UFOs - Leslie Kean [26]
Since I could show the investigators on the map the trajectory of the object in its elliptical orbits relative to points on the ground, they could determine its velocity to be about 1,550 mph. This speed is incredible, especially given the maneuvers it was making. I don’t know if it was from another universe or planet, or if it was from the ground here; I simply don’t know. I have never seen anything else like this since.
The scientific team studied all the data and the three pilot reports, and after a meeting of all thirty investigators in Porto, in 1984, the group provided a written analysis of more than 170 pages. They did everything they could to understand this case, but they could not find an explanation for it. They concluded that the object remained unidentified.3
I talked about my experience to the media and had no problems; it was covered seriously in many newspapers and on TV because we had three Air Force pilots involved. Since then, people have approached me to tell me about other UFO incidents, but most of them want to keep their experiences private.
Another incident occurred in Portugal before mine. An Air Force pilot, a colleague, saw a portion of an object behind clouds, which appeared to have two or three windows. He lost control of his Dornier Do 27 aircraft; it began to fall, and he only regained control right above the trees. His comments were on the air traffic controller tape, and he thought this was the end. I was there at the base when he landed and he talked with a group of us right away and filed a report. The engineers tried to figure out how he lost control. Afterward, some engineers outside of the Air Force came to the hangar where his plane was parked with many other identical aircraft. They were able to locate his particular plane by using an instrument that measures radiation; his plane registered high, and this could not be explained.
This pilot went on to have a career as a civilian pilot, as I did. After eighteen years in the Air Force, ending in 1990, I began flying commercially and am now a captain with Portugália Airlines (TAP), though I still fly solo. I still don’t know what I saw that day back in 1982, but I love flying as much now as ever. My encounter, though incredible, did nothing to change that.
CHAPTER 5
Unidentified Aerial Phenomena and Aviation Safety
by Richard F. Haines, Ph.D.
Safety is of prime importance to everyone who flies or is associated with flying. Yet most Americans have never heard about the fact that UAP sightings can affect flight safety. These incidents are not investigated by any government agency, as are other events affecting aircraft. In fact, aviation officials have prevented them from coming to light by censoring the reporting process in various ways. Pilots who make an official UAP report continue to be ridiculed by government officials and/or their own airlines and instructed not to report their sighting publicly. This attitude serves no one and in fact puts all of us at greater risk while traveling in airplanes. It prevents the scientific community from acquiring the data necessary to investigate the origin of these UAP, and it also keeps airlines and pilot organizations from taking action or providing their pilots with specialized training and safety protocols. Despite all this, these unusual aerial phenomena have continued to plague commercial, military, and private flight operations over many years.
The near-miss incident described by Lieutenant Guerra over Portugal in 1982 provides a powerful example of a case in which aviation