fighter Wing
at the Joint
Reserve Base
Naval Air
Station in
Fort Worth,
said no
F-16s or
other
aircraft
from his
base were in
the area the
night of
Jan. 8, when
most people
reported the
sighting.
Lewis said
the object
may have
been an
illusion
caused by
two
commercial
airplanes.
Lights from
the aircraft
would seem
unusually
bright and
may appear
orange from
the setting
sun.
"I'm 90
percent sure
this was an
airliner,"
Lewis said.
"With the
sun's angle,
it can play
tricks on
you."
Officials at
the region's
two Air
Force bases
— Dyess in
Abilene and
Sheppard in
Wichita
Falls — also
said none of
their
aircraft
were in the
area last
week. The
Air Force no
longer
investigates
UFOs.
One man has
offered a
reward for a
photograph
or videotape
of the
mysterious
object.
About 200
UFO
sightings
are reported
each month,
mostly in
California,
Colorado and
Texas,
according to
the Mutual
UFO Network,
which plans
to go to the
17,000-resident
town of
Stephenville
to
investigate.
Fourteen
percent of
Americans
polled last
year by The
Associated
Press and
Ipsos say
they have
seen a UFO.
Erath County
Constable
Lee Roy
Gaitan said
that he
first saw
red glowing
lights and
then white
flashing
lights
moving fast,
but that
even with
binoculars
could not
see the
object to
which the
lights were
attached.
"I didn't
see a flying
saucer and I
don't know
what it was,
but it
wasn't an
airplane,
and I've
never seen
anything
like it,"
Gaitan said.
"I think it
must be some
kind of
military
craft — at
least I hope
it was."
Copyright
2008 The
Associated
Press.
All
rights
reserved.
This
material
may not
be
published,
broadcast,
rewritten
or
redistributed.
URL:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22656172/?gt1=10755
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