UFO Hoaxes
In
1897 Alexander Hamilton, of Yates Center, Kansas, came out of his house to discover
a cigar shaped UFO was hovering over his farm. Humanoids in the ship had a rope
around one of Hamilton's calves and were trying to winch it aboard. This story
appeared in the Yates Center local newspaper along with statements from leading
citizens vouching for Hamilton's honesty. For almost a hundred years it was considered
one of the best documented UFO cases on the books. The only problem with it was
that it was a hoax.
Hamilton,
along with the other "leading citizens," were part of a local liar's
club and regularly practiced out doing each other with tale tales. Hamilton's
cigar airship story was so good that it was put in the newspaper as a joke. The
members of the club had no idea at the time just how effective this lie would
be at fooling thousands of people around the world. It was only in 1977 when Jerry
Clark, in FATE magazine, published the results of Robert Schadewald's work on
the "calfnapping" story, that the truth came out.
Objects
as mundane as a dry cleaner bags, balsa wood and birthday candles can be used
to perpetrate a hoax. Many people have been fooled by balloons constructed by
these simple materials. The candle provides the hot air needed to lift the balloon
as well as an eerie glowing light that floats through the air, fooling the unwary.
Teenagers in Oneonta, New York, mystified residents with this prank. Unfortunately
these devices can have more serious consequences than inspiring a false UFO report.
The flame, after a crash landing, may start a fire.
Though
only a tiny minority of UFO reports turn out to be hoaxes they challenge the credibility
of all sightings. They can also call into question the professionalism of UFO
enthusiast organizations. A number of years ago English physicist David Simpson
decided to see how effective UFO investigators would be a spotting a hoax. While
a group of UFO spotters were on a neighboring hill he used a purple light, a horn
and bogus faked photographs to generate a "close encounter of the first kind."
The hoax was not detected at all and the photographs declared to be, "genuine
beyond all doubt."
Though
there are reputable UFO organizations that do their best to screen out false reports
it is not always an easy job. Even when an organization suspects a hoax they may
be reluctant to say so unless they are absolutely sure. In theory a libel lawsuit
could be filed and the accusers must be prepared to prove their case.
One
of the most well known hoaxes involved with the "Hudson Valley Sightings."
Between 1983 and 1987 thousands of people along New York's Hudson Valley witnessed
a boomerang-shaped UFO estimated to be between 200 and 1000 feet from tip to tip.
The ship was marked at regular intervals by multicolored blinking lights. A group
of UFO investigators found that at least some of the incidents could be traced
to a spoof perpetrated by the "Stormville Flyers," a group of small
plane pilots. By attaching multi-colored lights on to their planes and flying
in formation they could give the impression of a huge UFO sailing majestically
across the sky. By turning off their lights on cue they could make the ship mysteriously
disappear. Although this hoax did not explain all the sightings over the years
in the Hudson Valley it did explain a percentage of the cases.
Some
skeptics believe certain categories of items are almost all hoaxs. This includes
things like the English crop circles and just about every "flying saucer"
pictures ever taken.
As
time goes on it may become more and more difficult to detect hoax photographs.
In the past faked photographs were subject to careful analysis that might spot
problem in the picture: a hidden string holding up a flying saucer, or evidence
like a shadow that would show the picture was not taken at the time of the day
claimed. More and more though sophisticated computerized image processing is available
even in people's home. This makes it easier and easier to create a seamless fake
photograph. (Above right: Detail from the above photograph at the top of the page.)