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- WHIDBEY ISLAND UFO REPORT CLASSIFIED AS AN "UNKNOWN"
-
- After a thorough investigation of all pertinent facts, the
- UFO sighting reported by Dan MacIndoe of Oak Harbor on January
- 21st, 1988 has been classified as a true "unknown". The Mutual
- UFO Network (MUFON)--a civilian organization of trained
- professionals that investigates UFO reports--has ruled out all
- possible conventional explanations for the object seen by Mr.
- MacIndoe, his wife, mother, mother-in-law and father-in-law, and
- three-year-old daughter.
-
- Dan MacIndoe, age 32, an ex-Navy lieutenant with seven
- years military service in the field of aviation
- supply--including work assignments with the Navy's prestigious
- Blue Angels squadron--was rated as an exceptionally credible
- witness by the MUFON organization.
-
- The UFO encounter began at 10:45 p.m. on the night of
- January 21st at the MacIndoe home not far from the Whidbey
- Island Naval Air Station. Flight operations at Whidbey NAS had
- by that time been over for 15 minutes, with the last plane
- reported "on the deck" at 10:30 p.m.
-
- The UFO was first observed by Cornelia MacIndoe, age 72,
- Dan MacIndoe's mother, who sighted a bright, orange-yellow
- stationary light in the southern sky when she went outside to
- smoke a cigarette. She called the entire family's attention to
- the object, and together they watched as the UFO shot straight
- up for approximately 3 degrees of arc from a position 25 degrees
- above the horizon in the direction of the Naval Air Station.
- The object then abruptly stopped, made a sharp right-angle turn
- in the horizontal direction and came straight towards them.
-
- According to MacIndoe's account, the object covered a
- distance of one and a half miles in approximately 3 seconds. As
- the UFO approached the house it seemed to slow, taking
- approximately 15 seconds to slowly drift directly over the heads
- of the five adult witnesses and child. It disappeared from view
- as it travelled in a straight path to the NNE, passing behind
- some tall fir trees behind the MacIndoe house.
-
- While the object was passing overhead Dan MacIndoe was able
- to observe the object through a 135 mm telephoto lens, and was
- also able to determine that there was no sound associated with
- its flight. Mr. MacIndoe described the shape of the underside
- of the object as that of "a perfect circle."
-
- "The lights were blueish-white in nature and I estimate 15
- lights spanned the circumference of the circle. All remained on
- forming a circle of 'running lights'. The lights would pulse
- brighter in sequence, I believe going in a clockwise direction,"
- Dan MacIndoe reported.
-
- He went on to say, "...during the event winds were calm,
- there were scattered clouds in the vicinity. We live in a rural
- area. There were no sounds. During the entire episode none of
- us heard the usual prop or jet noise associated with military
- aircraft using the airfield. At the time the object was
- directly overhead I asked my family for complete silence to
- listen for engine noise. There was absolute silence."
-
- According to Dr. Donald Johnson, Washington State Director
- for MUFON, a combination of factors were sufficient to rule out
- all mundane explanations for the sighting. "The fact that this
- overflight occurred in restricted military airspace, together
- with the testimony of multiple witnesses, the complete lack of
- sound, the observation of the unusual lighting pattern on the
- object seen through magnification, and the lack of wind combine
- to provide sufficient information to classify this case as an
- unknown."
-
- "In other words, there is little possibility that the
- object the MacIndoes and others reported seeing that night was a
- satellite, balloon, commercial or military airplane or
- helicopter, or astronomical body." The National Weather Service
- and Whidbey NAS were called to confirm that there were no
- weather balloons released at that time. Additionally, several
- of Mr. MacIndoe's Dugualla Bay neighbors and others from as far
- away as Lake Washington, Edmonds, and Bellingham called him to
- report that they had also witnessed unusual lights in the sky
- that evening.
-
- Dr. Johnson reports that the field investigation has been
- evaluated by the national headquarters as complete. The
- sighting was assigned a strangeness rating of four on a
- five-point scale--labelled as "strange, does not conform to
- known principles", and it also received a probability rating of
- four on a five point scale--"credible and sound".
-
-