You Can't Tell the People: The Definitive Account of the Rendlesham Forest UFO Mystery by Georgina Bruni

You Can't Tell the People: The Definitive Account of the Rendlesham Forest UFO Mystery by Georgina Bruni

Author:Georgina Bruni [Bruni, Georgina]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9781447217558
Google: zykTEGeffiIC
Goodreads: 16357514
Publisher: Pan Macmillan
Published: 2011-12-12T00:00:00+00:00


The following is part of a letter to Nicholas Redfern, supposedly from Superintendent S. M. Pearce at the Felixstowe office, dated 27 October 1988. According to George Plume, S. M. Pearce was a female administrator at the time:

I can inform you that, at shortly after 4 a.m. on 26th December 1980, the police did receive a call reporting unusual lights being seen in the sky near RAF Woodbridge.

Although it has not been challenged before, I believe there is also an error in the memorandum regarding the time of the first incident. It states that the patrolmen saw the unusual lights at approximately 0300L, but according to Timothy Egercic’s testimony, his patrol received the first call during shift change, which occurred between 23.00 and midnight. This is more than three hours’ time difference. Egercic’s testimony, along with other witnesses, is also in accordance with the time recorded by Staff Sergeant Jim Penniston, who claims he was contacted at precisely two minutes past midnight. By the time the airmen at RAF Woodbridge had checked out the sighting, reported it to the Law Enforcement desk, which in turn was reported to Central Security Control and Egercic’s patrol, it would certainly have been around midnight when SSgt Penniston was alerted. What is more, the events of the first night appear to have been terminated before the local police arrived, because PC Dave King, having turned up at approximately 04.30, reported that there were no military men in the forest. Besides, the patrolmen went a fair distance on foot and, having personally walked that route and in view of the witnesses’ accounts of the event, it would have been difficult but not impossible to complete those tasks within ninety minutes. Let us also consider the following: (a) the time taken for Penniston to arrive at the east gate and exchange data with the Woodbridge patrol and Central Security Control and receive permission to proceed with the investigation; (b) drive from the east gate, park the vehicle and walk through the forest at night; (c) circle an object for at least thirty minutes and check out the surrounding area; (d) chase the object through the farmer’s field, walk back to the vehicle and return to base before the British police arrived.

At a Quest UFO conference in 1994 Colonel Halt told the audience that Penniston’s patrol walked towards the coast for one or two miles and were not contactable for around one and a half hours. He also stated that the desk sergeant, Crash McCabe, referred to the time of the incident as being ‘sometime around midnight’. In view of the aforementioned I conclude that the time of 03.00 hrs for the initial sighting is incorrect.

Also, in paragraph one of the memorandum, it states: ‘The object was hovering or on legs. As the patrolmen approached the object, it manoeuvred through the trees and disappeared.’ Was the object hovering or was it standing on legs? Halt seems undecided, yet in paragraph two he ascertains that an actual landing took place.



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