lunes, 25 de enero de 2010

Close encounters of the suburban kind

Centenial Citizen

Close encounters of the suburban kind


Jeff Peckman, the chief proponent of the ballot initiative to form a Denver UFO commission, has presented a short video he says shows a space alien peering in a Nebraska man's window. Courtesy photo

By Peter Jones
Published: 01.21.10
On a late afternoon in April 2009, college student Will Chambers was leaving his parents' home in Littleton. His trips back to school in Fort Collins were usually uneventful — though this time, the drive would prove more interesting.

Chambers was taking University Boulevard to I-25 — a route he had driven many times since graduating from Arapahoe High School in 2007. He could likely drive it in his sleep — a good thing, since this time he was having a hard time keeping both eyes on the road.

"When you see something like that, it changes everything that you know," Chambers said of the incident.

As Chambers passed University's intersection with Arapahoe Road, he entered a stretch of University that meanders around DeKoevend Park and the tree-lined residential neighborhoods in west Centennial.


"Right as I was making the first turn, I spotted a bright white object in the sky. It was probably northeast," he said. "It looked like it was either cigar-shaped or disk-shaped from the side."

With one eye on the road, Chambers slowed down, while keeping the other eye glued on the mysterious object. As he weaved up the hill toward Orchard Road, the thing — whatever it was — disappeared into the trees.

"I kept looking for it," Chambers said. "I almost gave up on it, but as I looked more westward, it had moved to a new position. It seemed like it came closer to me, almost overhead."

As Chambers waited at the stoplight, he took the opportunity to study the unidentified flying object more carefully for a few seconds.

"As it came out from under the cloud, it turned blue to match the sky. It was like camouflage," he recalled. "It definitely looked like a solid object. I definitely felt like it was an intelligent design."

UFO Central

Colorado has recently become something of an epicenter for UFO-related activity. Although not yet rivaling Roswell, N.M., the site of a famous alleged spaceship crash in 1947, the state is increasingly on the UFO community's radar screen.

Colorado sees about a dozen reports of UFO sightings every month, according to the Mutual UFO Network or MUFON, an international organization that tracks such activity. The group celebrated its 40th anniversary at its annual conference in Greenwood Village last August.

"Colorado does seem to have a higher rate than other states," said MUFON spokesman Alejandro Rojas. "We're not 100 percent sure why. The vast majority of these investigations turn out to be something mundane."

Rojas thinks the fact that MUFON is headquartered in Fort Collins and that NORAD, the North American Aerospace Defense Command, is based near Colorado Springs may have something to do with the large culture of sightings.

Whatever the cause, there are quarters in Colorado that have seen a new interest, concern and even fear about the implications of UFOs and occurrences that some attribute to alien visitors.

Southwestern Colorado was hit recently by a string of bizarre cattle mutilations. Several ranchers in and around the San Luis Valley reported their calves had been killed and mutilated in ways that have left law enforcement baffled.

Calves' chests were cored out and their organs carefully removed. There were reportedly no pools of blood or signs of struggle. Perhaps most mysterious were the lack of footprints, tire tracks or other evidence of human activity.

Then, Elbert County resident Marcia Burke was on "The Montel Williams Show" last year to discuss her alleged encounter with a space alien she says she encountered on her horse ranch near Deer Trail.

"I felt like I got some telepathy where he was trying to tell me not to be scared," she told Colorado Community Newspapers. "It was too much for me to handle. I went inside my house and locked the door."

Such reports have prompted UFO activists in Denver to collect enough valid petition signatures to place a proposed ordinance on the city's August ballot. Proponents say the local, state and federal governments have done too little to keep the public informed on such issues.

If it passes, the ordinance would create a seven-member city commission of "experts" to collect evidence on reported UFO sightings in the city and actively provide information to the public. The commission would also ensure that police and firefighters were trained to handle UFO-related incidents

"The commission would essentially serve the purpose of briefing the general public about extraterrestrial intelligent beings," said Jeff Peckman, the measures's chief proponent.

Peckman, himself, claims to have seen UFOs and has publicly screened a video that purports to show a space alien peering into a Nebraska man's window. Peckman tried unsuccessfully to show the video to then-Sen. Barack Obama during the 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver.

UFOs over Lone Tree

Alex Kalkman, 22, was hanging out in Lone Tree's Daniels Park with a few friends one afternoon when he saw a flying object in the distance to the west. A hang glider, he thought, at first.

"We watched it for probably a minute, moving really slowly," he said. "Then it came to a complete standstill and stayed there for a solid minute. The object started moving north again."

Whatever it was, it did not make any noise, according to Kalkman, who by now was convinced that the object was no regular aircraft

"It was invisible for a good 30 seconds," he said. "When we were able to pick it up again, it was moving in an eastbound trajectory. It panned across the sky for a good 10 minutes."

Kalkman says he later had another UFO sighting on a desolate highway in Utah.

Whatever one makes of such sightings — space visitors, top-secret government projects or overactive imaginations — there has been an apparent increase in the public's willingness to talk about their UFO experiences.

Celebrities ranging from Muhammed Ali to former President Carter have publicly discussed their own UFO sightings, helping lend credibility to what many have dismissed as a dubious phenomenon.

Nuclear physicist Stanton Friedman has tried to lend credibility to UFO research since the late 1950s. He worked on advanced nuclear aircraft for government contractors before writing such books as "Crash at Corona: The Definitive Study of the Roswell Incident."

As he lectures around the world, Friedman, a frequent MUFON guest, has noticed a slow, but growing tendency for people to acknowledge their UFO experiences when he asks for a show of hands.

"The hands go up reluctantly. They know I'm not going to laugh," he said. "As I'm counting, by the time I get to the other side of the hall, the hands go up rapidly. Everyone thinks he's the only one who's had a sighting. When I ask how many reported what they saw, 90 percent of the hands go down."

That's where Doug Wilson, MUFON's chief Colorado investigator, comes in. He leads 24 other volunteer sleuths and has investigated about 60 reported UFO sightings in the state over the last four years, — some with accompanying photos or video. According to Wilson, his work is not unlike any other serious investigative query.

"I take whatever data I can from the interview and compare it to the initial report," he said. "I take that information and try to find out — Could it be a weather anomaly? Could it have been a weather balloon? Could it have been an aircraft? We check all of that."

As many as 70 percent of the once mysterious sightings can be explained away that way, Wilson says.

"There are also a significant number that can't be explained," he added. "But you'll never see a MUFON report that says this man saw an extraterrestrial vehicle. That's not for us to decide."

Both Chambers' and Kalkman's reports remain in MUFON's unexplained file. That leaves such witnesses to interpret their own experiences for themselves — sometimes in ways that become life-changing.

"It really puts things in perspective," Kalkman said of his two experiences. "I was raised in a Christian family. I don't know that I believe the same things my parents do. It's definitely changed some fundamental beliefs."

Chambers agrees.

"You start to wonder what else is out there," he said. "There's so little that we know about the universe."

1 comentario:

  1. Over the past year and a half, Denver has had the uncomfortable burden of being thrust into the world headlines because of one man. This man is Jeff Peckman.

    During this time Denver citizens should have suffered great embarrassment. Instead, they have laughed along with the world because they thought that the laughter was directed at Peckman only. They were wrong. The world has been laughing at Denver, for Peckman claims to their representative.

    Peckman has worked hard to get an initiative on the August 2010 City Of Denver Ballot. This initiative aims to create a committee that will ‘prepare Denver for contact with extraterrestrials.’

    The now infamous ET Commission was originally inspired by a hoax; an unconvincing piece of footage showing a phony alien peering into a window.

    Peckman’s proposed initiative makes bold declarations such as:

    The People of the City and County of Denver hereby declare that:
    The presence of extraterrestrial intelligent beings and extraterrestrial vehicles on Earth, and within Earth’s atmosphere, has been confirmed by credible evidence, official government documents, and whistleblowers formerly working for the U.S. Government and government contractors;
    Where is this credible evidence? Where are these official government documents? Who exactly are these whistleblowers?

    Peckman has not and will not address these questions. If we vote in favor of the initiative, we are “declaring” that all of this is just simply the truth.

    The purpose of this letter is not to examine the document point by point. The objective is to express that Peckman’s ideas are not representative of the citizens of Denver.

    Peckman needed approximately 4,000 signatures to get the initiative on the ballot. However, during the first year of the campaign he was only able to acquire about 10% of that number.

    In his desperation to meet the shortfall of signatures, he started emotionally bribing the people by offering to donate a dollar to charity for every one received. When that ploy failed, he purchased the remainder from a company that “acquires” signatures for ballot initiatives.

    In this way, Peckman obtained over 10,000 signatures. However, 60% of those were invalidated. Surprisingly, he still squeaked by with just enough signatures.

    In Peckman’s own words, the truth is lost:

    Over 10,200 signatures total were filed with the Denver Elections Division on Sept. 4. 2009 and Nov. 2. The City Clerk and Recorder confirmed on Nov. 30 that the required 3,974 valid signatures had been exceeded which qualified the the ETA Commission initiative for the August 2010 ballot in the next citywide election.

    If this initiative were to pass, Denver will suffer. The stigma will ensure that the city will be overlooked for business opportunities, and damage the city’s credibility.

    Of course, this ridiculous proposal would never pass, right?

    The problem is that most Denverites feel this issue is a joke and are ignoring it. If the people continue their silence, the few supporters will be the deciders.

    Peckman and his ‘little green people’ are not representative of the people of Denver.

    Now the people have spoken.


    Rocky Mountain Paranormal Research Society

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