Community Corner
2,600 UFO Sightings In Ohio So Far In 2019: What They Saw
In the last three months, UFOs have been spotted in Lakewood, North Royalton, Willoughby and around the state.
LAKEWOOD, OH β On September 9, just before 7 p.m., a Lakewood resident was walking back to their house, with their 5-year-old son in tow. They were playing with dragonflies and fireflies when something caught the resident's eye. They saw a cigar-shaped burst of light moving south across the sky.
"My first thought was that it was a drone, based on its apparent size and distance away. We see small drones in the area from time to time, but they usually move somewhat erratically, slowly, and always seem to have blinking lights. As I tried to process what I was seeing, I realized that it was moving as if it was an arrow shot from a bow," the resident wrote in a report for the National UFO Reporting Center.
The cigar-shaped light was only in the sky for 10 seconds, but it shook the Lakewood resident enough that they wrote a detailed post on its appearance and direction. "The speed that it was moving was much greater than anything that I have seen before," they wrote. It flew out of eyesight, behind a group of condos, before the resident could fully analyze what they were seeing.
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Similar accounts of UFOs have been reported from across the state. In fact, more than 2,600 reports of UFO sightings in Ohio have been filed with the National UFO Reporting Center this year.
Unidentified Objects
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The National UFO Reporting Center gets witness accounts of unidentified flying objects every year from people in Ohio and elsewhere around the country.
The idea that weβre not alone and aliens from another galaxy are circling the planet in strange-looking spacecraft has long fascinated us. Thousands of reports of unidentified flying objects, or UFOs, are filed every year. In the Buckeye State, 2,694 reports have been filed in 2019.
The National UFO Reporting Centerβs website is filled with accounts like this one, from Gallipolis, Ohio:
βA husband (former law enforcement) and wife (scientist), while sitting outside their recreational vehicle at a public campsite, witness a very bright light approach their campsite from the south in an erratic manner, appearing to slow or stop on several occasions as it drew near. It got within 50 yards, they estimate, of their campsite, at which time, out of a sense of alarm, the husband reached for his .45 caliber sidearm, but he felt unable to use his arm, or lift the firearm. The object, estimated by the witnesses to have been approximately 20 feet in diameter, hovered nearby for approximately 8 seconds, and then suddenly accelerated toward the west, and disappeared very quickly to the west.β
UFO hunting has been a popular pursuit in the United States since the mid-20th century, when Kenneth Arnold, a businessman piloting a small plane, filed the first well-known report in 1947 of a UFO over Mount Rainier in Washington. Arnold claimed he saw nine high-speed, crescent-shaped objects zooming along at several thousand miles per hour βlike saucers skipping on water.β
Although the objects Arnold claimed to see werenβt saucer-shaped at all, his analogy led to the popularization of the term βflying saucers.β And since then, Americans have been more or less obsessed with the idea that alien life is among us.
It may be easy to scoff at some of the eyewitness accounts on the National UFO Reporting Center, but the idea of intergalactic travel got a boost when information emerged from the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program, a $22 million, multi-year program that began in 2007 to investigate "unidentified aerial phenomena," according to reports by The New York Times and Politico.
Related: UFOs Are Real, Retired Navy Pilot Suggests Of Weird Aircraft
Former Nevada Democratic Sen. Harry Reid slipped in an earmark for the program into the Pentagon budget. Nevada, of course, is the home of a U.S. Air Force facility known as Area 51, the source of multiple alien conspiracy theories, including claims that interstellar visitors are held there; that the 1947 Roswell crash wasn't a weather balloon at all but a Soviet aircraft piloted by mutated midgets; and that the 1969 moon landing was filmed by the U.S. government in one of the Area 51 hangars.
The Pentagon program was defunded in 2012. But in a report released in late 2017, the investigators detailed an account by retired Navy Cmdr. David Fravor, who was conducting a training mission off the coast of California in 2004 when he saw an oblong craft flying erratically through his airspace at incredible speed, maneuvering in a way that defies accepted principles of aerodynamics.
Fravor described the wingless object, about 40 feet long and shaped like a Tic Tac, as other-worldly.
βI can tell you, I think it was not from this world,β Fravor told ABC News in 2017. βI'm not crazy, haven't been drinking. It was β after 18 years of flying, I've seen pretty much about everything that I can see in that realm, and this was nothing close.β
Fravor's account is convincing. When he saw the object from the air, controllers on one of the Navy ships on the water below reported that objects were being dropped about 80,000 feet from the sky, then headed "straight back up."
He could see the disturbances on the water below and breaking waves on the surface, "like something's under the surface," he told ABC.
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