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Location: Mothership -> UFO -> Updates -> 1997 -> Jul -> Phoenix Lights - 'Solved'?

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Phoenix Lights - 'Solved'?

From: TotlResrch@aol.com [Kal Korff]
Date: Fri, 25 Jul 1997 06:10:28 -0400 (EDT)
Fwd Date: Fri, 25 Jul 1997 10:51:26 -0400
Subject: Phoenix Lights - 'Solved'?


Dear List:


This article speaks for itself...rember, Jim Dilettoso is also
the same person who "authenticated" the infamous Eduard "Billy"
Meier hoax UFO photographs. Like his Meier analysis, it appears
that his Phoenix lights one (a cause celeb with Richard Hoagland
and Art Bell) is badly in error as well. There were no UFOs,
just military flares, as some of us suspected all along.


Air Guard unit sheds
light on Valley's UFOs


Randy Reid/The Arizona Republic
"I had one too many UFO calls," says Guard Capt. Eileen Bienz.



By Richard Ruelas
The Arizona Republic

There's still the chance it was flying saucers bent on world domination,
but another explanation turned up Thursday for those eerie lights
spotted over Phoenix on March 13.

Turns out the Maryland Air National Guard was running an exercise called
Operation Snowbird along the Barry Goldwater Gunnery Range southwest of
Phoenix on that fabled night.

They flew eight A-10s and dropped a mess of high-intensity flares on
their way back to Tucson, military officials said.

Since March, Arizona military bases said they had nothing in the air
that would have caused the mysterious lights seen from Phoenix on March
13. But the bases didn't check visiting aircraft.

That is until they were asked to by Capt. Eileen Bienz, public affairs
officer for the Army and Air National Guard. She started a one-woman
investigation into the luminaries.

"I had one too many UFO calls," Bienz said. "I said, "I've got to figure
this thing out' is what it finally came down to."

What Bienz found out about was Operation Snowbird, which brings in
aircraft from bases in the northern United States from November to
April. Hence the name.

A flight schedule from Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, shows that a
squadron of planes from Operation Snowbird left at 8:15 p.m. on March 13
and returned at 10:30 p.m.

A spokesman for Luke Air Force Base confirmed that the Maryland planes
were authorized to use the Barry Goldwater range from 9:30 to 10 p.m. on
March 13.

According to Village Labs in Tempe, which used reports to create
computer simulations of the lights, the lights came to a rest near the
Estrella Mountains southwest of Phoenix. There were also reports of huge
balls of lights that suddenly disappeared.

The Phoenix lights gained national attention in June after an article in
USA Today. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Phoenix City Councilwoman
Francis Emma Barwood asked for an Air Force investigation. Neither could
be reached for comment Thursday.

The lights entered UFO folklore. They were referenced liberally by Art
Bell, host of a late-night radio show focusing on the paranormal. The
V-shaped Phoenix lights made it onto T-shirts sold at the 50th
anniversary celebration in Roswell, N.M.

The lights also prompted a bizarre news conference by Gov. Fife
Symington, who trotted out an aide dressed in an alien costume.

Bienz said the Snowbird planes don't explain away everything spotted
that night. The planes don't match up with reports of lights coming in
from the north, zooming through Phoenix and popping up again near
Kingman. But Bienz is trying to find the origin of those as well.

But the Operation Snowbird planes might account for the lights seen near
10 p.m. in the west, the sightings that have provided most of the
videotape and photographs seen around the country.

"Our guys did create, while they were up there, an event that this one
colonel told me could be perceived as a hell of a light show," said
Capt. Drew Sullins, of the Maryland Air National Guard.

Sullins said the planes were probably in a formation, then peeled off
one or two at a time to perform the run, Sullins said.

During the run, they would drop high-intensity flares, called Luu-2,
made of either magnesium or cesium, Sullins said. The flares are
suspended by a tiny parachute and take a long time to drop, Sullins
said.

The planes completed their required runs and their time at the busy
range was coming to a close. But the A-10s still had a bunch of flares
on board, and Davis-Monthan doesn't let planes land with flares aboard.

"I don't know the logic of that rule, but I imagine it's a safety
thing," Sullins said.

So as they were leaving the range, the planes jettisoned their flares.

The flares would visible for a great distance as they slowly floated
down, said Keith Shepherd, spokesman for Davis-Monthan.

"(Our pilots) told me that at 6,000 feet and using those types of
flares, you can see them from 150 miles away on a good night," Shepherd
said.

Jim Delitoso of Village Labs was at a loss for words when told of the
Snowbird planes.

When he got his bearings back, he said that optical analysis of photos
and videotapes show the lights couldn't be flares and that a computer
simulation matching witness accounts places the lights nowhere near the
gunnery range.

"I'm open-minded that it could be flares, but we have no evidence of
that," Delitoso said.

The Maryland Air National Guard is also keeping an open mind, said
Sullins, its spokesman.

"All I'm saying is, yes, we had aircraft flying in that area doing night
illuminations." he said. "These guys were flying it. They were there. We
can prove it. Whether people want to believe it was the mysterious
lights, it's up to them."



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