Dr.
R. Leo Sprinkle, known in the UFO community as a hardworking psychologist
interested in UFOs, particularly alien abduction and who organized contactee conferences
each year since 1980, has died at 91.
He
was born on August 31, 1930, in Rocky Ford, Colorado. He earned both a bachelor’s
and master’s degrees at the University of Colorado and completed his doctorate
at the University of Missouri. He then spent three years at the University of
North Dakota before moving onto the University of Wyoming, where he stayed until
he retired.
Sprinkle’s
original interest in UFOs was sparked by his sighting of an unknown object in
1949. He, along with his wife, had sighting in 1956. His first scientific paper
on the subject was based on a survey of members of NICAP conducted in 1961 and
1962. His paper was published in 1969. His real area of interest ran between
abductees and contactees.
In
1968, he served as the psychological consultant to the University of Colorado,
Air force sponsored investigation into UFOs, known as the Condon Committee. He
conducted the hypnotic regression on former Ashland, Nebraska, police officer
Herbert Schirmer when missing time was discovered in his police log.
In
1980, after years of correspondence with many people who believed they had been
contacted by benevolent alien beings, he, along with the Institute for UFO
Contactee Studies, began hosting the Rocky Mountain Conference on UFO Investigation.
Contactees from around the world met at the University of Wyoming campus to
share their experiences with other like-minded people.
He
had an interest in the New Age studies, believed in reincarnation, and
eventually identified himself as a contactee. In 1999, he published Soul Samples:
Personal Exploration in Reincarnation and UFO Experiences. He encouraged
his colleagues to study the psychological makeup of the contactees. This
resulted in June Parnell’s research of the Rocky Mountain conference participants,
which culminated in her Ph.D. dissertation in 1986.
I
will note here that I met Leo on a couple of occasions. We chatted briefly and
I found him to be a nice, warm individual, with a great sense of humor, who was
interested in what others had to say. We disagreed on the contactee end of the
spectrum, but I think we agreed on the cattle mutilations. He seemed to think
that some, if not many of those experiences, might have a more terrestrial nature
and might possibly have psychological roots. He had said that it really wasn’t
an area that he had explored in depth.
He
believed that the UFO activity was the result of an educational program that he
thought of as “cosmic consciousness conditioning.” He said that the program was
conducted by representatives of the extraterrestrial or ultraterrestrial beings
to alert the human race about the reality of alien visitation.
Sprinkle
published a number of scientific papers in science journals related to the UFO
field, some relating to hypnosis and contact with alien beings.
Leo
Sprinkle will be long remembered as an advocate for those whose experiences and
beliefs are outside the mainstream. He died on November 15, 2021.
2 comments:
We're indebted to you Dr. Sprinkle. RIP.
Perhaps the best comment about Dr. Sprinkle is this one from Philip J. Klass:
"Is it simply coincidence that the gentle and kindly UFOnaut that Sprinkle described had a personality similar to his own? ...Sprinkle has never reported that any of his subjects claimed to have been impregnated by UFOnauts, or to have had unborn children removed from their womb [unlike Hopkins' subjects].
"Is it possible that two basically different types of UFOnauts are visiting earth—a warm, gentle type whose victims later seek out Sprinkle, and a more cruel breed whose victims seek counsel from Hopkins?
"Or is it possible that the character of the alleged experience that emerges under hypnosis reflects not only the personal UFO beliefs of the abductionist who is serving as the hypnotist and/or principal interrogator but also some elements of his personality as well? I admit his is pure speculation on my part..."
(From page 169 of the 1989 edition of UFO-Abductions: A Dangerous Game.)
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