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This section contains descriptions of unexplained facts provided by eyewitnesses or published in the media, as well as the results of their analysis by the group.

UFO. United States

ID #1537539805
Added Fri, 21/09/2018
Author July N.
Sources
Phenomena
Status
Result
Resume

Initial data

Initial information from sources or from an eyewitness
Incident date: 
21.06.1947
Location: 
Остров Мори
WA
United States

The incident took place shortly after June 21, 1947. Seaman Harold A. Dahl stated that this day had seen six UFOs near Maury island when he sailed in a boat along with his son Charles and a dog. Dahl reported that he observed four to six (in the first FBI report referred to four or five) "ponimaesh objects" flying over his boat. According to the sailor through a hole in the centre of the discs you can see the blue sky, and on their inner faces were portholes. One of the ships seems to have been faulty. Another ship approached and then flew away. At this point from the inner hole of the vehicle malfunction began erupting some objects.They fell on the boat and damaged the windshield, the canopy and the wheel arch, and also killed running along the deck the dog. Son Dahl also received minor injuries. Dahl claimed to have made a series of UFO photos and collected a few similar pieces of slag debris, discarded the faulty object. Also way collected some light white metal sheets, which, being ejected from the center hole of the UFO fell to the ground like scraps of newspaper.

The next morning, said Dahl, to his house came a man and asked him to lunch in a nearby diner. Dahl accepted the invitation. The man was dressed in a black suit, drove a new Buick in 1947, and Dahl assumed he was a soldier or government agent. For a meal the man told him details of the UFO sighting, though Dahl anyone did not speak about it. Also, this man allegedly did the warning which Dahl took as a threat that his family might be harmed if it gets spread about what he saw. This was the reason for the confusion: the late Dale claimed that his stories about UFOs were a hoax; however, he also claimed that he actually saw a UFO, and the deception said to protect the family.

Despite the threats of the man in black, Dahl reported the incident to his boss, Fred Crisman, which has long claimed to have experience in unusual phenomena, and was also the co-owner of the boat swam the distance. The next day, Crisman sailed to the island and, according to him, saw the object quickly disappeared beyond the cloud. He collected additional samples of "slag" lying on the beach. He then sent a sample for analysis in Chicago. According to the FBI report, or Krisman he sent a sample to ray Palmer, science fiction writer and editor of "Amazing science fiction", or did his friend from the University of Chicago who failed to identify the material. While the sample ran in Chicago, occurred the famous encounter of Kenneth Arnold with UFO. Palmer contacted Arnold and asked him to investigate the incident in the article, which he wrote for one of the publications.

The case in the Cascade mountains

In this article we will tell about one of the most famous casesthat attracted public attention to the existence of unidentified flying objects. He is considered the impetus that gave rise to the UFO movement.

Arnold flew from Boise to Tacoma and met with Crismina, dal and at least three military intelligence officers at the Winthrop hotel. These meetings lasted for several days, and during this period one (according to the FBI, most likely it was Crisman) began to merge the information about the UFO sighting near Maury island, and the meetings in the hotel and the essence of the issues discussed in the local and national press.

Two officers of US air force (captain William L. Davidson and Lieutenant Frank M. brown), who arrived at the request of Arnold, decided to go back to California on the same day, immediately after a conversation with Crimanal. Dal also decided to leave, citing possible danger to him and his family. When the scouts were about to leave, Crisman got out of his car the specimens found on the shore the wreckage and handed them over to investigators for transportation to California. Later, Palmer said the officers immediately recognized in the metal sheets of plain aluminum, not to talk about it to Arnold, not wishing to embarrass him. However, the plane was flying carrying a "slag" officers, crashed shortly after taking off from Tacoma. Both soldiers were killed. The crash site was only discovered in 2007, and held an FBI investigation has found no traces of sabotage.

Next, after the crash of the day Dal and Crisman came to the hotel to Arnold. Dahl asked to see pictures of UFOs taken on the island of Maury. He said that the photos are in the glove compartment of his car, but they are all spoiled white spots. The whole company left the hotel and headed for the photographs to the Dahl car parked outside, but the photos in the glove box was not there.

Fearing death, Dahl disappeared. Arnold realized that I will not be able to complete the promised Palmer article. Samples of the wreckage, and transferred to Arnold Palmer, also disappeared.

Much later, Crisman and Dahl admitted that the whole story was fabricated. Before the death of Krizman changed history, turning it into a story about an American plane dropping radioactive waste.

Association of skeptics who investigated the incident, concluded that it was the wreck of an unknown aircraft, and found "the wreckage" was a industrial slag. Involved in the investigation of ed Ruppelt classified the case as "a proven hoax".

Translated by «Yandex.Translator»

Original news

The incident took place shortly after June 21, 1947. On that date, seaman Harold A. Dahl, out scavenging for drifting logs, claimed to have seen six UFOs near Maury Island (which is now a peninsula of Vashon Island, in Puget Sound, near Tacoma, Washington, United States; Maury Island is located directly across a narrow section of Puget Sound from Sea-Tac International Airport and Boeing Field). Dahl, his son Charles, an unnamed hand and Dahl’s dog were on the boat. Dahl reported seeing four, five or six (the initial FBI report says four or five) “doughnut-shaped objects” flying in formation over the area where his boat was. He said he could see blue sky through the holes in the center of the discs, and that there appeared to be port holes lining the inside of the ring. One of the craft appeared to be malfunctioning, Dahl reported, and another craft edged up to it, then retreated. At this point the troubled craft began ejecting objects through the inner port holes. Slag-like material began hitting the boat and damaged the windshield, the wheel house and a light fixture, and killed his dog on the deck. He said his son was also slightly injured by falling debris. Dahl claimed to have taken a number of photographs of the UFOs, and recovered some type of slag ejected from the craft that malfunctioned. Dahl also recovered samples of sheaves of lightweight white sheets of metal that fluttered like “newspapers” out from the inner ring of the troubled UFO to the ground.

The next morning, Dahl reported a man arrived at his home and invited him to breakfast at a nearby diner; Dahl accepted the invitation. He described the man as wearing a black suit and driving a new 1947 Buick; Dahl assumed he was a military or government representative. Dahl claimed the man told him details of the UFO sighting while they ate, though Dahl had not related his account publicly. The man also allegedly gave Dahl a non-specific warning which Dahl took as a threat that his family might be harmed if he related details of the sighting.

Some confusion and debate over Dahl’s statements have occurred. Dahl later claimed the UFO sighting was a hoax, but has also claimed the sighting was accurate, but he had claimed it was a hoax to avoid bringing harm to his family.

In spite of the threat, Dahl had reported the incident to his employee at his sawmill operation, Fred Crisman, who had long claimed to have experience with unusual phenomena (and who was later alleged to be linked to the John F. Kennedy assassination)[1] and who also was the owner, or co-owner, of the boat used by Dahl. Crisman and Dahl also had a joint-venture to retrieve drifting logs from Puget Sound as a source of raw lumber. Crisman sailed to the island the following day and said he spotted a craft briefly, but it went behind a cloud. He gathered more of the slag which he found littering the beach area. He then sent a sample to Chicago with a request it be tested. According to the FBI report, Crisman either sent it to Ray Palmer, science fiction writer and editor of Amazing Science Fiction, or sent it to a friend at the University of Chicago who failed to identify the material and then sent it on to Ray Palmer. While the “rock formation” was being passed around in Chicago, the famous sighting by Kenneth Arnold took place at Mount Rainier in Washington state. Palmer contacted Arnold and asked him to investigate the incident for the story Arnold was writing for one of Palmer’s publications (the FBI report states Palmer was the editor of the magazines Venture and Fantacy [sic, given as “Fantasy” elsewhere in the report] at this time, although both Venture Science Fiction Magazine and The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction first appeared long after the incident. Palmer inaugurated the first issue of Fate magazine in January, 1948 with a cover featuring flying disks and the article he paid Kenneth Arnold to write [2]).

Arnold flew from Boise, Idaho, to Tacoma and met with Crisman, Dahl and at least three military intelligence officers at the Winthrop Hotel there. During the meetings over several days, an unknown person (the FBI agent who wrote up the main report on the incident believed Crisman was the most likely suspect) began leaking details of the UFO sighting at Maury Island, the meeting in the hotel room and details of the conversation there to reporters at the Tacoma Times and at United Press, the latter reporter also working for Tacoma News Tribune. The anonymous caller also contacted the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and the Boise Statesman.

The two United States Army Air Corps investigating officers who arrived at Arnold’s request, Captain William L. Davidson and Lietuenant Frank M. Brown of Army A-2 Intelligence, decided to fly back to Hamilton Field the same day they arrived in Tacoma after interviewing Crisman in the hotel room. Dahl had decided to leave, citing possible danger to himself if the story got out, presumably because of the warning he received from the man in black previously. The two intelligence officers said they had to return to Hamilton Field in California quickly because the next day was Air Force Day, when the Air Force officially became a new service branch distinct from the Navy, Marines and Army. As the investigators were preparing to leave, Crisman produced samples of the “rock formation” from his automobile and gave it to the investigators to take back to California.[3] The plane carrying the two investigators and the slag crashed near Kelso, Washington, shortly after leaving Tacoma, killing both men.[3] In April 2007 it was reported that the crash site had been rediscovered and some material recovered, although the initial military investigation did recover exhibits and remove the bodies.[4][5] The FBI report notes that investigators from McChord Field near Tacoma had investigated the wreckage and were convinced there was no sabotage involved. The FBI report further mentions that two other people on board the airplane survived by parachuting from the airplane after it lost its left wing and the tail section due to a fire in the left engine. One of the survivors was named as a member of the flight crew and the other was referred to as “a hitch-hiker.” The Seattle Post-Intelligencer identified them as Sergeant Elmer L. Taft and Technical Sergeant Woodrow D. Matthews. Initially the Air Force denied the men had been carrying a secret cargo, but in later years admitted that they had been officially investigating the Dahl report.

Crisman alerted Arnold of the crash early the next morning and Dahl and Crisman returned to the hotel to discuss the situation with Arnold. Arnold had invited another person, accidentally identified in the FOI copy of the FBI report as a Mr. Smith of Seattle (probably Captain E. H. Smith (elsewhere E. J. Smith) of United Airlines, identified in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer article under External links below), to Tacoma to attend the UFO conference, and this informant related to the FBI field agent that a Mr. Lantz (elsewhere identified as Paul Lance) of the Tacoma Times contacted Arnold at the hotel and informed him of the leaks, including information that the Army intelligence officers had been shot down in the B-25 airplane over Kelso by 20 mm cannon, and that a Marine airplane whose wreck that had allegedly been found earlier at Mt. Rainier had also been shot down with the same weapon. The anonymous caller claimed knowledge of on-going investigations by military intelligence. He was not identified but claimed to be a switchboard operator. Mr. Smith informed the FBI the switchboard operator at the Winthrop Hotel in Tacoma was not a male. The anonymous caller also said he was not interested in providing a scoop to any certain media outlet but wanted the news “to get back to New Jersey.”

Asked to produce the photographs he had made of the UFOs over Maury Island, Dahl and the group left the hotel and went to Dahl’s automobile parked outside. Dahl then claimed the photographs had disappeared from his glove compartment. Initially he had said the photographs didn’t turn out and were marred by white spots that appeared on them. He didn’t change his story and the group knew the photographs were of poor quality. Later UFOlogists revisited the issue of the photographs with Crisman, prompting the claim some copies had survived, but UFOlogists were unable to acquire this piece of evidence.

The ad hoc group in Tacoma in 1947 also decided to sail to Maury Island. This plan failed when the boat failed to start. Asked where the UFO had damaged the boats, Crisman pointed to the windshield, the klaaxon and a light. Smith told the FBI there were signs of recent repair to these parts.

Alarmed by the deaths, Dahl disappeared, although the FBI report mentions his son, allegedly injured by the slag from the malfunctioning UFO, had run away from home to Montana for some reason. The anonymous caller informed the press that one of the two witnesses would shortly be sent to Alaska. Crisman, a WWII veteran, was recalled to service hastily and sent to Alaska (A UFO was spotted northwest of Bethel, Alaska on August 4 by Captain Jack Peck and copilot Vince Daly from a Douglas DC-3 they operated for Al Jones flying service and was reported to the headquarters of the Fourth Air Force in Hamilton, California and the Air Defense Command commander at Mitchell Field in New York.[6]), then posted to Greenland (Thule Air Force Base figures in Milton William Cooper’s “Behold a Pale Horse” as a Majestic 12/Operation Majority control terminus). Arnold found himself unable to complete the story for Palmer. Samples of the slag provided to Arnold and Palmer also allegedly went missing. Arnold was allegedly advised by Ted Morello of the United Press: “You’re involved in something that is beyond our power here to find out anything about… Get out of this town until whatever it is blows over.”.[7]

Arnold decided to fly home. He stopped for fuel in Pendleton, Oregon, and shortly after taking off again, his engine froze in mid-air. He managed to land the plane safely despite the emergency.

Paul Lance of the Tacoma Times died within two weeks of undetermined causes.[8] United Press stringer Ted Morello moved to New York and until his death due to a stroke on September 15, 2007, at the age of 88, was a well-respected newspaper correspondent to the United Nations.

Some believe that the famous case of another allegedly disabled UFO, the Roswell UFO incident, took place about 12 days after Dahl’s sighting, although various dates circulate among Roswell investigators and the chronology is less certain than that for the Maury Island Incident.

The story of the mysterious crash of the B-25 and the death of the two men investigating the “disk case” who allegedly had a “top-secret cargo” or even “saucer parts” was carried by the wire services and published by newspapers locally and nationally.[citation needed]

Albert K. Bender later seized on Dahl’s story, and printed it in his newsletter. In 1953, Bender claimed three men in black visited him, and warned him to stop his UFO research, which he did for a decade, closing down his International Flying Saucer Bureau. In 1963 Bender published his story, *Flying Saucers and the Three Men*, placing him beyond the pale of even the UFO research community because of his claims about men in black.

Capt. Edward J. Ruppelt, chief of Project Blue Book in the early 1950s, wrote that he was convinced that the entire sighting story was a hoax.[9] The initial FBI field report concluded the story was a hoax as well.

In the FBI report the anonymous caller mentioned an incident involving a United Airlines pilot and his co-pilot flying over Montana and coming under fire.

United Airlines pilot E. H. Smith, the likely identity of the main informant in the FBI report and a key figure in the meetings at the Winthrop Hotel in Tacoma, was named as witnessing a UFO event over Boise several weeks prior (on July 4, according to the FBI report) to the crash of the B-25 near Kelso, Washington, according to an Associated Press dispatch with the dateline of San Francisco, August 2, “2 Flyers died in Crash on ‘Disc’ Mission” (see Seattle Post-Intelligencer, “Is strange rock from UFO or just a piece of poppycock?”, April 25, 2007, under External links below). In the FBI report on the Maury Island Incident, Mr. Smith reports he made contact with people he knew inside military intelligence during the meetings with Arnold, Dahl, Crisman and others in Tacoma. Smith reported a meeting between Arnold, him and an unnamed military intelligence figure without Dahl or Crisman present. In subsequent accounts by Arnold a Major Sanders is mentioned as present at the hotel with Crisman. Mr. Smith reported he, his contact from military intelligence and Arnold went to an unidentified Tacoma slag mill to compare the “rock formation” Dahl had collected and provided with generic slag from a smelter, and found they were very alike.

The story surfaced from Ray Palmer (editor of Amazing Stories), regarding a man called Fred Crisman who claimed to have actual physical evidence of a flying saucer, July 31, 1947.

Palmer passed the story onto Kenneth Arnold, who was investigating UFO reports in the Northwest. Arnold interviewed Crisman an his associate Harold Dahl who claimed they were harbour patrolmen (their first lie).

Crisman reported that they had seen a doughnut-shaped craft dump piles of slaglike material on the beach of Maury Island in Puget Sound. The next morning a mysterious man in black had threatened Dahl, who claimed the man said ‘I know a great deal more about this experience of yours that you will want to believe.’.

The 2 men showed Arnold the material who in turn contacted an Army Air Force intelligence officer, Lieutenant Frank Brown, who flew up from Hamilton Field in California in the company of another Air Force officer.

The 2 Air Force officers immediately recognised the material as ordinary aluminium but did not say so in front of Arnold due to the fact that he would feel embarrassed. While flying back to Hamilton, their B-25 caught fire and crashed, killing both officers.

Crisman and Dahl later confessed to investigators that they had made up the story. Before his death Crisman changed the Maury Incident story to that of an American Plane dropping radioactive waste instead of a UFO dropping unknown substances.

A sceptic association investigated the case, which they date to 21 June 1947, instead of 31 July 1947 (?), and gives the explanation “foundry slag, unrelated plane crash.” Note that Ed Ruppelt was involved in the investigation and classifies the event as “admitted hoax.”

Hypotheses

List of versions containing features matching the eyewitness descriptions or material evidence
Not enough information

Investigation

Versions testing, their confirmation or refutation. Additional information, notes during the study of materials
Not enough information

Resume

The most likely explanation. The version, confirmed by the investigation

The waste industry

This category may include the remains of materials, raw materials, semi-finished products formed in the process of production. These are products resulting from physical and chemical processing of raw materials, mining and mineral beneficiation, which is not the purpose of this production process, the substances captured in the purification of flue gas and waste water, etc.

This may include, in particular:

Deliberate falsification

This version includes any falsifications that imitate unexplained phenomena both from the outside: practical jokes, flash mobs, fake news, witness fraud, staging, etc.

There are many ways to make something similar to a ghost or a flying saucer from improvised materials, without using video and photomontage.

Many homemade things made for the sake of a joke, a practical joke or a direct imitation of a mystical being or event can be taken as unexplained not only in photos and videos, but also in reality.

Airplane / Helicopter

An aircraft heavier than air for flights in the atmosphere (and outer space (e.g. An orbital aircraft)), using the aerodynamic lift of a glider to keep itself in the air (when flying within the atmosphere) and the thrust of a power (propulsion) installation for maneuvering and compensating for the loss of total mechanical energy to drag. 



A rotorcraft in which the lift and thrust required for flight are created by one or more main rotors powered by an engine or several engines. They differ in maneuverability, the ability to hover and almost vertical takeoff.


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