Aliens Living Among Us (2025) Movie Script
Throughout history,
mysterious lights in the sky have
sparked wonder, fear, and speculation.
Are they natural phenomena,
man-made illusions, or
something far more extraordinary?
A message from life beyond our world?
Today we explore the world's
most mysterious encounters
with unexplainable lights.
From the chilling depths
of Rendlesham Forest, the
Roswell incident, the
haunting Martha Lights, to the
chaos of the Battle of Los Angeles.
Are these phenomena
mere tricks of nature, or
could they be undeniable
evidence of extraterrestrial life
visiting our planet?
Let's have a look at the aliens
that might be living among us.
I've never seen anything
like it before then,
and I've never seen
anything like it since then.
Set against the turbulent
backdrop of the devastating
attack on Pearl Harbor, one of the United
States' most baffling aerial mysteries.
Birds and blimps to
enemy aircraft, and even
the possibility of visitors
from another world.
Yet one fact remains undeniable.
What was witnessed in the skies that night
was truly an unidentified flying object.
A UFO.
December 7th, 1941.
A date which will live in infamy.
With confidence in our
armed forces, with the
unfounding determination
of our people, we will gain
the inevitable triumph.
So help us God.
Reports of strange flying objects in
the sky are older than the United States.
Some of them reported
in scientific journals that
date back to the 16th century, but they've
usually been classed with
Loch Ness monsters and
relegated to the Sunday supplements.
Until World War II showed us that some
of the most fantastic
dreams can be very real.
Like atomic bombs, for instance.
And since the close of the war, hundreds
of reports of strange objects in the
sky have been filed with the Air Force.
And most of them have
been easily explained.
Experimental jet aircraft, weather
balloons, reflected ground lights,
unusual cloud formations, and so on.
February 23rd, 1942.
The sighting of a
Japanese submarine off the
coast of Santa Barbara, California
heightened fears of a mainland invasion.
As the sun set, the shelling began.
February 24th, 1942.
7.18p.m. That evening, warnings of
a further invasion by
naval intelligence put much
of the Los Angeles
coastline under yellow alert.
Tensions eased over the next few hours,
prompting a white alert to be issued.
February 25th, 1942.
Air raid sirens penetrated
the night's silence.
Radars pinpoint an unidentified
flying object approaching the
metropolis, forcing a blackout.
L.A. descended into darkness as
the gunners prepared for the invasion.
Was it imminent?
It's a well-known story within UFO history.
Anti-aircraft guns went into
action against unidentified
aircraft in the Los
Angeles area shortly after
3 a.m. Pacific wartime this morning.
The anti-aircraft guns
began barking during a
blackout ordered by the
4th Interceptor Command at
2.25 a.m. The unidentified object, which
some sources thought
might be a blimp, moved
slowly down the Pacific
coast from Santa Monica
and disappeared south of Long Beach.
They spotted an object in
the sky over Los Angeles.
Basically, you know, an oval object,
and they had anti-aircraft batteries
at the ready, and off they went.
Fired thousands of rounds at this thing.
It was caught in the searchlights,
you know, of the city...
and of course, it's gone down in UFO law
because there was no attack ever on the
mainland of the United
States by the Japanese.
So some people said, well, perhaps
this oval -shaped object was a UFO.
Well, this made headlines
in the newspapers, and
the reason it didn't get hit is
because it's not of this Earth.
Captured by a Los Angeles
Times photographer, an
iconic image offered a
chilling glimpse into the
source of Los Angeles'
most terrifying air raid.
Black-and-white picture.
You see the searchlights all
converging on an object in the sky.
There's some anti-aircraft
fire around it, and
it looks like when the
searchlights, you know,
are all linked together,
all come together, that
there is some kind of object within it.
That's fueled speculation as to
what it may or may not have been.
But the story doesn't
end in the City of Angels.
Our journey takes us
to the windswept plains
of New Mexico, where
another enigmatic event would
forever change the way we view the skies.
In the small, dusty town of Roswell, a
mystery unfolded that would
cement its place in UFO lore.
This is the Roswell
Incident, a case shrouded
in secrecy, rife with
rumors of government cover
ups, and nearly erased from public memory.
What truths lie buried in the desert sands?
What was being hidden from us?
So it is known as the
Cosmic Watergate even today.
Even the skeptics will agree
that something crashed at Roswell.
There's no denying it.
The Air Force agrees that
something crashed there.
It's a question of what, who do you
believe, what evidence do you,
you know, have to support it?
We expect the cowboys and
Indians to come riding past.
It's rocks, sand, cactus.
The townsfolk have a
saying about Roswell, that
it's 200 miles from nowhere,
and it pretty much is.
Headline edition, July 8, 1947.
The Army Air Forces has announced that a
flying disc has been found and is
now in the possession of the Army.
Army officers say the missile,
found sometime last week,
has been inspected at Roswell, New Mexico,
and sent to Wright Field,
Ohio, for further inspection.
What they recovered was
supposedly a vehicle not
of this world, a flying saucer.
The airbase that was just outside of
the town was the Roswell Army Air Force.
The Army and the Air Force
were one group in those days.
There are claims that
Roswell was a significant
place for an alien spacecraft to be in
action on this planet, because it was the
home at that point of the 509th, which
was the only, the only
squadron, airborne squadron,
trained to drop nuclear
weapons on the face of the Earth.
They were the ones
responsible for the atomic
bombs during the Second World War,
although they weren't flown out of Roswell.
They'd had a call from the local sheriff
in the town, a chap called Matt Brazel,
claimed to have found this
strange debris on his ranch.
So they sent Jesse Marcel to investigate.
He brought some of this debris back,
en route back to the base in
the early hours of the morning.
He woke up his son, Jesse Marcel Jr.,
and spread this material
on the kitchen floor.
His son picked this, this piece of material
up, what they call an I-beam,
with these strange symbols on.
And his father said to him, son,
you may be the first to see writing from
another world.
Apart from the I-beam that is described
by his son, one of the most peculiar
properties of this material was
what they nicknamed memory metal.
So it looked pretty much like aluminium,
but it was extremely
lightweight, almost had no weight
at all, and then when you crushed it,
you could crush it easily, and then you'd
let go, and it would just spring back
into its previous shape,
with no creases, no marks.
His son, who went on to become a
doctor, and also served in the military as
a flight surgeon, said,
I've never seen anything
like it before then, and I've never
seen anything like it since then.
Now, for whatever reason,
Roswell Army Air Force
did issue an official
press release saying that
they had discovered a flying disc on a
rancher's land, and some of it was
being sent to higher headquarters.
That particular press
release went around the world,
sent out a second press release
saying, sorry, we got it wrong.
It wasn't a flying disc.
It was actually just a weather balloon.
They basically brought in
the press photographers, and
there's a set of photographs, and there is
Major Marcel holding
bits of this material, which
is clearly a weather balloon.
However, Major Marcel said, that is not the
material that I collected
from Matt Brazel's ranch.
The allegation is that
they did somehow a swap.
The peculiar thing is that Major Marcel was
quite well qualified to identify
weather balloons, because
they used to launch
weather balloons from their
own base every day, because they needed to
know the weather,
because they had aircraft in
and out of there, and it was only,
I think, two months
before this incident, he'd
actually been qualified to do this work.
He knew a weather balloon when he
saw it, and he was adamant until his dying
day that the material he collected
was certainly no weather balloon.
In the stillness of the
Rendlesham forest, hazy
lights pierced through the
treetops, witnessed by military
personnel stationed nearby.
It was late December
1980, just after Christmas,
when this extraordinary event
unfolded, becoming the most
famous UFO encounter in British history.
But was it a hoax, or a visit from
beings beyond our solar system?
Eyewitness accounts tell
of strange lights, and even
physical contact with
an otherworldly craft.
Yet sceptics propose alternative
explanations, natural phenomena, or
perhaps an elaborate prank.
The biggest cases in the UK, often given
the name, you know,
Britain's Roswell, happened in
Rendlesham forest in Suffolk.
Rendlesham forest lay
between the twin bases of
RAF Woodbridge and RAF Bentwaters.
Now in 1980, they were an American base.
It's not a backward little,
you know, RAF station.
It had nuclear weapons stored there.
Now in 1980, they were on high alert
because there was tensions
throughout Russia and some
of the Soviet bloc countries.
Some events happened in late December
1980 over a period of three nights.
There was apparently a
sighting of a UFO there.
There's subsequently a
document came to light, which
is known as the Holt Memo, because Charles
Holt, who was the acting base
commander that night, wrote up the events.
And he said that his men went out to
investigate strange lights in the forest.
And what's subsequently
being claimed is that they
encountered a UFO,
and that there were aliens
involved, and that this
may actually have been
some collusion between
the American military and the
aliens to do with a craft that needed
to come down somewhere
to affect its own repairs.
First night, some
strange lights were seen in
the forest, and one
of the security police...
saw this and asked if he
could go and investigate.
So three base security personnel were sent.
They traveled into Rendlesham
forest, which was then public land.
It was not military land.
One stayed with the
vehicle because they were
having problems with their communications.
Jim Pennington and John Burrows were
the two airmen that went into the forest.
They could see this
thing in amongst the trees.
They claimed that as
they approached it, what
they saw was not just lights, it was
a triangular-shaped craft, either
hovering or on legs just above the ground.
Red lights on the top,
blue lights underneath.
It wasn't that big, you know, maybe
the size of a medium-sized car.
Jim Pennington claims he touched it.
It felt warm and smooth, and there were
these strange markings down the side of it.
They walked around it, and
then it moved off through the trees.
They were then accompanied
by their third colleague,
and they tried to chase it
through the trees, but it was gone.
So they reported this in the incident
log when they returned to base.
Then on the third night, the deputy base
commander, Colonel
Holt, was on site, and they
were having a post-Christmas dinner.
Awards were being given out, you
know, the base commander was there.
And one of the, again, the security came
and said, you know,
Colonel, Colonel had heard
about what had happened,
and they said to him, it's back.
What's back?
This is the UFO.
So the colonel thought, I'll take some men
into the forest, and I'll do
away with this nonsense.
Now he wasn't in military uniform at the
time, so he went, got changed first, picked
up his small tape
recorder, a little handheld
thing, selected a few men, off they went.
First problem they had, they had these sort
of diesel-powered lights,
they're called light holes,
and they wouldn't work.
They were arguing that there was no diesel
in them, but of course they were full.
So they proceeded into
the woods, into the forest.
The colonel was first taken to the location
of the first night's encounter, and one of
his colleagues had brought
a Geiger counter along
with him, and he waved it over the
area, and he got higher
readings, not dangerous,
but higher readings where
this object had supposedly been.
He looked up in the tree canopy, it
looked as if the branches
were broken, because
the trees were quite
densely packed, looked like
something had descended through the trees.
Then out in the distance the colonel could
see this red-orange light, not high in
the sky but low down, it looked
almost like an eye blinking at you
and all the while he's recording.
Approximately 0-1-25 hours.
The indentations look like
something twisted, you know,
has it sat down on them?
Looks like someone
took something and sat it
down and twisted it from side to side.
Very strange.
Hey, this is Erie.
Foxtrot.
This is strange.
Erie, someone want to look
at the spots in the ground?
0148, we're getting very strange signs
out of the farmer's barnyard animals.
Very, very active, making
an awful lot of noise.
They came to the edge of the forest,
and then there was a farmer's field.
Beyond the field was
the farmhouse, and they
said this orange thing was in the field,
and it was so bright it lit up
the, it reflected off the glass in the
windows of the farmhouse, and it made
the farmhouse look like it was on fire.
The lighting is gone now, it was
approximately 120 degrees from the site.
Is it back again?
Yes, sir.
We'll douse the flashlight, sir.
Let's move out to the edge of the
clearing so we can get a better look
at it, see if we can
get the star scope on it.
The light's still there, and all the
barnyard animals have gotten quiet now.
Yeah, we're heading
about 110, 120 degrees from
the site out through to the clearing now,
still getting a reading on
the meter, about two clicks.
Maybe three to four
clicks, getting stronger.
Now, some people have said what the colonel
and his party were looking
at was the lighthouse.
There's a lighthouse out
on the coast at Orford Nest.
The colonel said I could see
the lighthouse as well as this.
I knew what the lighthouse
looked like anyway,
and this thing was in the field.
Okay, we're looking at the thing.
We're probably about 200 to 300 yards away.
It looks like an eye winking at you,
still moving from side to side, and
when you put the star scope on it, it's
sort of a hollow center, a dark center.
It's like a pupil of an eye
looking at you and winking.
This thing moved closer to them.
They all got a bit edgy, and
then it burst, and it was gone.
When they looked, somebody
notified the colonel, and
there was three or more objects in
the sky, and they said at one point a
beam of light was shot down towards them.
Okay, here he comes from the south.
He's coming towards us now.
Now we're observing what appears to
be a beam coming down to the ground.
This is unreal.
And it landed, you know, it
was aiming towards them.
I don't mean a long way off.
It was just a few yards away from them.
He didn't know if this
was a weapon or warning.
You know, some of these lights were
also seen over the weapon storage area.
3400 hours, one object still
hovering over Woodbridge
base at about five to ten degrees off
the horizon, still moving
erratic and similar lights
and beaming down over here.
So they chased these
lights through the forest
for a couple of hours or more, and
then he thought, well,
I'm, you know, I'm wet.
There's nobody come, you know.
He expected that, you know, there might be
an aircraft intercept or a
helicopter, nothing, nobody.
So he decided to return to base.
He reported it to his commanding officer.
He was later asked to write a memo,
which was just a one-page thing
that he wrote, and he sent that to the
Ministry of Defence.
Unbeknown to him, the
Ministry of Defence sent
one to the United States Air Force, and
a few years later, that memo surfaced in
the United States under
the Freedom of Information
Act, and the story then was made public.
The colonel himself would
never wanted anything made
public, but once it was made public,
more of those on site came forward.
There is no doubt these
people were genuine.
There is no sense of a hoax
or anything like that at all.
He has no idea what it is.
He's gone on the record, he's written an
affidavit, as have many of the other
airmen that were involved as well.
From the dense greenery
of Surrey, we travel
to the arid plains of Texas, where a
century-old mystery
dances across the desert.
Known as the Marfa
Lights, flickering orbs of
illumination have been reported
since 1883, mystifying locals
and baffling scientists.
First documented by
Robert Reed Ellison, a young
cowhand, the lights
were initially thought to be
Apache campfires, yet no evidence
of fire or human presence was found.
Since then, countless witnesses
have seen these supernatural orbs.
They move against the
wind, shimmer in various
colours, and sometimes
defy explanation entirely.
The Marfa Lights.
Marfa's in Texas, in the United States, and
it is one of several locations around the
world where these
strange lights are observed.
There's no houses there, there's no
roads, there's no cars, no streetlights.
To give you an example, there's a place
in Norway called Hestalen
in central Norway, and
they too have these strange lights.
The Norwegians have
studied this, and there is
a 24-hour monitoring
station in Hestalen even now.
In Australia, they call
them the Min Min Lights.
In the UK, they've got various names, but
they generally go under
the term of the Spook Lights.
And there's places in the Pennine chain of
hills where these lights are
seen on a fairly regular basis.
There may not be lots of them,
but they turn up year in, year out.
And we have Bala in Wales.
So there's locations
in different parts of the
world where these strange lights are
seen, and Marfa is one amongst them.
Scientists have proposed
theories ranging from tectonic stress
beneath the Earth's crust,
creating glowing Earth lights,
to gases igniting in the desert air.
Some claim superior mirages
caused by temperature differences
might be to blame.
Others suspect the answer lies in natural
gas reserves below the Marfa desert.
How many people have seen the Marfa lights?
You know, certainly
hundreds down the years.
I've worked with a colleague
by the name of Dr. Irina Scott.
She lives in Ohio.
She's seen the Marfa lights.
She went to visit a friend near
there, and she too saw them.
You know, she was as
puzzled by them as anyone else.
I've been to Hestalen in Norway, didn't see
the lights, but they have caught the lights
on radar, they've taken video of them, and
lots and lots of photographs of them.
What you find about
these locations, like Marfa,
they go back if not
decades, even centuries,
and you usually find folk tales or ghostly
paranormal tales originally
associated with these lights.
Despite the scientific scrutiny,
no single theory explains it all.
To this day, the Marfa lights remain a
captivating mystery on the Texan horizon.
The early hours of February 25th, 1942.
Air raid sirens shattered the calm as radar
tracked an unidentified
object over Los Angeles.
This is, you know, downtown Los Angeles.
You know, high above it, there must have
been thousands if not tens of thousands of
people at least saw
some part of it that night.
You know, by its very nature, with the
searchlights and the anti-aircraft
fire, you couldn't hide it.
The civilians in Los
Angeles panicked somewhat.
They thought this was an attack by,
you know, the armed forces of Japan.
Anti-aircraft guns filled the
night with thunderous fire.
The city plunged into chaos.
Captured in a haunting
photograph by the Los
Angeles Times, the
events of that night became
etched in history as one of the
most infamous UFO mysteries.
Explanations ranged from
weather balloons to enemy aircraft,
but declassified documents
later suggested the military had
fired at nothing more than a
weather balloon carrying a flare.
It was a weather balloon.
You know, a weather balloon is
something that is launched even today.
We still use them.
It goes into various
parts of our atmosphere
and does, you know,
what it says on the tin.
It reads the weather, not just from its
location, but it can carry
equipment, you know,
sometimes to test the weather in other
areas or other parts of the atmosphere.
And of course, that
goes back to the ground.
Well, there was thousands
of rounds of flares.
Of anti-aircraft, fired at whatever
this may or may not have been.
And of course, nothing was shot down.
You know, nothing.
Not weather balloon, not Japanese
bomber, no flying saucer, nothing.
Yet no wreckage was ever found, and
Japanese involvement was ruled out.
Theories of extraterrestrial
visitors have persisted, fueling the
enigma of the Battle of Los Angeles, a
mystery that to this day
defies definitive explanation.
Roswell died for decades.
Nuclear physicist Stanton
Friedman met quite by chance
Major Marcel in the late 1970s.
And that's really when
the investigation began.
In the 1990s, it hit the headlines
again for a whole host of reasons.
And another investigation took
place, this time on an official level.
And the United States Air Force provided a
huge great tome, a huge
massive book about Roswell,
saying that it was now
still a weather balloon,
but these weather balloons were part
of a secret monitoring device,
which was called Project Mogul.
Basically, Project Mogul
launched some equipment into the
higher atmosphere to check for
Soviet nuclear experiments, tests.
It was discontinued for two reasons.
First of all, because it was
only limited in its effectiveness.
And secondly, because the
Americans managed to find
better ways of spying on the Russians.
So Project Mogul was top secret, but the
equipment that they were
using was just ordinary.
It was still weather balloons.
Somebody said, well,
according to some of the
eyewitnesses that have
subsequently come forward, there was
also dead bodies found at the crash site.
I never talked about it again.
I never mentioned it to anybody.
Not by Major Marcel, but others.
And when they were saying
dead bodies, they meant aliens.
One theory links the incident
to Operation Paperclip,
suggesting the craft
was a secret Nazi flying
machine brought to the U.S.
after World War II, called the Bell.
This experimental craft
allegedly failed during a test flight.
Grainy hoax footage of alien
autopsies and government
cover-ups have blurred fact and fiction.
While some believe the crash
was extraterrestrial, others
maintain it was a failed
military experiment.
Whatever fell from
the skies in Roswell, its
secrets remain tightly guarded, leaving
the truth tantalizingly out of reach.
Press release, i.e. the press release put
out by Walter Holt,
said that they'd captured
a flying saucer was probably a pretty
bad error of judgment in the heat of the
moment because they
realized that they'd got some
of their own technology
and they didn't want
people to know there were
experiments going on locally.
And they completely
over-egged the press release,
which meant that they had
to retract it very, very quickly.
But that's the only major
mistake I think they made.
You know, if you wanted to hide something
that you were testing,
then it's the perfect place.
You know, Trinity, the
place where the first
atomic bomb was tested, is
not that far away in the desert.
And of course, when they exploded the first
atomic bomb, they just told the locals it
was a dynamite shack that had blown up.
You think, well, if any UFO event has
the possibility of being
an alien spaceship, then
you would put this in that category.
So you cannot prove it
conclusively one way or another.
But I would say the odds lie in
the favor of it looking like that.
I'm truly skeptical about the alien thing.
And there are a number of
reasons to be skeptical about it.
First of all, let's just do
a reality check on this.
There were lots and lots of UFO books
published between the
early 1950s and about 1980.
And a number of those played up certain
cases that were taken
to be hugely important
and hugely spectacular, including the
Betty and Barney Hill abduction case.
Roswell's virtually
non-existent in those books.
There are other crashed
saucer cases around then.
So I'm skeptical because
it just doesn't turn up,
that no information
appears to leak from it.
However, you have to keep an open mind.
Me personally, I sit on the fence.
I believe something
peculiar happened there.
I don't believe the Weather
Balloon or Project Mogul, it doesn't fit.
The evidence that the
Air Force have provided
doesn't fit, would not surprise me.
However, if it wasn't
something that the military
themselves were experimenting
with that was quite gruesome,
hence the reason to keep it quiet.
But I don't believe any of the
balloon, balloon baloney it's called.
When it comes to UFO cover-ups, if
you think about it from
a military perspective,
if you are testing
something that for whatever
reason strays into an area where it comes
in contact with the
public, the general public,
then the perfect
cover-up is to call it a UFO.
Because people would go
running around looking for
something that simply
didn't exist at that time.
And in reality, it was something that
the military had been messing with.
The authorities in any country, it is their
duty to keep secrets in the first place.
That's part of what they do.
So they can keep things very secret.
Things happen that shouldn't.
It would never surprise me that some of
the UFO events that we perhaps look at
in different parts of the world are not
something that's man-made and
has gone, not as planned, sort of thing.
In the world of British ufology, no case
is more enticing than the
incident at Rendlesham Forest.
In the 40 years since
the alleged extraterrestrial
encounter took place, many
researchers have attempted to
uncover the truth
surrounding Britain's Roswell.
Investigations into the
event has given rise to
both sceptical and scientific
conclusions, riddled with their
own contradictions.
What gave off these strange lights?
Were they man-made, a natural phenomena,
or visitors from a distant world?
One of the things about all the witnesses
at Rendlesham, including
Colonel Holt, is their credibility.
He wasn't sent to England for an easy ride.
He'd been involved with returning prisoners
from Vietnam, for example, you know.
So he had a long and
illustrious career in the military.
They had all kinds of training, not just
walking around with a dog and a flashlight.
You make up your own mind, was this
something that the military were testing?
Orford Ness has a
history of military testing.
It's where some of the first radar was
tested, beginning in the
Second World War, for example.
But would you test something where
there's a storage of nuclear weapons?
I'm not so sure you would.
So then you look at the other alternatives.
The sceptics will say that they, over the
three nights, a number of things
happened that they all misidentified.
There was, you know, the lighthouse,
the re-entry of a satellite, or whatever.
But the witnesses said, no, I
saw this up close and personal.
You know, and I've met the
Colonel, listened to what he had to say.
I think it's highly unlikely that he would
misidentify anything,
let alone the lighthouse.
He went to speak to the lighthouse keeper.
And he says, the lighthouse
has three coloured lights on it.
The red one goes out to sea,
because red means don't come here.
So if you were seeing a red light,
you must have been out at sea.
He has no idea what it is.
He's gone on the record, he's written an
affidavit, as have many of the other
airmen that were involved as well.
One little intriguing
thing, as I mentioned, the
first two airmen that went into the
woods were Pennyston and Burroughs.
Jim Penniston is the one that said
they saw a craft, touched it, et cetera.
His colleague, John
Burroughs, who was standing just
a few yards away, looking at the
same thing, said, I never saw any craft.
I only saw lights.
Lord Hill Norton, former
admiral of the fleet,
said that either these
gentlemen saw what they
claimed to have seen, or they were all
under the influence of something illegal.
Which either way, surely that
must be of defence significance.
Could these unexplainable
lights cutting through the darkness
be more than just phenomena?
Could they be the silent
beacons of extraterrestrial
life reaching out across the void?
We just might never actually find out.
Well, originally, of
course, you know, it was
fear and superstition
that was, you know, that
were accountable ghosts, you
know, phantoms this, phantom of that.
As we moved into the 20th century, perhaps
they were phantom
airships, you know, and as
we moved further into
the century, perhaps there
were beings from another world.
But basically, all you're
seeing is lights, and
it depends on your own perception
as to what you make of them.
Studies have been
done at various locations.
As we mentioned previously,
the Ministry of Defence
in the UK did a study on
UFOs called the Condine Report.
It came to the conclusion that UFOs
were unidentified atmospheric phenomena.
In other words, strange balls of
light, they're common plasmas.
So the number of scientists
and scientific studies
claim that these could be as yet an
unidentified type of
aerial phenomena, natural.
But are those, certainly when you look at
Marfa, they think there
is a sceptical solution,
if you want to go down that route,
that it is, you know, caused by traffic
cars in the distance, and these lights
are somehow reflected in a certain way.
And that's what people are seeing,
even though you can't see the cars.
And that could be a possibility.
But when you go to places like Hestaland,
these lights are seen down in the valley.
There's only about 200 people live there.
The locations where they've
been seen, there are no roads.
And in the winter, it gets down to
minus 20, and about 10 feet of snow.
I know I was there in the
winter, I can guarantee that.
And they have caught them on radar.
They have filmed them, both in movie
film, you know, and still photographs.
So there is a very real phenomena there.
Perhaps we are not alone.
Perhaps these lights, objects
and encounters are glimpses
of a greater cosmic
reality, or simply reflections
of our curiosity, our
fears, and our imagination.
Until science or transparency
brings definitive answers,
the question will remain, what's out there?
The Air Force then said, well, they will
actually crash test dummies,
not related to Project Mogul at all.
But we used to have these large wooden
mannequins that we
dropped from high altitude,
you know, to test parachutes and so on.
But the only thing that was wrong with
that is they didn't start
using those until the 1950s.
And of course, the Roswell
incident happened in 1947.
So they got the wrong decade as well.
In all, the Air Force had given out
four different aspects of what this was.
First of all, it was a flying disc.
Then no, it was a weather balloon.
Then, oh sorry, no, it was Project
Mogul, which was still weather balloons.
Oh, all the dead bodies
were crash test dummies.
Oh, we forgot they were from the 1950s.
So they have four different
interpretations of what happened.
That's why, one of the many reasons why
people are suspicious
of the official version.
The various mysterious
lights will probably turn out
to be some kind of
atmospheric phenomenon that
as yet is understood by mainstream
science, nothing to do with ETs at all.
Unknown.
The official position is unknown.
Could these unexplainable
lights cutting through the darkness
be more than just phenomena?
Could they be the silent
beacons of extraterrestrial
life reaching out across the void?
We just might never actually find out.
mysterious lights in the sky have
sparked wonder, fear, and speculation.
Are they natural phenomena,
man-made illusions, or
something far more extraordinary?
A message from life beyond our world?
Today we explore the world's
most mysterious encounters
with unexplainable lights.
From the chilling depths
of Rendlesham Forest, the
Roswell incident, the
haunting Martha Lights, to the
chaos of the Battle of Los Angeles.
Are these phenomena
mere tricks of nature, or
could they be undeniable
evidence of extraterrestrial life
visiting our planet?
Let's have a look at the aliens
that might be living among us.
I've never seen anything
like it before then,
and I've never seen
anything like it since then.
Set against the turbulent
backdrop of the devastating
attack on Pearl Harbor, one of the United
States' most baffling aerial mysteries.
Birds and blimps to
enemy aircraft, and even
the possibility of visitors
from another world.
Yet one fact remains undeniable.
What was witnessed in the skies that night
was truly an unidentified flying object.
A UFO.
December 7th, 1941.
A date which will live in infamy.
With confidence in our
armed forces, with the
unfounding determination
of our people, we will gain
the inevitable triumph.
So help us God.
Reports of strange flying objects in
the sky are older than the United States.
Some of them reported
in scientific journals that
date back to the 16th century, but they've
usually been classed with
Loch Ness monsters and
relegated to the Sunday supplements.
Until World War II showed us that some
of the most fantastic
dreams can be very real.
Like atomic bombs, for instance.
And since the close of the war, hundreds
of reports of strange objects in the
sky have been filed with the Air Force.
And most of them have
been easily explained.
Experimental jet aircraft, weather
balloons, reflected ground lights,
unusual cloud formations, and so on.
February 23rd, 1942.
The sighting of a
Japanese submarine off the
coast of Santa Barbara, California
heightened fears of a mainland invasion.
As the sun set, the shelling began.
February 24th, 1942.
7.18p.m. That evening, warnings of
a further invasion by
naval intelligence put much
of the Los Angeles
coastline under yellow alert.
Tensions eased over the next few hours,
prompting a white alert to be issued.
February 25th, 1942.
Air raid sirens penetrated
the night's silence.
Radars pinpoint an unidentified
flying object approaching the
metropolis, forcing a blackout.
L.A. descended into darkness as
the gunners prepared for the invasion.
Was it imminent?
It's a well-known story within UFO history.
Anti-aircraft guns went into
action against unidentified
aircraft in the Los
Angeles area shortly after
3 a.m. Pacific wartime this morning.
The anti-aircraft guns
began barking during a
blackout ordered by the
4th Interceptor Command at
2.25 a.m. The unidentified object, which
some sources thought
might be a blimp, moved
slowly down the Pacific
coast from Santa Monica
and disappeared south of Long Beach.
They spotted an object in
the sky over Los Angeles.
Basically, you know, an oval object,
and they had anti-aircraft batteries
at the ready, and off they went.
Fired thousands of rounds at this thing.
It was caught in the searchlights,
you know, of the city...
and of course, it's gone down in UFO law
because there was no attack ever on the
mainland of the United
States by the Japanese.
So some people said, well, perhaps
this oval -shaped object was a UFO.
Well, this made headlines
in the newspapers, and
the reason it didn't get hit is
because it's not of this Earth.
Captured by a Los Angeles
Times photographer, an
iconic image offered a
chilling glimpse into the
source of Los Angeles'
most terrifying air raid.
Black-and-white picture.
You see the searchlights all
converging on an object in the sky.
There's some anti-aircraft
fire around it, and
it looks like when the
searchlights, you know,
are all linked together,
all come together, that
there is some kind of object within it.
That's fueled speculation as to
what it may or may not have been.
But the story doesn't
end in the City of Angels.
Our journey takes us
to the windswept plains
of New Mexico, where
another enigmatic event would
forever change the way we view the skies.
In the small, dusty town of Roswell, a
mystery unfolded that would
cement its place in UFO lore.
This is the Roswell
Incident, a case shrouded
in secrecy, rife with
rumors of government cover
ups, and nearly erased from public memory.
What truths lie buried in the desert sands?
What was being hidden from us?
So it is known as the
Cosmic Watergate even today.
Even the skeptics will agree
that something crashed at Roswell.
There's no denying it.
The Air Force agrees that
something crashed there.
It's a question of what, who do you
believe, what evidence do you,
you know, have to support it?
We expect the cowboys and
Indians to come riding past.
It's rocks, sand, cactus.
The townsfolk have a
saying about Roswell, that
it's 200 miles from nowhere,
and it pretty much is.
Headline edition, July 8, 1947.
The Army Air Forces has announced that a
flying disc has been found and is
now in the possession of the Army.
Army officers say the missile,
found sometime last week,
has been inspected at Roswell, New Mexico,
and sent to Wright Field,
Ohio, for further inspection.
What they recovered was
supposedly a vehicle not
of this world, a flying saucer.
The airbase that was just outside of
the town was the Roswell Army Air Force.
The Army and the Air Force
were one group in those days.
There are claims that
Roswell was a significant
place for an alien spacecraft to be in
action on this planet, because it was the
home at that point of the 509th, which
was the only, the only
squadron, airborne squadron,
trained to drop nuclear
weapons on the face of the Earth.
They were the ones
responsible for the atomic
bombs during the Second World War,
although they weren't flown out of Roswell.
They'd had a call from the local sheriff
in the town, a chap called Matt Brazel,
claimed to have found this
strange debris on his ranch.
So they sent Jesse Marcel to investigate.
He brought some of this debris back,
en route back to the base in
the early hours of the morning.
He woke up his son, Jesse Marcel Jr.,
and spread this material
on the kitchen floor.
His son picked this, this piece of material
up, what they call an I-beam,
with these strange symbols on.
And his father said to him, son,
you may be the first to see writing from
another world.
Apart from the I-beam that is described
by his son, one of the most peculiar
properties of this material was
what they nicknamed memory metal.
So it looked pretty much like aluminium,
but it was extremely
lightweight, almost had no weight
at all, and then when you crushed it,
you could crush it easily, and then you'd
let go, and it would just spring back
into its previous shape,
with no creases, no marks.
His son, who went on to become a
doctor, and also served in the military as
a flight surgeon, said,
I've never seen anything
like it before then, and I've never
seen anything like it since then.
Now, for whatever reason,
Roswell Army Air Force
did issue an official
press release saying that
they had discovered a flying disc on a
rancher's land, and some of it was
being sent to higher headquarters.
That particular press
release went around the world,
sent out a second press release
saying, sorry, we got it wrong.
It wasn't a flying disc.
It was actually just a weather balloon.
They basically brought in
the press photographers, and
there's a set of photographs, and there is
Major Marcel holding
bits of this material, which
is clearly a weather balloon.
However, Major Marcel said, that is not the
material that I collected
from Matt Brazel's ranch.
The allegation is that
they did somehow a swap.
The peculiar thing is that Major Marcel was
quite well qualified to identify
weather balloons, because
they used to launch
weather balloons from their
own base every day, because they needed to
know the weather,
because they had aircraft in
and out of there, and it was only,
I think, two months
before this incident, he'd
actually been qualified to do this work.
He knew a weather balloon when he
saw it, and he was adamant until his dying
day that the material he collected
was certainly no weather balloon.
In the stillness of the
Rendlesham forest, hazy
lights pierced through the
treetops, witnessed by military
personnel stationed nearby.
It was late December
1980, just after Christmas,
when this extraordinary event
unfolded, becoming the most
famous UFO encounter in British history.
But was it a hoax, or a visit from
beings beyond our solar system?
Eyewitness accounts tell
of strange lights, and even
physical contact with
an otherworldly craft.
Yet sceptics propose alternative
explanations, natural phenomena, or
perhaps an elaborate prank.
The biggest cases in the UK, often given
the name, you know,
Britain's Roswell, happened in
Rendlesham forest in Suffolk.
Rendlesham forest lay
between the twin bases of
RAF Woodbridge and RAF Bentwaters.
Now in 1980, they were an American base.
It's not a backward little,
you know, RAF station.
It had nuclear weapons stored there.
Now in 1980, they were on high alert
because there was tensions
throughout Russia and some
of the Soviet bloc countries.
Some events happened in late December
1980 over a period of three nights.
There was apparently a
sighting of a UFO there.
There's subsequently a
document came to light, which
is known as the Holt Memo, because Charles
Holt, who was the acting base
commander that night, wrote up the events.
And he said that his men went out to
investigate strange lights in the forest.
And what's subsequently
being claimed is that they
encountered a UFO,
and that there were aliens
involved, and that this
may actually have been
some collusion between
the American military and the
aliens to do with a craft that needed
to come down somewhere
to affect its own repairs.
First night, some
strange lights were seen in
the forest, and one
of the security police...
saw this and asked if he
could go and investigate.
So three base security personnel were sent.
They traveled into Rendlesham
forest, which was then public land.
It was not military land.
One stayed with the
vehicle because they were
having problems with their communications.
Jim Pennington and John Burrows were
the two airmen that went into the forest.
They could see this
thing in amongst the trees.
They claimed that as
they approached it, what
they saw was not just lights, it was
a triangular-shaped craft, either
hovering or on legs just above the ground.
Red lights on the top,
blue lights underneath.
It wasn't that big, you know, maybe
the size of a medium-sized car.
Jim Pennington claims he touched it.
It felt warm and smooth, and there were
these strange markings down the side of it.
They walked around it, and
then it moved off through the trees.
They were then accompanied
by their third colleague,
and they tried to chase it
through the trees, but it was gone.
So they reported this in the incident
log when they returned to base.
Then on the third night, the deputy base
commander, Colonel
Holt, was on site, and they
were having a post-Christmas dinner.
Awards were being given out, you
know, the base commander was there.
And one of the, again, the security came
and said, you know,
Colonel, Colonel had heard
about what had happened,
and they said to him, it's back.
What's back?
This is the UFO.
So the colonel thought, I'll take some men
into the forest, and I'll do
away with this nonsense.
Now he wasn't in military uniform at the
time, so he went, got changed first, picked
up his small tape
recorder, a little handheld
thing, selected a few men, off they went.
First problem they had, they had these sort
of diesel-powered lights,
they're called light holes,
and they wouldn't work.
They were arguing that there was no diesel
in them, but of course they were full.
So they proceeded into
the woods, into the forest.
The colonel was first taken to the location
of the first night's encounter, and one of
his colleagues had brought
a Geiger counter along
with him, and he waved it over the
area, and he got higher
readings, not dangerous,
but higher readings where
this object had supposedly been.
He looked up in the tree canopy, it
looked as if the branches
were broken, because
the trees were quite
densely packed, looked like
something had descended through the trees.
Then out in the distance the colonel could
see this red-orange light, not high in
the sky but low down, it looked
almost like an eye blinking at you
and all the while he's recording.
Approximately 0-1-25 hours.
The indentations look like
something twisted, you know,
has it sat down on them?
Looks like someone
took something and sat it
down and twisted it from side to side.
Very strange.
Hey, this is Erie.
Foxtrot.
This is strange.
Erie, someone want to look
at the spots in the ground?
0148, we're getting very strange signs
out of the farmer's barnyard animals.
Very, very active, making
an awful lot of noise.
They came to the edge of the forest,
and then there was a farmer's field.
Beyond the field was
the farmhouse, and they
said this orange thing was in the field,
and it was so bright it lit up
the, it reflected off the glass in the
windows of the farmhouse, and it made
the farmhouse look like it was on fire.
The lighting is gone now, it was
approximately 120 degrees from the site.
Is it back again?
Yes, sir.
We'll douse the flashlight, sir.
Let's move out to the edge of the
clearing so we can get a better look
at it, see if we can
get the star scope on it.
The light's still there, and all the
barnyard animals have gotten quiet now.
Yeah, we're heading
about 110, 120 degrees from
the site out through to the clearing now,
still getting a reading on
the meter, about two clicks.
Maybe three to four
clicks, getting stronger.
Now, some people have said what the colonel
and his party were looking
at was the lighthouse.
There's a lighthouse out
on the coast at Orford Nest.
The colonel said I could see
the lighthouse as well as this.
I knew what the lighthouse
looked like anyway,
and this thing was in the field.
Okay, we're looking at the thing.
We're probably about 200 to 300 yards away.
It looks like an eye winking at you,
still moving from side to side, and
when you put the star scope on it, it's
sort of a hollow center, a dark center.
It's like a pupil of an eye
looking at you and winking.
This thing moved closer to them.
They all got a bit edgy, and
then it burst, and it was gone.
When they looked, somebody
notified the colonel, and
there was three or more objects in
the sky, and they said at one point a
beam of light was shot down towards them.
Okay, here he comes from the south.
He's coming towards us now.
Now we're observing what appears to
be a beam coming down to the ground.
This is unreal.
And it landed, you know, it
was aiming towards them.
I don't mean a long way off.
It was just a few yards away from them.
He didn't know if this
was a weapon or warning.
You know, some of these lights were
also seen over the weapon storage area.
3400 hours, one object still
hovering over Woodbridge
base at about five to ten degrees off
the horizon, still moving
erratic and similar lights
and beaming down over here.
So they chased these
lights through the forest
for a couple of hours or more, and
then he thought, well,
I'm, you know, I'm wet.
There's nobody come, you know.
He expected that, you know, there might be
an aircraft intercept or a
helicopter, nothing, nobody.
So he decided to return to base.
He reported it to his commanding officer.
He was later asked to write a memo,
which was just a one-page thing
that he wrote, and he sent that to the
Ministry of Defence.
Unbeknown to him, the
Ministry of Defence sent
one to the United States Air Force, and
a few years later, that memo surfaced in
the United States under
the Freedom of Information
Act, and the story then was made public.
The colonel himself would
never wanted anything made
public, but once it was made public,
more of those on site came forward.
There is no doubt these
people were genuine.
There is no sense of a hoax
or anything like that at all.
He has no idea what it is.
He's gone on the record, he's written an
affidavit, as have many of the other
airmen that were involved as well.
From the dense greenery
of Surrey, we travel
to the arid plains of Texas, where a
century-old mystery
dances across the desert.
Known as the Marfa
Lights, flickering orbs of
illumination have been reported
since 1883, mystifying locals
and baffling scientists.
First documented by
Robert Reed Ellison, a young
cowhand, the lights
were initially thought to be
Apache campfires, yet no evidence
of fire or human presence was found.
Since then, countless witnesses
have seen these supernatural orbs.
They move against the
wind, shimmer in various
colours, and sometimes
defy explanation entirely.
The Marfa Lights.
Marfa's in Texas, in the United States, and
it is one of several locations around the
world where these
strange lights are observed.
There's no houses there, there's no
roads, there's no cars, no streetlights.
To give you an example, there's a place
in Norway called Hestalen
in central Norway, and
they too have these strange lights.
The Norwegians have
studied this, and there is
a 24-hour monitoring
station in Hestalen even now.
In Australia, they call
them the Min Min Lights.
In the UK, they've got various names, but
they generally go under
the term of the Spook Lights.
And there's places in the Pennine chain of
hills where these lights are
seen on a fairly regular basis.
There may not be lots of them,
but they turn up year in, year out.
And we have Bala in Wales.
So there's locations
in different parts of the
world where these strange lights are
seen, and Marfa is one amongst them.
Scientists have proposed
theories ranging from tectonic stress
beneath the Earth's crust,
creating glowing Earth lights,
to gases igniting in the desert air.
Some claim superior mirages
caused by temperature differences
might be to blame.
Others suspect the answer lies in natural
gas reserves below the Marfa desert.
How many people have seen the Marfa lights?
You know, certainly
hundreds down the years.
I've worked with a colleague
by the name of Dr. Irina Scott.
She lives in Ohio.
She's seen the Marfa lights.
She went to visit a friend near
there, and she too saw them.
You know, she was as
puzzled by them as anyone else.
I've been to Hestalen in Norway, didn't see
the lights, but they have caught the lights
on radar, they've taken video of them, and
lots and lots of photographs of them.
What you find about
these locations, like Marfa,
they go back if not
decades, even centuries,
and you usually find folk tales or ghostly
paranormal tales originally
associated with these lights.
Despite the scientific scrutiny,
no single theory explains it all.
To this day, the Marfa lights remain a
captivating mystery on the Texan horizon.
The early hours of February 25th, 1942.
Air raid sirens shattered the calm as radar
tracked an unidentified
object over Los Angeles.
This is, you know, downtown Los Angeles.
You know, high above it, there must have
been thousands if not tens of thousands of
people at least saw
some part of it that night.
You know, by its very nature, with the
searchlights and the anti-aircraft
fire, you couldn't hide it.
The civilians in Los
Angeles panicked somewhat.
They thought this was an attack by,
you know, the armed forces of Japan.
Anti-aircraft guns filled the
night with thunderous fire.
The city plunged into chaos.
Captured in a haunting
photograph by the Los
Angeles Times, the
events of that night became
etched in history as one of the
most infamous UFO mysteries.
Explanations ranged from
weather balloons to enemy aircraft,
but declassified documents
later suggested the military had
fired at nothing more than a
weather balloon carrying a flare.
It was a weather balloon.
You know, a weather balloon is
something that is launched even today.
We still use them.
It goes into various
parts of our atmosphere
and does, you know,
what it says on the tin.
It reads the weather, not just from its
location, but it can carry
equipment, you know,
sometimes to test the weather in other
areas or other parts of the atmosphere.
And of course, that
goes back to the ground.
Well, there was thousands
of rounds of flares.
Of anti-aircraft, fired at whatever
this may or may not have been.
And of course, nothing was shot down.
You know, nothing.
Not weather balloon, not Japanese
bomber, no flying saucer, nothing.
Yet no wreckage was ever found, and
Japanese involvement was ruled out.
Theories of extraterrestrial
visitors have persisted, fueling the
enigma of the Battle of Los Angeles, a
mystery that to this day
defies definitive explanation.
Roswell died for decades.
Nuclear physicist Stanton
Friedman met quite by chance
Major Marcel in the late 1970s.
And that's really when
the investigation began.
In the 1990s, it hit the headlines
again for a whole host of reasons.
And another investigation took
place, this time on an official level.
And the United States Air Force provided a
huge great tome, a huge
massive book about Roswell,
saying that it was now
still a weather balloon,
but these weather balloons were part
of a secret monitoring device,
which was called Project Mogul.
Basically, Project Mogul
launched some equipment into the
higher atmosphere to check for
Soviet nuclear experiments, tests.
It was discontinued for two reasons.
First of all, because it was
only limited in its effectiveness.
And secondly, because the
Americans managed to find
better ways of spying on the Russians.
So Project Mogul was top secret, but the
equipment that they were
using was just ordinary.
It was still weather balloons.
Somebody said, well,
according to some of the
eyewitnesses that have
subsequently come forward, there was
also dead bodies found at the crash site.
I never talked about it again.
I never mentioned it to anybody.
Not by Major Marcel, but others.
And when they were saying
dead bodies, they meant aliens.
One theory links the incident
to Operation Paperclip,
suggesting the craft
was a secret Nazi flying
machine brought to the U.S.
after World War II, called the Bell.
This experimental craft
allegedly failed during a test flight.
Grainy hoax footage of alien
autopsies and government
cover-ups have blurred fact and fiction.
While some believe the crash
was extraterrestrial, others
maintain it was a failed
military experiment.
Whatever fell from
the skies in Roswell, its
secrets remain tightly guarded, leaving
the truth tantalizingly out of reach.
Press release, i.e. the press release put
out by Walter Holt,
said that they'd captured
a flying saucer was probably a pretty
bad error of judgment in the heat of the
moment because they
realized that they'd got some
of their own technology
and they didn't want
people to know there were
experiments going on locally.
And they completely
over-egged the press release,
which meant that they had
to retract it very, very quickly.
But that's the only major
mistake I think they made.
You know, if you wanted to hide something
that you were testing,
then it's the perfect place.
You know, Trinity, the
place where the first
atomic bomb was tested, is
not that far away in the desert.
And of course, when they exploded the first
atomic bomb, they just told the locals it
was a dynamite shack that had blown up.
You think, well, if any UFO event has
the possibility of being
an alien spaceship, then
you would put this in that category.
So you cannot prove it
conclusively one way or another.
But I would say the odds lie in
the favor of it looking like that.
I'm truly skeptical about the alien thing.
And there are a number of
reasons to be skeptical about it.
First of all, let's just do
a reality check on this.
There were lots and lots of UFO books
published between the
early 1950s and about 1980.
And a number of those played up certain
cases that were taken
to be hugely important
and hugely spectacular, including the
Betty and Barney Hill abduction case.
Roswell's virtually
non-existent in those books.
There are other crashed
saucer cases around then.
So I'm skeptical because
it just doesn't turn up,
that no information
appears to leak from it.
However, you have to keep an open mind.
Me personally, I sit on the fence.
I believe something
peculiar happened there.
I don't believe the Weather
Balloon or Project Mogul, it doesn't fit.
The evidence that the
Air Force have provided
doesn't fit, would not surprise me.
However, if it wasn't
something that the military
themselves were experimenting
with that was quite gruesome,
hence the reason to keep it quiet.
But I don't believe any of the
balloon, balloon baloney it's called.
When it comes to UFO cover-ups, if
you think about it from
a military perspective,
if you are testing
something that for whatever
reason strays into an area where it comes
in contact with the
public, the general public,
then the perfect
cover-up is to call it a UFO.
Because people would go
running around looking for
something that simply
didn't exist at that time.
And in reality, it was something that
the military had been messing with.
The authorities in any country, it is their
duty to keep secrets in the first place.
That's part of what they do.
So they can keep things very secret.
Things happen that shouldn't.
It would never surprise me that some of
the UFO events that we perhaps look at
in different parts of the world are not
something that's man-made and
has gone, not as planned, sort of thing.
In the world of British ufology, no case
is more enticing than the
incident at Rendlesham Forest.
In the 40 years since
the alleged extraterrestrial
encounter took place, many
researchers have attempted to
uncover the truth
surrounding Britain's Roswell.
Investigations into the
event has given rise to
both sceptical and scientific
conclusions, riddled with their
own contradictions.
What gave off these strange lights?
Were they man-made, a natural phenomena,
or visitors from a distant world?
One of the things about all the witnesses
at Rendlesham, including
Colonel Holt, is their credibility.
He wasn't sent to England for an easy ride.
He'd been involved with returning prisoners
from Vietnam, for example, you know.
So he had a long and
illustrious career in the military.
They had all kinds of training, not just
walking around with a dog and a flashlight.
You make up your own mind, was this
something that the military were testing?
Orford Ness has a
history of military testing.
It's where some of the first radar was
tested, beginning in the
Second World War, for example.
But would you test something where
there's a storage of nuclear weapons?
I'm not so sure you would.
So then you look at the other alternatives.
The sceptics will say that they, over the
three nights, a number of things
happened that they all misidentified.
There was, you know, the lighthouse,
the re-entry of a satellite, or whatever.
But the witnesses said, no, I
saw this up close and personal.
You know, and I've met the
Colonel, listened to what he had to say.
I think it's highly unlikely that he would
misidentify anything,
let alone the lighthouse.
He went to speak to the lighthouse keeper.
And he says, the lighthouse
has three coloured lights on it.
The red one goes out to sea,
because red means don't come here.
So if you were seeing a red light,
you must have been out at sea.
He has no idea what it is.
He's gone on the record, he's written an
affidavit, as have many of the other
airmen that were involved as well.
One little intriguing
thing, as I mentioned, the
first two airmen that went into the
woods were Pennyston and Burroughs.
Jim Penniston is the one that said
they saw a craft, touched it, et cetera.
His colleague, John
Burroughs, who was standing just
a few yards away, looking at the
same thing, said, I never saw any craft.
I only saw lights.
Lord Hill Norton, former
admiral of the fleet,
said that either these
gentlemen saw what they
claimed to have seen, or they were all
under the influence of something illegal.
Which either way, surely that
must be of defence significance.
Could these unexplainable
lights cutting through the darkness
be more than just phenomena?
Could they be the silent
beacons of extraterrestrial
life reaching out across the void?
We just might never actually find out.
Well, originally, of
course, you know, it was
fear and superstition
that was, you know, that
were accountable ghosts, you
know, phantoms this, phantom of that.
As we moved into the 20th century, perhaps
they were phantom
airships, you know, and as
we moved further into
the century, perhaps there
were beings from another world.
But basically, all you're
seeing is lights, and
it depends on your own perception
as to what you make of them.
Studies have been
done at various locations.
As we mentioned previously,
the Ministry of Defence
in the UK did a study on
UFOs called the Condine Report.
It came to the conclusion that UFOs
were unidentified atmospheric phenomena.
In other words, strange balls of
light, they're common plasmas.
So the number of scientists
and scientific studies
claim that these could be as yet an
unidentified type of
aerial phenomena, natural.
But are those, certainly when you look at
Marfa, they think there
is a sceptical solution,
if you want to go down that route,
that it is, you know, caused by traffic
cars in the distance, and these lights
are somehow reflected in a certain way.
And that's what people are seeing,
even though you can't see the cars.
And that could be a possibility.
But when you go to places like Hestaland,
these lights are seen down in the valley.
There's only about 200 people live there.
The locations where they've
been seen, there are no roads.
And in the winter, it gets down to
minus 20, and about 10 feet of snow.
I know I was there in the
winter, I can guarantee that.
And they have caught them on radar.
They have filmed them, both in movie
film, you know, and still photographs.
So there is a very real phenomena there.
Perhaps we are not alone.
Perhaps these lights, objects
and encounters are glimpses
of a greater cosmic
reality, or simply reflections
of our curiosity, our
fears, and our imagination.
Until science or transparency
brings definitive answers,
the question will remain, what's out there?
The Air Force then said, well, they will
actually crash test dummies,
not related to Project Mogul at all.
But we used to have these large wooden
mannequins that we
dropped from high altitude,
you know, to test parachutes and so on.
But the only thing that was wrong with
that is they didn't start
using those until the 1950s.
And of course, the Roswell
incident happened in 1947.
So they got the wrong decade as well.
In all, the Air Force had given out
four different aspects of what this was.
First of all, it was a flying disc.
Then no, it was a weather balloon.
Then, oh sorry, no, it was Project
Mogul, which was still weather balloons.
Oh, all the dead bodies
were crash test dummies.
Oh, we forgot they were from the 1950s.
So they have four different
interpretations of what happened.
That's why, one of the many reasons why
people are suspicious
of the official version.
The various mysterious
lights will probably turn out
to be some kind of
atmospheric phenomenon that
as yet is understood by mainstream
science, nothing to do with ETs at all.
Unknown.
The official position is unknown.
Could these unexplainable
lights cutting through the darkness
be more than just phenomena?
Could they be the silent
beacons of extraterrestrial
life reaching out across the void?
We just might never actually find out.