home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- *****************************************************************
- I M P O R T A N T N O T I C E
- concerning the following text file
- *****************************************************************
- ParaNet makes no endorsement of this material and the views
- expressed herein are not necessarily the views of ParaNet. This
- information is provided as a public service only.
-
- This file is SHARETEXT material. This means that you are free to
- distribute it to anyone you like, as long as it is not used for
- commercial purposes, you do not charge for it, you do not remove
- this header, or change the contents in anyway. Additionally, we
- ask that you contribute to ParaNet, if possible, to assure a
- continuation of this valuable, educational SHARETEXT service.
- The suggested contribution is $75.00 and entitles you to full
- access to our comprehensive library and our network of electronic
- affiliates all over the world. Other services are available.
- Mail your contribution to:
-
- ParaNet Information Service
- P.O. Box 172
- Wheat Ridge, CO 80034-0172
-
- ParaNet(sm): Freedom of Information for a better world!
-
- (C) 1991 ParaNet(sm) Information Service. All Rights Reserved.
- ****************************************************************
- ParaNet File Number: 00049
-
- All Rights Reserved unless copyrighted by Author.
- THIS FILE WAS PREPARED BY PARANET OMEGA-ALPHA
- FOR PARANET INFORMATION SERVICE FROM ORIGINAL MATERIAL
- SUPPLIED BY, UFO RESEARCH AUSTRALIA, P.O. BOX 229.
- PROSPECT, SOUTH AUSTRALIA 5089
-
- ========================================================
-
- THE ABDUCTION PHENOMENON IN AUSTRALIA
- by
- Keith Basterfield, Vladimir Godic and Pony Godic
- of
- UFO Research Australia
- P.O. Box 229
- Prospect
- South Australia 5082
- ==================================================================
- In July/August 1988 issue of IUR Budd Hopkins, referring to the
- testable fantasy-prone hypotheses advanced by Keith Basterfield and
- Bob Bartholomew, wrote that his advice was "to put their theory on the
- back burner and to look into any possible abductions that come their
- way." Unfortunately, within Australia this is easier said than done.
- There has been an apparent lack of well-documented abduction cases in
- this country. The authors therefore decided to review the situation
- on two fronts. First, they undertook an intensive examination of the
- Australian UFO literature. Second, they undertook to uncover any
- previously unreported cases. This article documents our findings to
- date.
-
- In 1976 Keith Basterfield co-authored a work titled "An Australian
- Catalogue of Close Encounter Type Three Reports". In this work an
- attempt was made to collect and document all Australian CE3 cases that
- were known as of that date. The result was a collection of some 36
- cases. But none of these could be classed as possessing and
- characteristics associated with the abduction event.
-
- The following year Bill Chalker of Sydney presented a paper at the
- national UFOCON 3 at Surfers Paradise and wrote, concerning Australia,
- "Upon first inspection, we appear to have a complete absence of "time
- loss", "abduction" and contact cases." Within two years though,
- Chalker was on the trail of stories along the lines of "interrupted
- journeys." Three Australian events came to light.
-
- In 1971, a Finnish couple, Ben and Helen K., left Gladstone,
- Queensland, at about 11:35 p.m. and upon arrival in Rockhampton found
- that only 40 minutes had passed on the trip that would normally take
- much longer. In addition to the rapid trip they could not recall
- passing through intervening places although they recall seeing an
- unusual green light at one stage. Their 1971 Valiant sedan was
- reportedly covered with a thin film of odorless oil, and unusual marks
- were noted on the car's hood. Attempts at hypnotizing the couple
- were unsuccessful.
-
- The second account told of an event dated January 10, 1978, at a place
- called the Balers Creek Falls, New South Wales. Gary P. had been
- diving alone in the early hours of the morning when he found himself
- unaccountably stationary on the side of the road at 5:00 a.m. He was
- unable to clearly remember the previous 160 km. While stationary he
- noted a really bright light hovering some distance away. Although he
- tried to get close to it, he could not.
-
- A researcher in Western Australia, Jeff Bell, came across the story of
- a truck driver. The incident took place near Baladonia in that state
- in February 1978. A memory lapse of three to 3 1/2 hours is said to
- have been associated with the observation of two unusual lights.
- During this time the driver says he recalls "talking to somebody about
- inventing something ... Also I remember speaking with two voices ..."
- Investigators have been unable to learn anything more about this
- account.
-
- The Frederick Valentich case burst on the scene in 1978 and in some
- quarters it was suggested he had in fact been abducted. The story is
- well known, but in condensed form, 20 year old Frederick Valentich
- disappeared over Bass Strait while flying a Cessna aircraft between
- Melbourne and King Island. Some think he was abducted by the
- occupants of the object which he reported observing just before radio
- contact was lost with his aircraft.
-
- In 1980 Keith Basterfield produced a more definitive study of local
- CE3 events and broadened the catchment area to include New Zealand as
- well as Australia. By this date 104 such events had come to light.
- There were five more cases which relate to todays abduction accounts.
-
- The first one uncovered came via an article in the English "Flying
- Saucer Review" and it is said to have occurred in Adelaide, South
- Australia, in 1955. A 10 year-old girl, Janet X, was being treated
- for a slight nervous disorder. While under hypnosis for this
- condition she recounted a story of her interaction with aliens and a
- flying saucer. She spoke of being in the saucer with three "men" and
- of visiting a planet with and advanced society. Pony Godic of UFORA
- spoke with one of the case's original investigators in 1989, but
- despite this we have not been able to relocate Janet X to reinterview
- her.
-
- Two American paperbacks led us to an abduction report more typical of
- today; yet it is dated August 11, 1966. A Marlene Travers, of
- Melbourne, is reported to have observed a large silver disc land near
- her. She was abducted and raped by and alien wearing a loose fitting
- metallic green tunic. The above books referenced the original source
- as the "New York Chronicle" of November 21, 1966. A search by Pony
- Godic using the U.S. Library of Congress and the South Australian
- State Reference Library found a small college newspaper of that name
- in Hempstead, New York. No reply has yet been received to the
- inquiry directed to that paper. Any light American researchers could
- throw on this account would be appreciated.
-
- An interesting case occurred in 1972 and was ably investigated by Gary
- Little and Bill Stapleton of Melbourne. The significance of it was
- not understood at the time until it was reexamined for the 1980
- catalogue. In early 1972 Maureen Puddy reported observing a disc-
- shaped object in the sky. Later in July she related that her car
- stopped itself as the same object hovered overheard. Several months
- later she recounted being abducted into a room and observing an
- entity there. This latter event occurred while two other persons
- were physically present with Mrs. Puddy but they reported only that
- Mrs. Puddy lapsed into unconsciousness. On a later occasion she said
- the entity again appeared to her when she was driving the car. The
- "mental" abduction has led some researchers to support an altered-
- state-of-consciousness approach to the abduction phenomenon.
-
- The fourth event, unfortunately could not be documented properly, came
- from Springwood, New South Wales, in 1973. One night two men were
- asleep in a caravan on a remote building site, when one was awakened
- by a blue light projecting from a hovering aerial disc. A time lapse
- of some two hours occurred. He felt some "beings, Caucasian types,"
- were somehow involved.
-
- The fifth case was uncovered by Bill Chalker. In 1974 two young
- women from Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, felt compelled to
- get into their car which allegedly drove itself to a remote spot.
- They were escorted by a brilliant white light source. Vague human
- shapes were seen and strange noises heard. There was an episode of
- missing time.
-
- Two additional cases came to light at about this time. An old man is
- said to have been abducted near Elliot, Northern Territory, in 1976,
- after a bright object landed near him. Beings alighted and took him
- aboard. He said they asked him some questions about life on earth
- before they returned him unarmed to the pick-up point.
- Investigations were unable to verify the account even though Pony
- Godic spent some time in 1989 corresponding with residents of Elliot
- in an attempt to uncover some leads. The other story emerged from
- Hobart, Tasmania, on the other side of Australia, again in 1976. A
- man and his wife had gone to bed. She fell asleep, leaving him
- awake. Suddenly through the closed door came three figures. One
- tried to put a bag over the man's legs in an apparent abduction
- attempt. He tried to awaked his wife, whereupon the figures departed
- through the window.
-
- The frustrations of being unable to investigate a fascinating report
- came to the surface in the next case. At about 9:00 p.m. on February
- 5, 1979, an intense white light lit up the hood of a car driven by a
- young man, near Lawitta, Tasmania. The car engine stopped, the radio
- went dead and the lights went out. Later that evening the man was
- picked up by the police in Hobart for driving the car without lights.
- They found him to be in a dazed condition and he did not know where he
- was. He was taken to a hospital apparently suffering from shock.
- The man, apparently suffering from shock, wished no further
- investigation of the matter.
-
- INTO THE 1980'S
- In 1982 what had all the hallmarks of a classic multiple-witness
- abduction case happened. Keith Basterfield produced a short report
- in "UFO Research Australia Newsletter" describing "Australia's first
- abduction case?" But despite a promising start to investigations
- neither of the two witnesses wished to cooperate with inquiries and so
- the case languished in our files.
-
- The details are as follows: Two young men were traveling in a car
- near Port Lincoln, South Australia, on October 24, 1981 when they
- encountered a "white endless space" where a time loss of several hours
- is said to have occurred. During this loss time they have vague
- memories of a "being" and recalled "walking into a big room." Just
- prior to the "space" they had been watching a mysterious light in the
- sky. Arrangements to have the men undergo a full investigation
- including hypnotic regression was unsuccessful.
-
- Two years later, while documenting cases of near-death experiences
- (NDE's), Melbourne researcher Gary Little came across a case that
- contained aspects of both an NDE and a bedroom abduction. In 1979 a
- man named Mark retired to bed one night in Melbourne, Victoria, at
- about 11:00 p.m. Shortly after closing his eyes he lost all sense of
- sound and feeling and he found himself traveling in a tunnel through
- space. Looking forward, he noted a light at the end of the tunnel.
- His next awareness was of lying on a table in a "craft." He was
- medically examined by three beings, after which he panicked and then
- awoke in his own bed. The percipient didn't wish to take the matter
- any further.
-
- At about the same time (1983) Pony Godic and Keith Basterfield were
- investigating another case from the Northern Territory. A 17 year
- old youth, Simon, reported a series of events which included a
- nightmare close encounter, a number of dreams and also observations of
- entities about the house. Investigation, however, led to the
- conclusion that the stories originated from reading Raymond Fowler's
- "Andreasson Affair". The sketches Simon drew of his "aliens" were
- carbon copies of drawings from the book. Eventually he admitted
- he had indeed read the book whose story obsessed him to the point
- where his school grades suffered.
-
- Finally a well-investigated apparent abduction event emerged and was
- ably looked into and reported upon by Mark Moravec of Sydney. Two
- young men, out hunting near Jindabyne, New South Wales, in September
- 1978, reported seeing a bright spherical light on the ground some
- little distance away. Next night it was seen again. In 1983 one of
- the men began to recall memories of a two-hour time lapse on one of
- those two nights. One memory was of the two men's being floated into
- a room where they were placed on a table and examined by tall, white-
- colored beings. Moravec wrote "there is at present no evidence to
- confirm the 'abduction' experience occurred as a real physical event."
-
- RECENT RESEARCH
- Thomas E. Bullard's 1987 compilation of global abduction cases, "UFO
- Abductions: The Measure of a Mystery", contains 14 entries for
- Australia. This article presents brief details of 11 out of 14.
- One of Bullard's cases, case 16, doesn't seen to describe "missing
- time" and another, case 214, occurred in 1868, and the third, case 26,
- is spurious. This last event, dated March 28, 1982, was almost
- certainly explainable by the sighting, by a fatigued driver and
- passenger, of the planet Venus rising. No missing time or abduction
- scenario emerged, other than in speculation in the media generated by
- over enthusiastic UFO researchers involved in the case.
-
- By 1988, with the upsurge of the discovery of abduction cases in other
- countries, UFORA believed it was time to explore the dimension of
- events in this country. Therefore in November 1988 we circulated a
- carefully worded "Letter to the Editor" to 20 metropolitan daily
- newspapers requesting potential abductees to contact us. It was
- published in papers in four different Australian states. Although we
- received 20 replies to this letter, none was of the nature of an
- abduction event.
-
- Early 1989 brought five new cases to attention for review. One case
- (Nildottie) was poorly investigated and reported so far only in a
- national mass-circulation magazine. Three other cases in New South
- Wales are currently under investigation by Chalker, and two cases
- under investigation by Ray Brooke and Basterfield in South Australia.
-
- Here are brief details of the three New South Wales events: A Sydney
- woman recalls as a young girl, aged four or five years, she saw a
- small being with large eyes in her bedroom during daytime. She had
- little conscious recall of the details other than that she felt she
- went "somewhere else." Another Sydney woman woke up feeling
- agitated and heard a voice. Figures appeared and said to come with
- them. She went through a doorway into a room where she watched a
- scene on a screen. This screen showed pictures of her future life,
- and the events depicted later came true. The case is currently under
- active investigation and stretches over the time frame of 1979 - 1982.
- Finally, in 1976, a 31 year old woman was overcome be a feeling of
- sickness while vacuuming her house. Three strange figures were seen
- in front of her. There was apparently telepathic communication and
- advice that she had to go with them. The next thing she remembers,
- it was five hours later and her boy friend had arrived home. It is
- interesting to note that no events post 1982 were located.
-
- Meanwhile in 1979, in South Australia at a small country town called
- Nildottie, two men, Don and Jack, recounted an abduction experience
- which is alleged to have occurred near the River Murray. They were
- preparing for dinner when beings entered their house. They
- experienced a time lapse and found themselves standing by a silver
- craft. They were subjected to psychological testing for several
- hours before realizing they were back at their kitchen table. A more
- recent case from Adelaide in 1988 is one in which a man reports that
- he is in two-way communication with aliens via an implant in his ear.
- During investigation he revealed that he had undergone two apparent
- out-of-body experiences in which he was "sucked-out" of his body. He
- indicated that during these experiences he had been taken on board a
- UFO.
-
- CURRENT RESEARCH
- To determine the extent of the abduction phenomenon, and in the light
- of the availability of books by Randles, Hopkins, Klass and Strieber
- in Australia, we carried out another exercise in June 1989. We
- forwarded neutrally-worded "Letter to the Editor" to 51 regional
- newspapers scattered all over the country. Shortly thereafter we
- forwarded a media release and background briefing paper to selected
- metropolitan daily newspapers and radio stations because we had no
- visual material to present. The net result was coverage on two TV
- shows, items in five major metropolitan newspapers, items in an
- unknown number of country papers, and 31 interviews on 31 radio
- stations, all in one week. This was the most intense media exposure
- ever given to the subject of abductions to date in Australia.
- Several previously unknown cases are being investigated.
-
-
- DISCUSSION
- Unlike the United States and the United Kingdom, abduction accounts
- have never made front-page headlines or featured heavily in the
- electronic media within Australia. The only exception to this rule
- was the case of the missing pilot Frederick Valentich; that one made
- headlines throughout the world. All of the rest of the reports
- documented here have come to the attention either of UFO research
- organisations or through low-key press articles. This has meant that
- to date researchers have been able to pursue cases out of the media
- spotlight. On the other hand, with little mass publicity abduction
- cases may lie undiscovered, with potential abductees being unaware
- that there are responsible organisations to which they could take
- their stories. The recent UFORA publicity suggests there are indeed
- a few cases waiting attention. But a balance needs to be maintained
- between too much media exposure with the inherent risk of exposing
- people to the intimate details of previous events, and not enough
- publicity which would keep reports flowing to us.
-
- What then have we leaned about abduction experience in Australia? We
- have learned that there are cases that parallel those in other
- countries. Researchers have not been able to pursue and fully
- document many of these cases. Reasons for this include the sheer
- vastness of the Australian land mass and distances to percipients; the
- small number of serious researchers; the attitudes of some UFO
- investigators; and the unwillingness of percipients to be involved
- with full investigations.
-
- Are there yet more cases to uncover? UFORA's carefully measured appeal
- for cases has shown that it is possible to tread the line between too
- little and too much publicity. With limited resources available to
- Australian researchers a qualitative rather than quantitative approach
- seems the best way to proceed. As the recently uncovered cases are
- investigated, details will be published for the benefit of the broader
- global UFO research community.
-
-