For
those of you who have been keeping score at home (which I probably say more
often than I should), you know that I looked into the idea that four of the
witnesses quoted in the Levelland UFO vehicle interference cases had been
discredited. Robert Sheaffer mentioned it on my radio show and did send a link
to the site run by the Iron Skeptic. After the show I asked for the contact
information for the site host, Aaron Sakulich. When I posted the article about
Levelland, I had not heard back from him. In case you missed all this, you can
read that article here:
and
listen to the show here:
The
point is that I received a very cordial response from Aaron. I was looking for
the source of his information because I had never heard anything like that, and
I have been studying the case for, shall we say, decades. I had looked at both
skeptical and believer sites, have the complete Project Blue Book file on the
case (with a copy with all the names in it), have been to Levelland, twice, and
talked with a few of those who have done some original research on the case. In
other, more precise words, I had done my due diligence in the research of the
case so that
I could say that I hadn’t seen this particular issue raised…
Levelland, Texas, Obviously. |
And
yes, I know what you’re thinking. If that information was out there on a
website and I didn’t find it, then how can I say I had performed my due
diligence? Because there becomes a point where you have all the information
necessary to properly analyze the case and what you might have missed probably
isn’t all that relevant. Or, I suppose, that when the issue was raised, I was
able to refute it without having to make any further study. To properly refute
it, I did additional research, which, BTW, was out there for others to find. Again,
if you look at my original post about this, you’ll understand what I mean. The
question shouldn’t have been raised…
The
real point, however, is that the information wasn’t published on the website
until after I had completed my research. When I looked, on the web, for new information,
this particular site did not appear in my search engine.
But
I digress…
As
I say, I received a very nice response from Aaron that should put this aspect
of the case to rest. He wrote, “At any rate, I had to
go back and re-read my article about Levelland to remember which case it was
about. I must admit that even it was not my finest work. I am sure that at the
time I only had access to whatever came up on google or whatever books I
may have had around the house. So, I am afraid that I cannot provide a great
deal of new information - and since I didn't cite my sources at the time, I
don't even know what books those might have been.”
And that’s where this ends. We don’t know the sources so we can’t
see what those sources might have said. We don’t know how the information was
developed. We can say that it might have been someone who was writing about the
case in the pre-Internet days so that he or she extrapolated from the lack of
additional information about those four witnesses. Without access to the body
of data I have, the writer might have thought that those witnesses had not been
interviewed, or that those witnesses might have only called in reports. It
might just boil down to a guess based on the lack of information and nothing
particularly nefarious.
What we can do is eliminate this criticism of the case because we
don’t have good information on the way it was gathered. And since I was able to
find evidence that two of the witnesses had, in fact, been questioned by the
police, if not by the Air Force, then we know that the criticism is inaccurate.
We can leave it there.
2 comments:
Have you received a response from Robert Sheaffer to this information and what you said in Part I? I would love to see how he attempts to refute all this.
Thanks Kevin for chasing this down. This makes plain my disappointment with sheaffer and his SI bunch. He could have done his homework as well, instead he takes as gospel unsubstantiated claims from another so-called skeptic, because it suits his point of view. So much for the scientific process. His dismissal of the recent Naval videos of uaps is similarly based on accepting without critical assessment, the analyses of another skeptic page. But that page has also been challenged.
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