Texas
UFO witnesses threatened for talking to media?
By
Steve Hammons
Are
Stephenville, Texas, UFO witnesses being harassed and threatened?
Reports
are surfacing that indicate someone may be trying to intimidate witnesses who
spoke to the news media.
According
to recent articles in the Stephenville, Texas, local newspaper, at least one witness
to the recent UFO sighting who made public statements to the Associated Press(AP)
and other news outlets is concerned about threats that are apparently connected
to his statements to the media.
One
of the witnesses who stated he saw a huge solid object and has described it in
detail is Ricky Sorrells.
In
addition to speaking with the AP and other news media such as CNN, Sorrels had
been interviewed by Linda Moulton Howe, an Emmy Award-winning investigative journalist
who coordinates the Web site Earthfiles.com.
Howe
is also a regular contributor for the online radio show "Dreamland,"
hosted by well-known author Whitley Strieber on his Web site UnknownCountry.com.
Howe has covered the Texas sightings on the Dreamland program.
In
articles published Sunday, Feb. 3, and Monday, Feb. 4, in the Stephenville Empire-Tribune,
reporter Angelia Joiner quotes Sorrells as saying that one day after he spoke
with the AP, he received an unusual phone call.
PHONE
CALLS AND HELICOPTERS
Sorrells
says a man identifying himself as an Air Force lieutenant colonel called him about
the sighting and wanted to come out to Sorrells' property to speak with him.
When
Sorrells told the caller he would think about it, the man insisted and said he
would be coming out to Sorrells' property to speak with him.
The
conversation grew "heated," according to the Empire-Tribune report,
and Sorrells says the caller stated, "Son, we have the same caliber weapons
as you do but a lot more of them."
The
Empire-Tribune story quoted Sorrells as stating, "So I said if he was who
he said he was, why didn't he stop flying over my air space with all those helicopters.
And he informed me that it was not my air space it was his. He told me
if I'd quit talking about what I saw he would stop the helicopters."
According
to Empire-Tribune reporter Joiner, Sorrells stated that before the mysterious
man called him, several helicopters were flying frequently and at an unusually
low altitude over his property at various hours.
"I
get up at 2:30 a.m. to go to work and these helicopters kept flying over and I
couldn't sleep. Because it was about time to get up and go to work, I just got
up and went outside to see what I could," Joiner quoted Sorrells as saying.
"I
went to my truck and turned on the spotlight and shined it up at them. It was
so close, I could see the pilot's reaction. He threw up his arm to block the light.
He was in one of the smaller helicopters. Then he turned toward me and I still
have the light on."
"I
started to feel uncomfortable so I turned off the light and waved and went back
inside. I was thinking I had pushed the envelope," Sorrells stated in the
Empire-Tribune article.
STRANGE
INTRUDER
Sorrells
also reports he saw an intruder on his property at about 1 a.m.
He
told reporter Joiner, "I was in bed asleep. I keep my bird dogs on the east
side of my house and three others on the west side. The black lab doesn't bark
until someone comes across the cattle guard and the Catahoula doesn't bark until
she actually sees someone. They were all barking so I got up to see what was going
on."
Looking
out his bedroom window at the top of his driveway, Sorrells spotted a man.
"I
went around the bed and grabbed my rifle," Sorrells is quoted as saying.
With
Sorrells' family sleeping inside, he carefully looked out and saw the intruder
again.
"He
had positioned himself in between the car and the pickup 40 to 50 feet from my
back door. He stood staring at me rocking back and forth. I didn't think his feet
were moving but the next morning when looking at his tracks I could tell they
were."
Sorrells
told the Empire-Tribune that he could clearly see the face of the man who appeared
to be in his late 20s or early 30s. The man was wearing a "heavy parka-like
coat," Sorrells stated.
Sorrells
could not determine if the man had a gun.
"I'm
trying to decide whether or not to open the door," Sorrells is quoted as
saying. "We're just standing there face to face looking at each other. I'm
thinking he's dressed for the elements and the dogs are raising such a ruckus
he must know he's in danger of being caught. That's when I realized he wanted
me to see him."
The
man was in a position that could have been a threat to Sorrells if he had gone
outside, he believed.
So,
considering the safety of his sleeping family, he stayed inside as the man turned
and walked way into the nearby woods.
Later,
Sorrells checked out the area where the man went into the woods and found a bullet
... "a shiny new 25-06 Remington."
Sorrells
wondered if the bullet was a purposeful message to him.
MEN
IN BLACK
Sorrells'
account of phone calls and intimidating visitors is not unusual in the lore of
UFO sightings.
Whether
his mysterious phone call was actually from an Air Force officer might be difficult
or impossible to determine. Whether the caller was a U.S. Government officer,
agent or operative is also unclear.
Over
the decades of UFO sightings, witnesses have reported being interviewed by officials
of various kinds or even sternly spoken with about what they saw.
In
his 2006 book ON THE TRAIL OF THE SAUCER SPIES, researcher and author Nick Redfern
looked into the history of government interest in people involved with UFO encounters.
Redfern
used declassified government documents and other sources to report on government
inquiries about individuals involved with UFOs back to the late 1940s. In the
book, he takes a look at how civilian agencies and the Air Force responded to
alleged UFO incidents, as well as groups and individuals of interest.
He
also examined similar efforts in United Kingdom where the Ministry of Defense
(MoD), the Royal Air Force and Scotland Yard also investigated UFO-related cases.
Redfern
shows special interest about the mysterious "Men In Black," which some
people claim could be a special unit of the U.S. Air Force.
According
to Redfern, government investigators were especially interested when witnesses
were credible observers such as pilots, military personnel and peace officers.
For
more information in Redfern's book, see my article "History of government
surveillance of UFO witnesses and investigators examined in new book" (AmericanChronicle.com,
April 19, 2006).
OPERATIONAL
SECURITY
Though
we do not know who was involved with the phone calls to Sorrells and intrusions
on his property, it is possible that they could be connected to some kind of sensitive
official activities.
In
many defense, intelligence and national security situations, it is crucial that
certain information remain secret. There are often very valid and important reasons
for this.
At
the same time, especially in a democracy such as our own, Americans may feel as
though they have a "need to know" about topics such as unusual objects
in the skies.
Are
they highly-advanced U.S. aircraft or spacecraft? Are they possibly visiting beings
from other planets and/or dimensions? These questions seem normal and natural,
especially for those who have seen something very unusual and surprising.
This
is where operational security (OPSEC) comes into play.
If
we accept that there could be governmental and/or government-related special activity
groups responsible for management of sensitive, complex situations, then we must
understand their desire for OPSEC.
That
said, American citizens have rights ... although these seem to have been significantly
disrespected in recent years.
On
a more practical basis, establishing rapport and cooperation with people can often
be more successful than trying to threaten and intimidate them.
Some
Americans just don't respond well to attempts at intimidation.
Maybe
Texans are like this.