In
an attempt to clean up some things, I was looking at the Gerald Anderson tale
of seeing a crashed flying saucer on the Plains of San Agustin back in 1947.
This became quite the controversy in 1991 when Anderson identified the leader of
the archaeologists seen there as Adrian Buskirk. Tom Carey, who has an advanced
degree in anthropology, took on the task of locating Buskirk. While he didn’t
find anyone named Adrian, he did find one man named Winfred Buskirk who had
earned a Ph.D. in anthropology in 1949.
Could
this be the same man that Anderson had identified?
Given
the “identikit” sketch that Anderson had created to help identify Buskirk and
the photographs of Buskirk that Carey located during his search, the answer is
“Yes.” To make the connection even stronger, copies of the “identikit” sketch
were circulated in New Mexico and more than one person, upon seeing it said,
“That’s Win Buskirk.”
Buskirk
denied that he had been involved. He said that he had been in Arizona in July
1947, and that he knew nothing about a UFO crash on the Plains, or anywhere
else for that matter. That lead to the question, “Then how had Anderson been
able to pinpoint Buskirk as the man on the Plains, if Buskirk had not been
there?” (Not to mention how the five-year-old Anderson would have remembered
Buskirk after some forty-five or so years?)
Don Schmitt |
On
July 19, 1991, Buskirk wrote to me. We had aroused his curiosity about all this.
He wrote, “Your colleague Tom told me Anderson’s family moved to Albuquerque.
He would, if five years old in 1947, he would have been in high school around
1957 – 58 - 59. During those years I was teaching at Albuquerque High School,
mostly history but also other subjects… I think it not unlikely that Anderson
heard of me and saw me there and that later, somehow the name became associated
with his childhood memories. There is also the possibility that Anderson faked his
whole story. He might have used a high school annual for a picture of me to
provide his sketches. Can a 40-year-old memory of a five-year-old be that good?
In 1947 I would have been much thinner faced.”
Buskirk
was now interested in the puzzle. How had Anderson selected him as the leader
of the archaeologists on the Plains? On August 8, 1991, he provided an answer. Buskirk
wrote:
Mary…
Klicker called me this evening. I had written her asking her to check her year
books. There is nothing on Anderson in them, apparently.
Then
Robert Hannan, a former history teacher and Jim Hulsman, the basketball coach
at Albuquerque High School, called her. They had been contacted by [Stan]
Friedman and both had pointed him to her (Mrs. Klicker, used to be the
assistant principal). But Friedman has not contacted her. She was interested
enough then to ask Hannah and Hulsman to get on the case. All were good friends
of mine.
They
went to the Public Schools microwave [I’m sure he meant microfilm) records and
came up with this information… Gerald Francis Anderson was born [I’ve left the
date out for privacy reasons]. In the fall of 1956 he enrolled at Highland High
School… but after less than a year moved to Indianapolis.
Then
on 2 (or 3rd) October 1957 he enrolled at Albuquerque High, stayed a
little over a year, then checked out on 3 October 1958… His grade point average
in Albuquerque was [well, I have it, but leave it out for privacy reasons… I
mentioned this only to suggest the depth of the information that Buskirk
supplied].
Now
– at Albuquerque High he was enrolled for a semester of Anthropology. This was
a course I taught in the fall, so must have taken it in 1957… You will probably
want to call Mrs. Klicker, Jim Hulsman, and Robert Hannah for a verification
and possibly more information…
Quite
naturally, I did contact them, and they did verify the information. We had
established a contact between Buskirk and Anderson, not in 1947 but in 1957.
The records in Albuquerque verified it. What are the odds that they, Buskirk
and Anderson, would meet in one of the biggest events in history only to meet
again ten years later while Anderson was in high school and Buskirk happened to
be
teaching in that very high school? Buskirk wrote that he didn’t remember
Anderson, but given the circumstances, and since Anderson reportedly remembered
Buskirk well enough to produce an accurate sketch decades later, wouldn’t
Anderson have mentioned something about it when he recognized his teacher?
Stan Friedman |
Here’s
the kicker. Here’s the important point. In a letter dated August 19, 1991,
Buskirk wrote, “Dr. [yes, I know he didn’t have a doctorate] Friedman had previously
made inquiries of Hulsman.”
This
was the first time that we had proved that Anderson had been less than candid
with his tale. According to Buskirk, Friedman had been given the information
about Anderson having studied anthropology and therefore knew the truth, yet he
maintained that Anderson hadn’t known Buskirk and hadn’t seen him at the high
school arguing that the high school had three buildings so it was conceivable
that Anderson never ran into Buskirk... this despite the fact that the
information put them in the same classroom.
When
I learned about Anderson’s connection to Buskirk, I called Fred Whiting at the
Fund for UFO Research. I wanted him to know that we had not only put Anderson
into the same high school as Buskirk, but we’d put him in the class room. I had
the information from Buskirk, which I believed to be reliable, but I made the
telephone calls myself and talked with those that Buskirk had mentioned who
could corroborate it. One of them told me, as I asked questions, that he was
looking at the transcript as we spoke.
Whiting,
apparently called Friedman and Friedman called Anderson. At that point Anderson
called the high school. Anderson later wrote to me:
Be
advised, however, I have been in contact with the officials of the Albuquerque
High School, one in particular…. [ellipses in the original] Mr. Halsay. Also be
advised Sir, that I am more than a little aware of my Constitutional rights under
FERPA (Family Education Right to Privacy act [sic]…. Just in case you needed a
reminder). Make no mistake about it Mr. Randle, if I find out that you have
obtained and altered my high school transcripts (or even if you didn’t alter it)
without my permission, you and whoever assisted you are going to find
yourselves facing Federal charges and the accompanying suits filed under tort
law (my [here he gives his GPA, which confirmed the information that I have
been given] notwithstanding).
This
didn’t concern me, but I had been talking with people in New Mexico who still
worked for the school district. My inquiries could have caused them a great
deal of trouble over something that was, in the greater scheme of things,
trivial. Why put their jobs in jeopardy? I already had the information but more
importantly, Stan Friedman had it as well. He knew that Anderson had
identified his high school anthropology teacher as the leader of the
archaeologists on the Plains but chose to conceal this information. I knew it
too, and obviously, so did Anderson.
This
was, to me, the smoking gun. Anderson had been caught in complex lie. He had
placed his five-year-old self on the Plains to see the downed disk, had
identified the archaeologist of fame and fortune as from the University of
Pennsylvania led by Buskirk, and denied that he had seen Buskirk at any time
after that day in 1947. We knew that Buskirk had no affiliation with Penn, that
he had been in Arizona in July 1947, and that he had taught Anderson anthropology
in 1957.
Anderson
and Friedman managed to block this information. Anderson with his threats and
Friedman with his attacks against me. He had claimed that I was attempting to
invalidate (a nice way of saying what he was doing) Anderson with false
information. But he knew the truth and actively campaigned to keep it hidden.
Later,
Anderson would be exposed forging his telephone bill to, as he put it, make me
look bad. Although Friedman and John Carpenter are often credited with the
initial discovery, I was the one who proved that the phone bill Anderson had
submitted to prove that he and I had only spoke briefly had been altered by
Anderson to reflect Anderson’s claim. I
had the documentation from the telephone company with the accurate information
on it. Anderson eventually admitted to the forgery when Friedman obtained a
copy of the telephone bill from the phone company.
(You
can read about this episode in the July/August 1992 issue of the International
UFO Reporter and in the January 1993 issue of the MUFON UFO Journal.
For those who wish a report about some of these activities from a disinterested
third party see:
Although
it might seem that I’m beating a dead horse, I will say again that Friedman had
the information about the high school classes even before I got it. He just
said nothing about it, and when it was clear that I had it, attempted to get it
suppressed. At this point, with the people who supplied the information safe
from retribution and even though Anderson has been reduced to a footnote in the
Plains controversy, it is important that Friedman’s role be exposed.
For
those interested… Yes, I have copies of the letters about Anderson’s high
school credentials, if we really need that today. He admitted to forgery on
other documents and that should be enough to remove him from this UFO
controversy.
Doesn’t that bring into question other cases Friedman claimed were true? I mean if Friedman was willing to hide information to bolster his own claims, I can only assume he did it in other cases.
ReplyDeleteI've always admired Stanton Friemdan and the work he contributed to ufology, but there were times when I felt his judgement to be a little naive. He seemed certain that Lazar was lying because of the apparent inability to verify his education and employment records. Maybe its just the libertarian in me, but I have little doubt in the federal government's capacity for and interest in "erasing" someone. I don't want to go too deep down a political rabbit hole, so I'll say this: in light of the corona virus and the 2020 US election, I'm not putting it past the feds to undergo any sort of deception.
ReplyDeleteJohn-Paul, it's not the federal government that would be erasing Bob Lazars education records, its the shadow government running silently behind the federal government.
ReplyDelete