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- Latrobe Bulletin
- Latrobe, Pa
- May 6, 1989
-
-
- KECKSBURG CRASH CONTROVERSIAL
-
- By Kim Opatka
- Bulletin Staff Writer
-
- This final article in a six-part series on unidentified flying
- objects (UFOS) examines one of the most talked about and controversial
- incidents in the area, what has been termed a meteorite by some and an
- alien craft by others, which crashed in Kecksburg December 9, 1965.
-
- The object was first seen streaking across the sky, with
- thousands from Michigan to New York witnessing a brilliant ball of
- fire which left a smoke trail, visible for about 20 minutes after it
- passed.
-
- Many, including pilots who observed it, thought it was an
- aircraft which was on fire. Reports of debris from the object were
- made in many states, and an Ohio fire department was called to
- extinguish 10 small fires in an area where witnesses said they saw
- flaming fragments falling from the sky.
-
- Shock waves were reported by pilots, and a seismograph near
- Detroit recorded a shock, wrote investigator Stan Gordon, of
- Pennsylvania Association for the Study of the Unexplained (PASU) in a
- recent journal article. The crash has been a pet project of the
- Greensburg man "since the night it happened," he said, noting he is
- still trying to obtain information on the incident.
-
- Although the military eventually labeled the object a meteor, as
- did the Associated Press account published in The Bulletin the day
- after the crash, Gordon says recent evidence, including the discovery
- of a man who saw the object, supports the idea that the object was a
- true UFO.
-
- "I was a teen-ager then," said John (not his real name). "It was
- in the early part of December and there was a little snow and a little
- rain, and mud."
-
- He was called to the scene after the 4:44 p.m. crash as a fireman
- from the Latrobe area, to search for the crashed object.
-
- "I had seen a fiery object in the sky. I can't say exactly which
- direction but it was coming from the north. It was not too much
- longer and the fire whistle went off," he said. "I answered the call
- and was told they needed a search team because at the time they
- believed it was a downed aircraft. And I thought, 'My God, this is
- what I have just seen'."
-
- When firemen arrived at the Kecksburg Fire Hall, maps were
- reviewed and groups were given sections to search.
-
- "It was getting semi-dusk and we had flashlights. We were taken
- in the back of a truck and dropped off and told to go 'this way' which
- we did. I was not on the initial contact team. Another team found
- the object.
-
- "It was definitely, unequivocally, positively, absolutely no
- aircraft, plane, helicopter or rocket, at least not to my knowledge.
- It was in an area that was part field and part woods and we went down
- to investigate," he said.
-
- "We found the object had crashed at a 30 to 40 degree angle, and
- had broken off numerous tree branches in its impact path. My initial
- reaction was 'This is no airplane.' I observed no shrapnel, no
- breaking up of the fuselage. It was one solid piece, no doors, no
- windows.
-
- "Preliminary searches found no bodies or casualties. It was
- shaped like an acorn, laying on its side, like the acorn nut is in its
- shell when it's on a tree," he explained. "I've been a machinist for
- 24 years and I've worked with a tremendous amount of different metals,
- and I have never seen any type of metal that looked even close to
- that."
-
- John said the object was not broken, "not even cracked, just
- dented a bit. It did not give off smoke, steam or vapors, at least
- none that we could see."
-
- Reports from neighbors in the area said it had given off a faint
- trail of blue smoke, which disappeared after the crash.
-
- He described the portion visible as between eight and 10 feet
- long, six and seven feet across, and said a man of average height
- would probably have had little trouble standing up inside it. The
- crater it plowed into the ground was "rectangular in shape."
-
- John said the state police were there and the area was soon
- quarantined.
-
- "They drove us out. It was late at night when we finally got
- back to the fire hall and it had been completely taken over by the
- military. They were carrying in large pieces of equipment, radios and
- such, and they had armed guards posted outside so nobody could get in
- or out. The firemen were thrown out. We weren't even allowed in to
- use the bathroom.
-
- "The military had control of the whole operation," John recalled.
- "After a while we saw a flat bed truck come by with some other
- military equipment, a crane or something.
-
- "It was not too much longer, an hour, an hour and a half, when
- the trucks came back and there was a large object on the back of the
- flat bed, covered by a tarp, with military escorts front and back. I
- got the feeling that if you had stepped on the road you were dead
- meat. They weren't stopping for anything."
-
- Although the object was later said to be a meteorite, John
- doesn't buy that explanation.
-
- "It had writing on it, not like your average writing, but more
- like ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics. It had sort of a bumper on it,
- like a ribbon about six to 10 inches wide, and it stood out. It was
- elliptical the whole way around and the writing was on this bumper.
- It's nothing like I've ever seen, and I'm an avid reader. I read a
- lot of books on Egypt, the Incas, Peruvians, Russians and I've never
- to this day come across anything that looked like that."
-
- John notes that later it was denied that the object was even a
- meteorite, and the military "denied they were even in the area. But I
- know there were Air Force and Army personnel involved. It was like
- they just came out of the woodwork."
-
- Gordon's research has revealed that one of the military groups
- involved was most likely to be the 662nd Radar Squadron, based at the
- Oakdale Armory, located near Greater Pittsburgh International Airport.
-
- The squadron was found to be under the control of the Aerospace
- Defense Command, and attempts to get information on the Kecksburg
- crash, through the Freedom of Information Act, have not provided much
- to go on.
-
- One response said there had been no record of the squadron being
- activated on that date, Gordon said, wondering how so much equipment
- and personnel could be activated while the monthly report showed no
- entry on Dec. 9.
-
- Through his research, Gordon says he knows the Air Force was
- still investigating UFO cases at the public level then, and that it
- was apparently the Project Blue Book staff which contacted the 662nd
- squadron. Subsequent reports have led him to theorize that even the
- Project Blue Book staff was not made aware of objects which could
- "affect national security," and that some intelligence teams
- investigated crashes of "foreign space vehicles."
-
- Another strange occurrence that night, Gordon said, was reports by
- some civilians that radiation was released. He explained that some
- children playing in the area had reportedly been told by military
- personnel that that was a possibility, and men in decontamination
- suits were allegedly seen at the site later the next day.
-
- Although he has considered the possibility that the object could
- have been space debris or a test device, Gordon says documents and
- evidence obtained in the last few years lead more in the direction of
- it being a "true UFO."
-
- John concurs.
- "It was definitely not of this planet. At the time I was a
- skeptical teen, but when you see something like that you don't forget
- it. When you get called out like that from the fire department you
- think you're going out looking for an aircraft of some sort, not a
- UFO.
-
- "I'll never forget it. I still want to know what the hell it
- was."
-