There
are many avenues in the world today that allow us to take an investigation much
farther than had been possible in the past. I mention this only because I
started a search for L. G. Sikes who had investigated an interesting UFO
sighting many years ago. I was able to find an email address for him but it was
no longer active. I had the basic information about the case, posted it here,
and mentioned I had taken this as far as I could, which is to say, as far as I
wanted. There was nothing more to learn about the sighting but there might be
something to be learned about the man.
A
friend, John Steiger, picked up the ball and ran with it. He found an article
from the January/February 1966 issue of The A.P.R.O. Bulletin that was a
report of a UFO sighting by a police officer, Lewis Sikes. The UFO, which was
hovering near Wynnewood, Oklahoma, was tracked by radar at both Tinker Air
Force Base in Oklahoma City and Carswell Air Force Base in Fort Worth according
to that information. You can read the article here:
Steiger
also found a reference to a book Sikes had written in the 1990s entitled The
Wizard’s Bible. We learn from the website that the book is Sike’s first
“full length work.” We learn that the occult has been part of his life since
childhood and that, apparently, the occult was part of his work as a police
officer. You can see that information here:
https://darkstarmagick.com/product/wizards-bible/
Finally,
capping all this off is a note that he was an ordained pastor in the religion
of Dualism. Personally, I have no interest in following up on this, other than
to note that it makes me question the reliability of the information supplied by
Sikes. If you wish to learn more, you can read about Dualism here:
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/dualism/
For
those interested, Sikes died in 2014. And that would be the end of this little
chapter in the world of the UFO, but as I say, nothing is ever that easy. There
is the impact on his investigation of the October 16, 1973, sighting by William
and Donna Hackett which was part of an earlier posting here. While it can be
seen as an unremarkable sighting, there is a feature that interested a number
of UFO researchers including Walter Webb (which is where all this started a
couple of weeks ago). Webb merely reported that the “air seemed charged and
oppressive.”
I
wrote, in The UFO Casebook, “Later, both Hatchett and his wife reported
they felt the creatures in the UFO knew everything they were thinking.” This,
of course, relates to Sikes’ interest in the paranormal, and you have to wonder
if he didn’t unconsciously influence them as he was taking their report.
It
was reported in The A.P.R.O. Bulletin that both the Hatchetts “had an
intense feeling that the object, or its occupants ‘knew everything’, and that
the power that they, or the object possessed was limitless.”
But
that turns out not to be the most important aspect of this, and it does
demonstrate the rabbit holes you can go down. As I noted, John provided the
lead to The A.P.R.O. Bulletin article of the Sikes sighting. As you can
see, “…the object was picked up on radar scopes at Tinker Air Force Base near
Oklahoma City and at Carswell Air Force Base, Texas, according to the Highway
Patrol.” What is not clear if that report came to the Highway Patrol via Sikes
or if the Highway Patrol learned it from an independent source. That is an
important distinction to be made. If the Highway Patrol had received the
information from a source other than Sikes, then another level of corroboration
is built into the case. If they didn’t, then we’re back to Sikes.
Here
is the most important part of the article. “Later inquiries to Tinker Air Force
Base brought forth the statement from a spokesman there that he could ‘neither
confirm nor deny’ the radar confirmation. He referred future inquiries to the
U.S. Air Force headquarters in Washington. Note that he did not refer them to
Wright-Patterson AFB.”
I
have scanned the Project Blue Book Index on the relevant date(s) but there is
nothing listed for either Tinker or Carswell. My instinctive reaction was that
the sighting, especially the radar sightings from two Air Force installations,
should have been reported to Blue Book as regulations demanded. Here is just another
example of the cover up in progress…
But
then I thought, “What if there were no radar sightings because we don’t really
have a corroboration from the spokesman at Tinker?”
That
leaves us with one interesting fact. The Air Force spokesman directed further
inquiries to Washington and not to Blue Book and that, if nothing else,
suggests some sort of duplicity on the part of the Air Force. However, Air
Force regulations at the time directed those inquiries to unidentified or
unexplained sightings be sent to the Secretary of the Air Force Office of
Information (SAF-OI). The relevant part of the regulation said:
c.
Exceptions. In response to local inquiries regarding UFOs reported in
the vicinity of an Air Force base, the base commander may release information
to the news media or the public after the sighting has been positively
identified. If the stimulus for the sighting is difficult to identify at the
base level, the commander may state that the sighting is under investigation
and the conclusions will be released by SAF-OI after the investigation is
completed. The commander may also state that the Air Force will review and
analyze the results of the investigation. Any further inquiries will be
directed to SAF-OI.
What
this means is that the spokesman at Tinker should have said that any
information about the sighting would be coming from SAF-OI rather than neither
confirming or denying the sighting. Unfortunately, all we can draw from this is
one of two conclusions. The spokesman was ignorant of the regulations or that
nothing happened but for some reason he fell back to the confirm or deny
routine. If nothing happened, this confirm or deny statement would spark
suspicion and if it did happen, it would just make others want to explore the
case further.
My
suspicion here is that the spokesman, who would be speaking with the authority
of the base commander, didn’t have a clue about what was going on. He just used
the phrase that he’d seen or heard others use in the past. The only real source
of information is what Sikes reported, and what he reported might be what the Highway
Patrol was saying because Sikes had told them about the radar sightings.
So, we have returned to the very first question in this rather tangled mess. Just how reliable is Lewis Sikes and does his interest in UFOs and the occult contaminate the case? And we can then ask, “Where do we go now?”
4 comments:
Kevin: Thank you for following up -- I believe it was worth our efforts.
In response to your query: "Where do we go now?" ... we can either read The Wizard's Bible or pester Sikes' family members (he apparently has several listed) for more background information on him ... or both.
On the other hand, we can abstain from all this and take up potentially more worthy pursuits by sampling from the recent cornucopia of UFO literature from yourself and others, which is exactly my intent -- along with continuing my Art Bell research, of course!
Jack Parsons had a really huge interest in the Occult, he was in deep with Crowley until they had a falling out and influenced a young pulp writer named Lafayette Hubbard, he also basically forced CalTech to start JPL, people used to joke it meant "Jack Parsons' Lab". I'm just saying that interest in the occult doesn't automatically reduce the credibility of the report, to me anyway.
Thing is, that PAO's response is telling. You know full well that he knew that regulation, I'm sure it was posted on a corkboard in their Battalion HQ or whatever the Air Force calls it, so something was superseding that. It was probably an activity that NSA was managing, much like the sighting with that RB-47, hence the referral to Echelon Above Corps.
KR..."Just how reliable is Lewis Sikes and does his interest in UFOs and the occult contaminate the case?”
In recent years I've started to believe the UFO phenomenon and the occult are one and the same.
The seeming ability to "mind read" or to preempt peoples decisions comes up time and again. (The tic-tac going to the CAP, etc.)
People reporting visitations in their homes isn't dissimilar to reports of poltergeist activity.
FAdamsXII-
I do not know full well that he was familiar with that particular regulation, nor do I think it was posted to a bulletin board anywhere handy. There are so many regulations, and while he might have been aware of the regulations dealing with the operations of the Public Relations office, this was a regulation about UFOs, which he might not have ever seen.
And, I agree that an interest in the occult doesn't automatically disqualify him as either a witness or an investigator, if you read the whole report in the APRO Bulletin, you'll notice that his mother talked about a strange feeling as the object floated over. I just wonder if he wasn't, unconsciously attempting to validate his mother's "feeling."
Post a Comment