SUBJECT: UFO INFO Service Reports FILE: UFO1105 PART 22 Report #: 109 From: UFO INFO SERVICE Date Sent: 07-07-1986 Subject: KREMMLING, CO CASE TYPE: LRS DATE: 20 APRIL 1986 TIME: UNKNOWN CFN#: 0233 DURATION: 02: HOURS WITNESSES: TWENTY PLUS SOURCE: MANIFEST, WINTER PARK, CO ---------------------------------------- Bright lights hovering over Green Mountain Reservoir and Kremmling... Twenty-plus calls to the Summit County sheriff... And sightings by the sheriff's department and the police departments of Dillon and Silverthorne. Science fiction? Even after seeing them, Kremmling police officer Scott Koch would like to believe it is. On Sunday, April 20, a call came into the Kremmling PD from the Summit County sheriff's department, reporting numerous UFO sightings and inquiring if any similar calls had been received in Kremmling. Koch, who was on the 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. shift that night, saw stationary, colored lights in the skies directly over Kremmling. He then was informed of sightings near Green Mountain Reservoir, and drove down Colo. 9 to the county line. There, a large group of law enforcement officers from Grand and Summit Counties was witnessing something stranger than fiction. The lights were viewed over Williams Peak and the Gore, and through a high powered telescope, the objects looked to be triangular in shape, with lights on the outer edges. They were observed to hover, then "take off" to the southwest. The most startling aspect of the occurrence was the evasive action of a jet plane, which all present saw veer around one of the objects. Koch figured they watched for about two hours. Fact? Fiction? These witnesses were trained ovservers, professional men who viewed something alien to their natures. They really don't want to talk about it. But they don't deny the fact that something truly strange was out that night. ----------------------------------------- Report #: 110 From: UFO INFO SERVICE Date Sent: 07-07-1986 Subject: DANBURY, CT CASE TYPE: LRS DATE: 29 MAY 1986 TIME: UNKNOWN CFN#: 0234 DURATION: UNKNOWN WITNESSES: TWENTY-PLUS SOURCE: NEWS-TIMES, DANBURY, CT ------------------------------------ Area police said aircraft in the skies last night promted several dozen calls to the Danbury and Brookfield police departments as well as to state police barracks in Southbury and in Brewster with reports of UFOs. State police at the Southbury barracks said the crafts were probably ultra-light aircraft, but a New York sate trooper said they were regular planes "putting on a show." "They few right over the barracks, it was very impressive," said Trooper Peter Kontos of the Brewster barracks. "If you didn't know what it was, I could see how you would think it was strange." Kontos said the barracks received a half-dozen calls and "a whole mess of people" who stopped at the barracks to point out the spectacle to troopers. He said the Stormville, N.Y., barracks notified police about the aircraft. He said the pilots throttle the planes' engines to make it appear they are standing still, and then suddenly take off at a high speed. The Putnam County Sheriffs' Depatment, Brookfield police and Connecticut State Police at Troop A said they received a half-dozen calls each about the planes. Danbury police said they received 20 calls. ----------------------------------------- Report #: 111 From: UFO INFO SERVICE Date Sent: 07-08-1986 Subject: WASHINGTON COUNTY, AL CASE TYPE: PT - PHYSICAL TRACES DATE: 5 MARCH 1986 TIME: UNKNOWN DURATION: UNKNOWN WITNESSES: ONE - PLUS SOURCE: REGISTER, MOBILE, AL ----------------------------------------- Forensics testing UFO evidence Examiners at the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences will be testing the only evidence of a UFO which fell in Washington County in an effort to unravel the origin of the object which apparently exploded before it crashed into a backyard. It left trees and plants broken and damaged, but no clues as to what it was or what caused it. Mr. Jim Small, a trace evidence examiner with the Forensic Science lab who specializes in examining evidence from arson and explosions, said the lab received samples of the damaged plants and trees from the Washington County Sheriff's Department Wednesday. The first thing that we will look for is some type of explosive residue. Beyond that, I don't know, Small said. The explosion, which occured March 5 in the backyard of the Jesse Wallace Henson family in Frankville, was investigated by Washington County Sheriff William J. Wheat. Wheat said he had no idea what caused it whether it was a land explosion or caused by something that fell from the sky. ----------------------------------------- ********************************************** * THE U.F.O. BBS - http://www.ufobbs.com/ufo * **********************************************