I have been asked more than once why the ASUP, Inc.
involves themselves with cases that are clearly not within the normal
definition of what might be called a haunting. The question normally
arises with a raised eyebrow that suggests the unspoken question, “Don’t
you have enough on your plate as it is?”
The historic answer is simple. After the ASUP, Inc.
debunked Amityville, we were challenged to apply our “new” methods on
another equally famous case, the reported Mothman stories in Pt. Pleasant,
West Virginia.If in
fact the ASUP method worked in Amityville, we should be able to find out
the real story behind Pt. Pleasant.We were soon off on a road trip, complete with camping gear to the
rural Ohio River Valley! We had no preconceived notions or prejudice, from
the onset, Mothman could well be a ghostly apparition we thought.
To fully appreciate the phenomenon, you have to realize
that this took place more than 30 years before ASUP became interested in
what is now called the Skinwalker Ranch goings on, which in turn was
several years before Skinwalker became a household world.Pt. Pleasant, like it later counterparts had all manner of strange
goings on, all of which began with mysterious lights in the sky and dare
we mention missing livestock. After that there were numerous sightings of
otherworldly creatures, ending in the Men in Black. The only difference
was the kinds of creatures being reported, and of course, the fact that
those guys in vintage black touring cars were now traversing the landscape
in black helicopters! In hindsight, this gives a new interpretation to,
“What’s past is prelude!”
Beginning in late 1966 and throughout 1967, the village of Point Pleasant,
West Virginia, was abuzz with tales of the unexplained. On 15 December
1967, the Silver Bridge that linked West Virginia with Ohio, across the
Ohio River, collapsed. These events – which, strangely, ended as abruptly
as they began – formed the core of Keel’s investigations and The Mothman
Prophecies, first published in 1975, records flying creatures, UFOs,
animal mutilations, Men in Black and what we now call experiences of
‘missing time’.
Point
Pleasant was a congenial little town of about 5,000 people, and still bore
the scars of the Silver Bridge collapse when we arrived. The bridge
supports still stood in the middle of the Ohio River and a plaque now
commemorates those who died there in 1967. It was easy to see that the
town had grown up around the bridge as it fed traffic across the Ohio
River directly into the centre of town. On that fatal day, inbound rush
hour traffic had been halted by a traffic signal a block from the bridge
and had backed up traffic across it, putting an unbearable load on the old
structure.
Of
course, Point Pleasant predated the bridge by several hundred years. Once
home to Daniel Boone, it saw a great battle on 10 October 1774 at which
the Virginians defeated Native American Indians. My RV and company of
colleagues camped at the battle site – Tu-Endie Wei Park. Familiarizing
ourselves with some basic history and the lay of the land – including a
brief visit to the ‘TNT area’ at the heart of the Mothman story – we
settled into the camp-ground to plan our next few days.
We agreed early on that the suggestion of a connection between the
phenomenon and a curse by the chief of the defeated Indians was not an
issue for us to consider. This was a common formula, used by many writers…
when the book is running short, add in some local color. Whether Chief
Cornstalk had cursed future residents of the land was immaterial to our
investigation, unless we were willing to follow a thread that might tie
all UFO phenomena worldwide to ancient curses.
Likewise the Silver Bridge collapse, which so dramatically concluded the
phenomenon, was not up for further investigation. Its cause was thoroughly
investigated by officials from several state and federal agencies and
blamed on a combination of metal wear, structural deterioration, weather,
and the weight of static traffic on the bridge at the time; we could add
nothing to that. We also agreed that the reported cattle mutilations were
now 20 years in the past. Thus we focused on the UFO activity, which
included the reported sightings of Mothman during the 13 months prior to
the bridge collapse and the associated appearance of Men in Black (MIBs).
However, we immediately hit a problem; our foray into the TNT area had an
unexpected effect on two team members. Although we went in broad daylight,
one said she had a bad feeling about the place; then my usually-analytical
research partner admitted that her blood ran cold just driving through the
area. I saw that maintaining our objectivity might be difficult and skew
the rest of our work. We agreed to leave any further visits to the area to
the end of our stay.
Early the next morning, I hit the streets, first stopping at a coffee shop
in town and then visiting both the police station and the local newspaper
office. My colleagues phoned around, trying to locate people mentioned in
the book and set up interviews with them. Bringing up the topic of Mothman
in the coffee shop had an interesting result; nearly everyone I spoke to
remembered ‘the year of the UFOs’ and had a theory about it. Most seemed
to know someone directly connected to the phenomenon and were willing to
vouch for their veracity. Most residents had seen something, whether it
was strange lights in the sky or ‘abnormal’ activity on the outskirts of
town during that period. Even the more spectacular claims, they said, were
made by people who were not otherwise prone to telling tall tales.
We got a similar reaction at the police station and newspaper office; not
one person took the claims lightly, but vouched for the sincerity of those
people who told of their ‘close encounters’ with the phenomenon. I was
used to skepticism from public officials and professional journalists and
finding its opposite was quite unexpected. Even more intriguing was the
fact that many people had other stories to tell, ones which were not
included in Keel’s book.
I was hoping to find a witness who might further embellish their testimony
as reported in the book, or even recant. In my experience, the passage of
time allowed witnesses to relax and, as years passed, they were more
likely to admit it if they were wrong. Several of Keel’s original
witnesses had either moved from the area or had died; but of those we were
able to contact by telephone, only one person refused to speak to us.
First, we interviewed those who had witnessed Mothman at close proximity,
then those involved with the MIB visits; not one witness swerved from
their original account. Statistically, this had to be some sort of record.
The deeper our questions got, the more we were convinced that the witness
had indeed seen or interacted with something. Their speech and body
language suggested that they were telling the truth.
One particularly memorable subject, who was up-front about what she had
seen, was an older woman who said she had encountered Mothman in her
backyard. Her property was close to the boundaries of the TNT area and,
hearing a buzzing or humming sound coming from the back of her home, she
went out to investigate. It was mid-afternoon, one of the only daylight
sightings and when she opened the back door she found herself face to face
with Mothman, hovering about 10 feet in front of her. Her description was
detailed, suggesting something more like a machine than an animal. She had
no conscious memory of communicating with the visitor; to the best of her
recollection, she simply backed up into the house and closed the door.
This woman was not frightened by what she had seen, in fact she was
astonished at her own calmness. On returning to her living room she
noticed that the TV show she had been watching prior to hearing the noise
in the backyard had ended and the next program was about two-thirds
through. More than 25 minutes of time was ‘missing’. She returned to the
back door and looked out through the window, but the visitor had gone. Her
testimony seemed to rule out any kind of nocturnal creature.
Most of the other encounters, however, took place well after sunset. As
suggested in Keel’s book, the TNT area had become the place for teenagers
to go for ‘biological experimentation’. In the very first sighting, the
terrified witnesses, surprised while parked there, fled back to town at
high speed with the Mothman in hot pursuit. Somehow, the creature was able
to keep up with the car at nearly 100 mph, according to the witnesses,
whose statement to the police is now part of the public record. One older
officer, when asked about that report, said that he knew the officer who
had written it and swore that he was not the kind of man to put anything
in the record that he did not believe happened.
Other witnesses mentioned in the book told of glowing red eyes and a
buzzing or humming sound. UFO sightings were even more routine during this
period, so common in fact that the local newspaper stopped reporting them
on a regular basis. The entire community became desensitized to the
phenomenon and spoke matter-of-factly about nightly sightings of UFOs or
the latest news on the creature.
You might expect that frightened residents would avoid the TNT area; the
opposite happened. Saturday night in Point Pleasant now had a diversion
far superior to the local movie house. Dozens of cars flocked to the site
nightly in hopes of catching a glimpse of the red-eyed ‘monster from outer
space’. If anything, this attests to the widely-held local belief that
whatever the UFO was, it was not dangerous. One officer told us that, at
times, there were so many sightseers that police officers turned out to
direct traffic.
The reaction of residents to the mysterious visitors that followed was not
so laid back. The Men in Black were seen and are remembered as truly
malevolent individuals, despite their sometimes amusing quirks. More than
10 years after their last visitation, those who had invited the MIBs into
their homes still remembered the very real feeling of danger in their
presence. Of course, MIBs were not unique to Point Pleasant; they had been
well documented in earlier UFO lore and were being researched. Unlike
Mothman, the MIBs sent a shockwave of fear through their contactees. As
chronicled by Keel, they arrived in shiny black cars which, like their
equally shiny shoes, seemed impervious to the weather.
As the MIBs passed themselves off as 'officials' involved in the UFO
investigation, their aura of menace was combined with an absurd
fascination for quite mundane objects. Keel’s most memorable example is
that when offered Jell-O, an MIB saved a sample in a paper napkin, tucking
it into his coat. They asked questions about common food items and their
speech seemed somehow odd and disjointed. Most importantly, witnesses
noticed the MIB had no ears, or seemed to talk without moving their lips.
You’d think the witnesses would be terrified, having seen such obvious
warning signs, but a strange calm prevailed until after the visitors left;
only then did people realize how odd, even horrifying, their visitors
were.
Were the MIBs just an interesting sideshow to the Mothman tales? Our team
conducted interviews, looked for deviations from the original stories and
then departed. One witness told us, as we were leaving her home, that she
believed the MIBs’ veiled threats were very real and that anyone looking
seriously into the phenomenon was placing themselves in harm’s way. There
was little question in my mind that someone or something had toyed with
anyone who had directly encountered a UFO.
Eventually, it was time to go back to the TNT area. In fact we made two
visits that day, one in daylight and the second late at night. Even in
daylight the place was quite surreal. Its domed containment buildings
(used for storing the TNT) were stark, looking like rows of igloos. The
landscape was criss-crossed by deteriorated roads, their paving broken up
by clumps of grass. There were several larger buildings – including a
power plant that looks much like Dracula’s castle – and other
outbuildings, now gutted and crumbling.
Back at camp, we considered several alternatives. Was Mothman a government
experiment, a test of the common man’s reaction to things otherworldly?
Maybe, but in 10 years one might expect to see some of that technology
surface in the real world. There were other problems with this scenario,
such as where such technology was housed and where the support system
could be for such a project. It simply did not seem an appropriate theory
in this case; Point Pleasant wasn’t Groom Lake! Perhaps Mothman and his
dark kin were mental projections; a mind control experiment of some sort?
Theoretically, this kind of project wouldn’t require a large support base.
Could it be that those visited by MIBs were actually visited by normal
humans who then, somehow, planted the image of earless, non-verbal
investigators with shiny black shoes in their stead?
As our campfire debate went on under the stars, the group concluded that
this was just too far-fetched. We began, slowly, to consider the reality
of UFO activity, an area none of us had ever thought likely before coming
to Point Pleasant, and with that possibility came a new idea about the
reality of the MIBs.
That evening, we went back to take a last look at the TNT area, now a
black landscape. We waited two hours; nothing happened – no flashing red
lights from radio towers or buzzing noises from nearby transformers.
Nothing!
One team member recalled the old quote from Sherlock Holmes in The Sign of
Four: “When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however
improbable, must be the truth.” As a group, we were well versed in
paranormal activity, but this was not just another ghost story and, try as
we might, we could not fit the UFO pegs into any of the paranormal holes
we were familiar with. If our goal had been to find the common threads
between ghosts, apparitions and UFOs, we had failed. If it had been to
find another supposedly ‘true story’ woven from strands of fiction, that
too had failed.
It was not until we returned to New York that we realized we had, indeed,
learned something. As the time came to tell our colleagues at PRF that we
had failed to find a chink in the Mothman armour, two occurrences
convinced us that we could no longer sit on the fence in this case. It was
never our intention to speak out publicly about Mothman, but the first of
the two occurrences caused me to change my mind. Only two days after
returning to New York, my children began to complain that there was
something wrong with our telephones. In fact, the next time I went to use
one of them, the classic clicks and whirs of a phone tap were evident.
Next, the kids reported that they were picking up the phone to hear
conversations in progress… and the topic was our family. Of course, this
was long before Caller ID or even three way calling, but it wasn’t a party
line either, so there was some concern.
While this was interesting, I was not overly concerned until a close
friend told me the following story. She had phoned and, according to her
account, began having a conversation with me. She swore that it was my
voice and that the conversation touched upon things that only she and a
few colleagues would have known.
After about 10 minutes, the voice at the other end stopped her and began
to laugh “demonically” as she put it. Then it paused and said in a totally
different tone, “Oh, you wanted to talk to Rick. Sorry, he’s not here. I’m
here all alone with the children.” Whoever it was hung up and my friend’s
follow-up call got a busy signal. This was a near impossibility, given
that the house had four lines, including one reserved for my personal use
only; the system would roll over a call if any of the lines being called
were busy. The children were indeed at home, alone, and said they had not
been using any of the phones. The police were called, searched the house
and found the kids were indeed at home, and very much alone!
A week after this, I was expected to be on Joel Martin’s talk show at WBAB
on Long Island. The topic for the evening had nothing to do with UFOs or
haunted houses and certainly not Point Pleasant. The day before the show I
had worked the overnight and returned home to take the kids to school.I then returned home, locked the door and went to my second floor
bedroom, closed the blinds, pulled the drapes closed and went to bed.Some time later, the phone rang.The person on the other end sounded as if his voice was being
mechanically altered and he asked simply, “Where is your wallet?”
My
routine was simple, my ID case and badge was always placed in the
nightstand draw.I reached
over, still in the dark, but didn’t feel either.
I turned on the light and looked
carefully, neither my wallet or off duty revolver were where I put them.I went back on the phone, demanding that the caller identify
himself!He laughed and then
said quietly, “Forget Point Pleasant.”Then he added, “Look in your shoes,” and hung up.I reached under the bed and my missing items were neatly shoved in
each shoe.Throughout the
entire affair, my dog, Merlyn who weighed in at over 100 lbs. continued to
slumber by the bedside. There was no way in, no way out.I picked up the phone again and called Joel Martin, advising him we
were changing the topic for the evening’s program, but did not offer any
explanation.
Before the show, Joel met me in
the lobby of the station, which was unusual. Usually, his producer would
be on hand to get me settled in, with Joel busy up to airtime. But this
time, Joel was sitting in the hall with his producer and even before he
exchanged the usual greetings, his producer asked if I was playing a trick
on him. Then he asked me what I knew about MIBs. He told me that he had
been visited by a classic MIB that afternoon, who cautioned him about
doing shows about UFOs. Joel had known about my trip to Point Pleasant and
the Mothman story, but I never told him the topic for that evening show,
or what had led up to it. After some momentary conversation, we agreed
that it was time to go public. Whenever a journalist feels he is in
danger, the best advice is to put everything he knows before the public in
the hope that, once it is public knowledge, there is no reason to threaten
the source.
That program went off without a hitch and to the best of my knowledge
neither Joel, nor any member of my family, were contacted again. The
experience was, however, an eye-opener. Having spent a good part of my
life reporting about crime and criminals, including covering the mob
families of New York, I had never received any threat to my family apart
from this incident. The world of UFOs, I had thought, up to that point,
was harmless; just part of the wide range of things that go bump in the
night. Now, my mind had been changed. I also came to believe that The
Mothman Prophecies was based on very real events and while I still can’t
buy the tie-in to either Chief Cornstalk or the Silver Bridge disaster, I
do think that the reports of UFOs, Mothman and the MIBs were based on
truthful accounts by honest people.
So, what do I think really happened in Point Pleasant over those 13
months? I think that someone or something was involved in a complex human
experiment. Whether this project originated with the government or an
otherworldly source, I cannot say. The UFOs, the cattle mutilations,
Mothman and the MIBs were all an orchestrated experience. I think that
those experiments continue to this day, thinking about Skinwalker Ranch as
a prime example.Allowing for
the variables of hysteria, I know that cattle are mutilated, cryptids show
up in the most unlikely places from the Catskills to the Rockies; and the
sightings of lights in the sky, little grey men and any number of other
figures, sometimes glowing and other times only in shadow, are common
among us.
Are
they all connected?I have no
idea, but I can tell you that there is a body of evidence that suggests
multiple kinds of phenomenon can and do exist in the same time and space.Seeking the connection is what our job is all about!