• WHIDBEY ISLAND UFO REPORT CLASSIFIED AS AN "UNKNOWN", January 21st, 1988

    From Larry Sneeringer@RICKSBBS to All on Mon Feb 3 08:16:58 2025
    WHIDBEY ISLAND UFO REPORT CLASSIFIED AS AN "UNKNOWN"

    After a thorough investigation of all pertinent facts, the
    UFO sighting reported by Dan MacIndoe of Oak Harbor on January
    21st, 1988 has been classified as a true "unknown". The Mutual
    UFO Network (MUFON)--a civilian organization of trained
    professionals that investigates UFO reports--has ruled out all
    possible conventional explanations for the object seen by Mr.
    MacIndoe, his wife, mother, mother-in-law and father-in-law, and
    three-year-old daughter.

    Dan MacIndoe, age 32, an ex-Navy lieutenant with seven
    years military service in the field of aviation
    supply--including work assignments with the Navy's prestigious
    Blue Angels squadron--was rated as an exceptionally credible
    witness by the MUFON organization.

    The UFO encounter began at 10:45 p.m. on the night of
    January 21st at the MacIndoe home not far from the Whidbey
    Island Naval Air Station. Flight operations at Whidbey NAS had
    by that time been over for 15 minutes, with the last plane
    reported "on the deck" at 10:30 p.m.

    The UFO was first observed by Cornelia MacIndoe, age 72,
    Dan MacIndoe's mother, who sighted a bright, orange-yellow
    stationary light in the southern sky when she went outside to
    smoke a cigarette. She called the entire family's attention to
    the object, and together they watched as the UFO shot straight
    up for approximately 3 degrees of arc from a position 25 degrees
    above the horizon in the direction of the Naval Air Station.
    The object then abruptly stopped, made a sharp right-angle turn
    in the horizontal direction and came straight towards them.

    According to MacIndoe's account, the object covered a
    distance of one and a half miles in approximately 3 seconds. As
    the UFO approached the house it seemed to slow, taking
    approximately 15 seconds to slowly drift directly over the heads
    of the five adult witnesses and child. It disappeared from view
    as it travelled in a straight path to the NNE, passing behind
    some tall fir trees behind the MacIndoe house.

    While the object was passing overhead Dan MacIndoe was able
    to observe the object through a 135 mm telephoto lens, and was
    also able to determine that there was no sound associated with
    its flight. Mr. MacIndoe described the shape of the underside
    of the object as that of "a perfect circle."

    "The lights were blueish-white in nature and I estimate 15
    lights spanned the circumference of the circle. All remained on
    forming a circle of 'running lights'. The lights would pulse
    brighter in sequence, I believe going in a clockwise direction,"
    Dan MacIndoe reported.

    He went on to say, "...during the event winds were calm,
    there were scattered clouds in the vicinity. We live in a rural
    area. There were no sounds. During the entire episode none of
    us heard the usual prop or jet noise associated with military
    aircraft using the airfield. At the time the object was
    directly overhead I asked my family for complete silence to
    listen for engine noise. There was absolute silence."

    According to Dr. Donald Johnson, Washington State Director
    for MUFON, a combination of factors were sufficient to rule out
    all mundane explanations for the sighting. "The fact that this
    overflight occurred in restricted military airspace, together
    with the testimony of multiple witnesses, the complete lack of
    sound, the observation of the unusual lighting pattern on the
    object seen through magnification, and the lack of wind combine
    to provide sufficient information to classify this case as an
    unknown."

    "In other words, there is little possibility that the
    object the MacIndoes and others reported seeing that night was a
    satellite, balloon, commercial or military airplane or
    helicopter, or astronomical body." The National Weather Service
    and Whidbey NAS were called to confirm that there were no
    weather balloons released at that time. Additionally, several
    of Mr. MacIndoe's Dugualla Bay neighbors and others from as far
    away as Lake Washington, Edmonds, and Bellingham called him to
    report that they had also witnessed unusual lights in the sky
    that evening.

    Dr. Johnson reports that the field investigation has been
    evaluated by the national headquarters as complete. The
    sighting was assigned a strangeness rating of four on a
    five-point scale--labelled as "strange, does not conform to
    known principles", and it also received a probability rating of
    four on a five point scale--"credible and sound".


    
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