• RECAP OF GULFBREEZE SIGHTINGS FILE: UFO1688

    From Ricky Sutphin@RICKSBBS/TIME to All on Tue Jan 13 03:51:30 2026
    (628) Wed 6 Jun 90 22:49
    By: Jim Speiser
    To: All
    Re: Gulf Breeze at NUFOC
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    The following article was
    submitted by ParaNet Sysop John Hicks, and will also
    be circulated as the file
    NUFOC90.TXT. Copyright (c) 1990 John Hicks and
    ParaNet.


    The
    Gulf Breeze mystery continues



    by John B. Hicks

    The Gulf Breeze sightings
    have generated huge amounts of public
    speculation, scientific bickering and
    dirty tricks. However, many people
    in the Pensacola, Florida, area still see
    odd objects and lights in the
    sky.
    The recent publication of The Gulf Breeze
    Sightings by Ed and Frances
    Walters has, if anything, fanned the flames.
    "If
    you took that case, Ed's sightings and those of his family away, and
    left
    everything else, you would still have a monumental amount of evidence
    related
    to the UFO mystery," Dr. Bruce Maccabee said. "Between Nov. 11,
    1987 and May 1,
    1988, which is the time taken up by Ed's book, the time
    that involved Ed
    Walters and Frances, I estimate that there were about 60
    events which involved
    well over 130 witnesses in the Gulf Breeze area."
    Maccabee is a physicist
    employed by the U.S. Navy and a well-respected
    UFO investigator.
    According to
    Maccabee, about 65 sightings have occured in the Pensacola
    area since May,
    1988.
    "I'm basing my statistics on cases that have been reported to MUFON,"
    he
    said.
    MUFON is the Mutual UFO Network, a large organization of UFO
    researchers,
    investigators and enthusiasts.
    MUFON investigators Rex and Carol
    Salisbury have documented many UFO
    sightings and contacts in the Pensacola area
    going back many years.
    They made the following comments to the 1990 National

    UFO Conference in Miami Beach, Florida. In the interest of clarity, since
    they
    alternated speaking, I will quote the Salisburys as a team, rather
    than
    individually.
    "There have been sightings all around the town (of Pensacola),"
    they
    said. "Another area of intense activity is up around the university
    area."
    They said that the most of the witnesses they interviewed have had

    multiple sightings.
    "We have also discovered that many of these witnesses
    have also had
    missing time or other related UFO paranormal events or other
    types of
    ESP events in their lives," the Salisburys said. "These witnesses come
    from
    all walks of life, and they have seen a wide variety of UFO types, shapes

    and sizes."
    On February 8, 1989, Jeff Thompson and his young son watched as
    a
    brightly lighted object of about three feet in diameter landed in their
    front
    yard. Thompson crept close to the object and illuminated it with a
    flashlight.

    "The object suddenly emitted a bright, brilliant flash of light and

    disappeared," the Salisburys said. "Upon questioning Jeff, we learned that
    Jeff
    knew nothing at all of a previously-taken photo of a very small
    craft."
    "In
    March of 1989 we interviewed a family who has had multiple sightings
    and
    experiences over a two-year period in Pensacola, and as far back as 10
    years
    ago when the honeymooning couple saw a UFO hovering over a mountain
    in
    Pennsylvania," the Salisburys said. "Another family residing in the same
    area
    has had a number of sightings dating back two or three years."
    The two
    families did not know each other.
    The Salisburys said that they have worked
    on several cases in an area
    near a Navy installation. The cases involve
    witnesses who have had multiple
    sightings and past experiences with UFO and
    related phenomena, some going
    back into the 1920s.
    One witness is a 71-year-
    old woman who recently saw her back yard
    flooded with light. She underwent
    hypnosis and learned that she had also
    seen a bowtie-shaped object and a second
    light.
    "Her first experience was in 1925," the Salisburys said.
    In another
    experience about seven years ago, according to the Salisburys,
    a young woman
    babysitting was sleeping on a couch when a noise awakened
    her and the house
    shook. She saw a translucent hemispherical
    object in the living room with her.

    The woman slipped into a bedroom to check the baby. While she was out
    of the
    living room, there was another noise, the house again shook and the
    object
    disappeared.
    She told the Salisburys that she looked out a window and saw
    three
    orange balls streaking away across the yard and into the sky.
    In March
    of 1989 two women were driving home (to the mainland) from Gulf
    Breeze when
    they noticed a white light that appeared to be pacing their
    car. When they
    rounded a curve, they saw an object hovering over the road
    in front of the
    car.
    The women stopped, got out of the car, and felt compelled to walk
    toward
    the object. They bumped into the open car doors and stopped. When a car

    approached, the object lifted straight up and vanished.
    A Pensacola-area
    woman who said a UFO abducted her in Germany 16 years ago
    saw a UFO west of
    Pensacola in August of 1989. She told the Salisburys that
    the UFO was identical
    to what she saw in Germany.
    In September, the same woman and her son saw two
    objects hover over their
    house. Twenty similar sightings have occured in their
    area since then, and
    the latest was in April 1990.
    On Nov. 30, 1989, a woman
    driving east from Gulf Breeze saw an
    arrowhead-shaped object hover over a
    utility substation.
    In February of 1990 MUFON received 26 sighting reports,
    and in March the
    organization received nine sighting reports.
    A large number
    of UFOs returned to Gulf Breeze in mid-April 1990.
    "We had sightings of
    lights almost every night for about a week," the
    Salisburys said. At least two
    witnesses made videotapes of those objects.
    "Pensacola MUFON has submitted
    over 64 cases," the Salisburys said.
    On the night of Nov. 11, 1987, Ed
    Walters, a Gulf Breeze builder, saw and
    photographed his first UFO. What set
    Walters apart from the other witnesses
    was that he had a camera readily
    accessible, is what would be politely
    described as stubborn, and had what could
    be called good luck as a UFO
    photographer.
    Walters was not alone in his UFO
    sightings that day.
    In the decade up until Nov. 11, 1987, witnesses reported
    about 10
    sightings a year.
    "All of a sudden, on that one day, we find out
    that there were eight or
    nine sightings," Maccabee said. Other witnesses saw
    objects
    similar to the one Walters saw beginning at about 2:30 that morning.

    I will not recount Ed and Frances Walters' story here, since they do so
    in
    great detail in their book. Nor will I recount Dr. Bruce Maccabee's
    analysis of
    Ed and Frances Walters' photographs, since he does so in the
    paper he presented
    to MUFON.
    Since that Veterans' Day in 1987, Ed Walters has taken 41 pictures
    of
    possibly four different objects with five cameras. He has come under
    fire
    that his photographs were a hoax, possibly because they appeared
    too sharp and
    clear. Many other people took pictures before, during and
    after the period of
    his sightings, and several witnesses made videotapes.
    Walters made a videotape
    during one of his close encounters.
    Critics bandied about hoax and conspiracy
    theories.
    "You can't say there wasn't a conspiracy, but you can't establish
    a
    connection," Maccabee said. Also it appears that a large number of people

    would have to be in on a conspiracy.
    Maccabee examined several possible
    methods of hoaxing the photographs in
    his paper and found each to be either
    readily detectable or impossible to
    carry out. He also determined that Ed
    Walters would not have had the
    knowledge or equipment to carry out a hoax.

    "You're going to do something to destroy your roots?" Walters said. "Some

    would do something like that, but not a normal sane father."
    I described to
    Maccabee a method that could be used to hoax
    photographs that would pass most,
    if not all, of the tests he used to
    examine Walters' photographs. He was not
    familiar with the material and
    methods I described. He then pointed out that
    the events of the March
    17, 1988 sighting and photographs would have precluded
    any manipulation of
    photographs by Walters.
    Maccabee said that on that date,
    a witness (Peter Newman) opened the
    sealed Polaroid film boxes, loaded Walters'
    cameras and wrote down the
    serial numbers of the film packs. Newman was also
    keeping track of the film
    counter of each camera. Walters took several
    unplanned souvenir pictures of
    people who had joined the small group.
    Because
    of the cold weather the spectators left, but several
    pretended to leave and
    returned in the darkness. They could not see
    Walters because of bushes and a
    restroom facility building. They
    could, however, see the treetops above
    Walters' position.
    Maccabee said that the witnesses saw two flashes in rapid
    succession
    illuminate the treetops. A few moments later they saw Walters run
    out of
    the bushes to his truck and turn on the headlights. The witnesses
    gathered
    around and watched the pictures develop, and those pictures showed a
    UFO.
    "Those people watched the film develop, which means the photos had to

    have been taken shortly before," Maccabee said. "There was no time in the

    middle to diddle with stuff."
    Maccabee said that he had experimented with
    trying to slow or stop the
    film development, even by freezing the film. He said
    that he managed only
    a slight slowdown in development, certainly not enough to
    have been part of
    a hoax.
    Critics have suggested that someone may have been
    showing Walters
    something to photograph, such as a balloon. However, weather
    conditions
    that night would rule out a balloon.
    Ed Walters said that the
    weather was cold and nasty that night.
    "The wind was coming right off the
    water," Frances Walters said.
    Hoax theories and debunking efforts still
    abound.
    "I don't know how they (debunkers) sleep at night," Ed Walters said.

    "What is so intimidating about these photos that would cause such a
    reaction
    among the debunkers?"
    Lately articles have appeared in some newspapers in
    which the primary
    source of information has been Willy Smith. MUFON has
    distanced itself from
    Smith, who was originally an investigator involved in
    Walters' case. Smith
    was implicated in a debunking effort in which an image of
    a Gulf
    Breeze-type UFO appeared in a photograph of the Chrysler Building in
    New
    York City.
    Smith claimed that Ed Walters took the picture.
    UFO
    investigator Antonio Huneeus and commercial photographer Manuel
    Fernandez came
    forward and stated that Huneeus had Fernandez make the
    photograph for study and
    experimental purposes. They said that it
    was not an Ed Walters photograph.

    Smith has also claimed that the so-called ghost pictures show
    that Walters was
    familiar with making multiple exposures before he made the
    UFO photographs.

    Walters said that Smith has taken the entire ghost picture idea out of

    context. He said that it is a game he plays with various teenage visitors
    to
    his house, and that the game is that the ghost is "in" you, not beside
    you.

    He said that he first takes normal pictures of several people. For the
    picture
    of the person the ghost is "in" he focuses the camera for
    long-distance and
    takes the picture with the subject about four feet away.
    The flash on his
    Polaroid camera makes the subject's eyes turn completely
    white, and the subject
    is a little blurry. That is what he calls a ghost
    picture. It involves no
    multiple exposures.
    The picture Willy Smith has shown as a ghost picture is
    of a teenage girl
    standing in front of a sliding glass door. It shows blobs of
    light near the
    girl.
    Maccabee said that he has confirmed that fingerprints
    and smudges on
    glass can cause similar reflections without the glass itself
    reflecting
    light. Frances Walters said that she had never cleaned that glass
    door.
    The mysterious blue beam that appears in Walters' photographs and
    other
    witnesses' reports has also brought forth much speculation.
    "It can
    lift you up, it can hold you down," Maccabee said.
    Walters said, "The blue
    beam stops you from moving; the white flash, I
    believe, if it strikes you on
    the head, incapacitates you."
    "I don't know that, but I believe it's true,"
    he said.
    Walters explained how he captured the picture of the blue beam
    and
    Frances running in the doorway. He said that he was going outside while
    holding
    the camera up, and that the blue beam suddenly flashed just where
    he was about
    to step. At that time, Frances ran inside and he pushed the
    shutter release
    without even looking through the viewfinder.
    A new apparent debunking attempt
    is underway.
    An advertisement appeared in the Pensacola newspaper. The ad
    states,
    "Hoax UFO balloons are illegal." The advertisement text then says that

    anyone who sees or knows of UFO balloons should call a certain telephone

    number.
    "That's a Phil Klass phone number," Walters said. Walters also
    pointed
    out that the 1990 MUFON symposium will be in early July in Pensacola.

    He said that it would not be surprising if someone found a UFO balloon just
    in
    time for the symposium.
    Walters also mentioned a flyer that someone stuffed
    in Gulf Breeze
    mailboxes referring to him. It said, in part, "Many of our
    sources report
    how often this UFO nut can be seen drunk at local taverns."
    He
    said that the debunker obviously did not know that Santa Rosa County
    is dry,
    therefore there are no local taverns.
    "There is certainly a difference
    between an honest skeptic and a
    debunker," Walters said. "A debunker is
    compelled to convince all others
    that there is no such thing as a UFO;
    therefore, Gulf Breeze should be
    swept away."
    "I think probably most of you
    understand now, if you don't you should,
    that Gulf Breeze is not just Ed and
    Frances Walters," Walters said.
    "It would be almost as strange as a UFO to
    imagine that you can reject
    Ed's case as being a hoax and accept all the rest
    of them as being real,"
    Maccabee said.
    Walters declined to identify Believer
    Bill and Jane, two people
    who anonymously gave pictures of UFOs similar to
    those Walters saw to the
    Gulf Breeze Sentinel. He said that he knows their
    identity.
    "I might have said it (Believer Bill's name) publicly a few times,
    and I
    might have hurt him," Walters said. "It's not up to me to denigrate or

    expose someone who doesn't want to be exposed."
    "It's job-related suicide for
    some professions," he said.
    He acknowledged that he may have erred in trying
    to remain anonymous, but
    said he was trying to protect his family.
    "I
    probably made the mistake that if you don't come forward, the news
    media will
    turn into a school of sharks," Walters said. "But if you don't
    come forward it
    almost makes it worse, because then they are going to track
    you down."

    "They'll try their best to leap upon you from the bushes," he said.
    "For two
    years I tried my best to shun publicity," Walters said. "If they
    (debunkers)
    hadn't attacked so viciously, the book wouldn't have been
    written."
    On Jan.
    8, 1990, witnesses saw another UFO, and this time the military
    apparently took
    an interest.
    Ed Walters said that he and Frances were out walking near the
    Methodist
    Church in Gulf Breeze when they saw a large red light in the sky.

    "We'd been criticized early on for not always dancing to a phone and
    calling
    somebody, so in this case, we said well, what the heck, we'll run
    back to the
    house, take a chance that it's still going to be there, and
    we'll call people,"
    Walters said. "I ran to the phone and started to call
    investigators."
    Walters
    reached two answering machines and a paging machine. He then
    called Duane Cook
    and a friend who he had promised he would call, and they
    said they were on the
    way.
    "This was all on faith that the object was still in the sky," he said.
    "I
    didn't know, I was still inside."
    "It could have already gone and then I
    would look very foolish because
    everybody would have come a'running and I'd be
    embarrassed," Walters said.
    Walters said, "I started to put together this new
    camera I'd purchased."
    He said that he started running back toward the church
    while still trying
    to attach the lens to the camera.
    Duane Cook and his son
    arrived and both saw the object. Two other people
    approached and now the object
    was visible to six people gathered near the
    church.
    "I could see through the
    zoom lens this black disc," Walters said. He
    said that the disc was visible
    against a moonlit cloud cover.
    Walters and city councilwoman Brenda Pollak
    took some photographs.
    Walters' camera had a zoom lens with a maximum focal
    length of about 200
    mm., and Pollak had a 300 mm. lens on her camera. However,
    both had their
    cameras set on automatic exposure and the cameras automatically
    set long
    exposures.
    Walters' photograph shows a red blurry blob.
    "The
    critics and the debunkers would have me being a photo expert, some
    kind of
    genius," he said.
    Just after Walters made his exposure, the red light went
    out or, as
    others reported, the disc turned over.
    Pollak then took her
    photograph. Her photograph shows an image that looks
    like multi-colored pearls
    on a string.
    Maccabee said that the light changed colors 110 times during
    Pollak's
    three-second exposure. Since the camera was handheld with the 300 mm.
    lens,
    the image was a snakelike line with a blob of different colored light
    for
    each time the light changed colors.
    "I think this is a phenomenal
    picture," Walters said. "It doesn't solve
    anything, it just adds to the
    questions."
    "Some of the witnesses remember seeing a white light while the
    picture
    was being taken," Walters said. "We don't know we've captured this odd

    effect until the film comes out."
    The object then vanished, apparently into
    the low-lying cloud cover.
    Walters said that moments later, about six
    helicopters approached from
    the direction of Pensacola Naval Air Station.
    "There's no question where
    those helicopters came from," he said.
    He said
    that the helicopters approached the area of the church,
    illuminated floodlights
    and searched the area around the church. The object
    had been directly over the
    church when it vanished.
    A Navy chief, who was not an official spokesman,
    first told an
    investigator that the Naval Air Station dispatched the
    helicopters on a
    Search and Rescue mission. According to Walters, the
    investigator pressed
    further and the chief told the investigator, "You know
    what's been going on
    over there, you guess."
    Another red light appeared near
    the bridge from Gulf Breeze to Pensacola
    on the night of April 18, 1990, and
    many witnesses took photographs while
    several made videotapes. Maccabee said
    that he has most of the
    negatives and videotapes.
    Ed and Frances Walters'
    experiences have given them what could be called
    an insiders' perspective on
    the UFO phenomenon.
    "The toughest part is not understanding," Ed Walters
    said. "I don't like
    the idea that there may be something out there that may be
    a threat."
    Frances Walters said, "For every answer that you come up with, you
    seem
    to come up with a lot more questions."
    "Sometimes I think we haven't
    learned a darn thing," she said.
    A participant at the conference asked Ed
    Walters if he is ready for
    another visit from the visitors.
    "If they come
    symbolically to my front door, and they knock on the door,
    and they say, 'Hi,
    we're travelers from afar. Can we come in?' I'll open
    the door," Walters said.
    "If they try to come in the back door, in the
    darkness, and invade my
    household, I will resist and I will fight back."


    ###

    Copyright 1990 John B. Hicks



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