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Location: Mothership -> Ufomind Mailing List -> 1997 -> Aug -> UFO Crash Near Detroit in 1974

NOTICE: The page below has been permenently FROZEN as of January 2000. Due to resource limitations, this section of our website is no longer maintained, so some links may not work and some information may be out of date. We have retained this page for archive reference only, and we cannot vouch for its accuracy. Broken links will not be repaired, and minor errors will not be corrected. You are responsible for independently verifying any information you may find here. More Info

UFO Crash Near Detroit in 1974

From: Stig_Agermose@online.pol.dk (Stig Agermose)
Date: Mon, 18 Aug 1997 14:07:54 -0800

Here is another thought-provoking account that ought to be checked for
sure. The alleged crash took place in 1974 and was announced two times
by a tv station in Detroit, once in prime time news: a UFO with four
aliens aboard had been intercepted by the United States Air Force and
had crashed in the area. My check with Kevin Randle's "A History Of UFO
Crashes" established that the incident might be confirmed by an entry
in Len Stringfield's "Crash/Retrievals", but I haven't been able to
compare with the latter. More on that presently.

In her book about the life with her ex-husband (Backstage Passes, Life
On the Wild Side with David Bowie, Orion Books, London, 1993, p.
203ff.) Angela Bowie says that it was nice to leave the hectic life of
New York once in a while, whether it was for a concert tour or a
mystery one. This quote concerns a tour in 1974:

"The open road, for instance, was most refreshing. Yes...the limo
purring along at a steady twenty-five, good old Brooklyn Tony Macia's
bodyguarding bulk behind the wheel, Detroit back down the interstate
unraveling behind us, Minneapolis-St Paul up ahead somewhere, the
moonroof open, the powerful telescope surveying the summer night sky
from its tripod mount, the aliens up there perhaps recognizing that we
meant them no harm, that we were the ones who could be trusted...

They had been having a bad time, after all. One of their craft had been
intercepted somewhere north of Detroit, engaged by the United States
Air Force and - well, we never found out what happened after that. We
did'nt know if the saucer had been forced to crash-land on earth, or
blasted out of the sky so that it fell to earth, or what. We did'nt
know if its occupants - its crew? - were dead or alive or somewhere in
between, although we did know that there were four of them.

We knew all this because while we were in our hotel room in Detroit, we
saw an afternoon TV news flash to the effect that a UFO had crashed in
the area with four aliens aboard...more news at six.

We tuned in again at six - of course we did, along with everybody in
the state - and learned more, but not much more. The news crew
confirmed the landing, yet avoided being specific about its location
and presented what little information they had with great caution, as
if doing their best to downplay the sensational and possibly
panic-causing information they were supplying, straight-faced and
soberly, to their public. These were the station's regular newscasters,
reputable and popular, with everything to lose by creating a hoax and
nothing but brief notoriety to gain.

That, however, is what we were told when the eleven-o'clock news came
around: The prime-time news crew had perpetrated an irresponsible and
inexcusable hoax, and had therefore been dismissed from their jobs. No
UFOs had landed; no aliens were in custody, dead or alive; the United
States Air Force had positively not engaged or intercepted any craft
whatsoever in the skies above Michigan; and that, officially and
absolutely, was that.

It was difficult to know what to make of this incident. At one extreme,
it could have been just an overblown cosmic-hippie-cocaine dream, an
instance of too much weirdness for too long crashing through into the
perceived reality continuum. On the other hand, we had the videotape.

Yes, even in 1974. It so happened that the documentary filmmaker Alan
Yentob was along with us on the trip, making the film that would become
"Cracked Actor", and he had his VCR hooked up to the television set in
our hotel room when the afternoon news flash first caught our
attention. So we'd taped the whole six-o'clock and eleven-o'clock news
shows. There was no denying that the broadcasts had happened.

The broadcasts at least. In David's opinion, and mine too, what had
just occurred was indeed a warp in the usual business of
business-as-usual.

David believed very strongly that aliens were active above our planet,
and so did (do) I. That's why we were so alert in the limo on the way
to Minneapolis, watching intently for signs of further UFO activity in
the bright night sky. It was mostly David who had his eye pressed to
the telescope (purchased by Corinne Schwab, his personal assistant,
during a lightning shopping spree in Detroit). He'd talked about the
six-o'clock newscast during his show at Cobo Arena in Detroit, and he
believed that the energy thus created might well have communicated
itself to the beings monitoring from above our human reaction to their
fallen (slain/captured/atomized?) fellows.

I don't know quite what David expected, because by now he'd moved
beyond his manic-monologue mode into his silent, non-communication
state, but I suspect he would'nt have been surprised at all if the
aliens had come right down to the limo and tractor-beamed him up for an
exchange of ideas. He was feeling pretty much like the center of things
here on earth at the time, after all, and it probably seemed obvious to
him that some right-thinking human should take on the job of Man's
ambassador...

No aliens heeded the call, though, and after a while he disappeared
into his coke, sheltered by Corinne, and I lost interest. I left the
tour, and them, the next day."

Evaluating the story I must admit the logic of Angela's views. It seems
unlikely that a well-respected and popular newsstaff should risk its
standing as well as its existence for the short mention, which reports
like that might give.

Add to this that her account might be confirmed by Len Stringfield's
"Crash/Retrievals":


"Spring 1975:

Near Ohio-Michigan Border-

Insufficient Data


Bette Shilling reported to Len Stringfield that a friend, an Air Force
officer, had told her that he'd seen a coded message telling of a
flying saucer crash. According to that information two of the aliens
were dead and a third was still alive. The message was directed from a
communications station in Detroit and sent to the commanding officer of
a base somewhere in Ohio." (Kevin D. Randle: A History of UFO Crashes,
Avon Books, 1995, p. 206.)

Unfortunately Randle doesn't say where he got the date from. Maybe
Betty Shilling dated her experience to the spring of 1975, giving
Randle a reason for referring the crash to this time frame. Stringfield
himself might offer another and better basis for doing so, but as I
don't have a copy of his book, I would very much appreciate if somebody
could tell me how close Randle's rendering of the particulars is to
Stringfield's own.

>From my angle the message might just as well date from the previous
year and refer to the same incident as Angela's account. The fact that
Stringfield speaks of three, but the TV report of four aliens, may be
attributed to the panic of the moment.


Stig


Index: UFO Crashes


Mothership -> Ufomind Mailing List -> 1997 -> Aug -> Here

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Created: Aug 18, 1997