THE STORY
On November 11, 1987, Ed Walters, a contractor in Gulf Breeze, Florida, was allegedly immobilized “briefly by a blue beam”, after which he took five Polaroids of an object in the sky outside his home. Walters reported seeing the object hover about 200 feet (61 m) above the ground, describing it as being “‘right out of a Spielberg movie’”. He claimed to have made multiple subsequent visits to the UFO, recording videotape and taking 32 photographs of the object.
Walters further reported witnessing the craft land on Soundside Drive and “deposit five aliens on the road”. He stated that one of the aliens stared into his window, at which point the aliens communicated with him in English and Spanish via telepathy and presented him with a book showing pictures of dogs. A blue beam of light then caused him to be lifted three feet (0.91 m) off the ground. Walters stated that the immobilization in the blue beam happened again on December 2, 1987.
On February 7, 1988, Walters allegedly photographed his wife attempted to outrun the blue beam. Walters also claimed to have communicated further with the aliens; he or his family reported nineteen sightings or encounters over time. On May 1, 1988, Walters reported feeling the alien presence while he was at Shoreline Park after midnight, saw the UFO and took a photo of it, then “lost consciousness for an hour”. Walters stated that the UFO leaked some kind of liquid that continued to boil even nineteen days after he captured it. FACT OR FICTION?
The Gulf Breeze UFO incident was a series of claimed UFO sightings in Gulf Breeze, Florida, United States, during late 1987 and early 1988. Beginning in November 1987, the Gulf Breeze Sentinel newspaper published a number of photos supplied to them by local contractor Ed Walters that were claimed to show a UFO. UFOlogists such as Bruce Maccabee believed the photographs were genuine; however, others strongly suspected them to be a hoax.
Pensacola News Journal reporter Craig Myers investigated Walters’ claims a few years later, criticizing the Sentinel’s coverage of the story as “uncritical” and “sensationalist”. In 1990, after Walters and his family had moved, the new owners of their house discovered a styrofoam model UFO hidden in the attic. Myers was able to duplicate the object in the Walters photographs almost exactly using the model UFO. Walters later claimed that the model UFO had been “planted” in the attic.
Jerry
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