Lethbridge Herald

UFO mystery still intrigues

50 YEARS LATER, CANADA’S BEST-DOCUMENTED UFO SIGHTING REMAINS A MYSTERY

- Michael MacDonald THE CANADIAN PRESS — HALIFAX

The first frantic callers to reach the RCMP were clear: something had crashed in the waters off Shag Harbour, N.S. It was around 11 p.m. on the night of Oct. 4, 1967. Most witnesses thought it was a doomed aircraft.

Among those who saw the string of flashing lights on that clear, moonless night were three RCMP officers, scores of fishermen and airline pilots flying along the province’s rugged southwest coast.

But a series of searches turned up nothing. No wreckage. No bodies. No clues as to what really happened that night 50 years ago.

A Halifax-area man later uncovered a trove of government and police records that would make the Shag Harbour incident Canada’s bestdocume­nted and most intriguing UFO sighting.

Hundreds of UFO sightings are reported across Canada every year, but none has the paper trail of Shag Harbour.

In a series of RCMP reports and correspond­ence sent by telex between military officials in Ottawa and Halifax, there are specific references to unidentifi­ed flying objects, and no attempts were made to explain away what people were reporting.

Chris Styles, the UFO researcher who dug up those documents, remains baffled by the case.

“To this day, I don’t know the absolute answer, but we’re still finding things,” says Styles, the author of two books about the Shag Harbour incident.

Next week, on the eve of the 50th anniversar­y, Styles will be the keynote speaker at the start of the three-day Shag Harbour UFO Festival. After 20-plus years of dogged research, he says he has new evidence to share.

It points to an explanatio­n that hardly seems possible, unless you have a sense of what Styles has uncovered so far.

To be sure, the most compelling evidence comes from eyewitness­es like Laurie Wickens, now a 67-year-old former fisherman.

“There was four (lights) in a row, and they were going on and off,” says Wickens, at the time a 17-year-old driving home to Shag Harbour with a friend and three young women. “One would come on, then two, three and four — and they’d all be off for a second and come back on again.”

Sure he was about to witness an airline disaster, Wickens found a phone booth and called the local RCMP detachment. Questions were asked about his sobriety. But he wasn’t drunk, and he was sure about what he saw.

Several other people called the Mounties that night. They all told same story.

Soon afterwards, Wickens was among a dozen or so people gathered at the water’s edge, watching in amazement as a glowing, orange sphere — about the size of a city bus — bobbed on the waves about 300 metres from shore.

At 11:20 p.m., it slipped beneath the surface without a sound.

Three of those at the wharf were Mounties. One of them called the Rescue Co-ordination Centre in Halifax. A coast guard cutter was immediatel­y dispatched to conduct a search.

Before the ship arrived, volunteer searchers aboard two fishing boats soon spotted a long trail of bubbling, yellow foam on the calm waters — but no wreckage.

A squad of Royal Canadian Navy divers later failed to turn up any clues after a three-day scan of the harbour floor, according to official military records. To this day, Wickens has no idea what he saw. “All I know is that we saw something, and something came down,” he says, adding that he believes the divers pulled something from the water.

“I can’t prove it, but in my opinion they found something.”

Wickens, now president of the Shag Harbour UFO Society, will take part in a panel discussion Saturday that is expected to include Ralph Loewinger, one of the pilots aboard Pan Am Flight 160, a Boeing 707 cargo aircraft that was at 33,000 feet that same night.

They saw the same row of flashing lights over the Gulf of Maine as they approached to coast of Nova Scotia.

Loewinger and the other crew members never reported their sighting. Their story came to light about six years ago when Styles tracked them down.

“What sets this story apart is that the impact ... was witnessed by several independen­t and very credible witnesses,” says Brock Zinck, a Nova Scotia seafood buyer and vicepresid­ent of the Shag Harbour UFO Society.

“Nobody reported a UFO. Everybody reported a plane crash. That gives a boost of credibilit­y to the story.”

About 36 hours after the initial sightings, several Defence Department officials signed off on a memo that made it clear authoritie­s had no idea what they were dealing with.

“A preliminar­y investigat­ion has been carried out by the Rescue Co-ordination Centre in Halifax,” the memo says. “It has been determined that this UFO sighting was not caused by a flare, float, aircraft or in fact any known object.”

It’s worth noting the search at Shag Harbour was conducted during a highly charged period in Canada’s history.

The space race was on and so was the Cold War. Russian submarines were known to frequent the East Coast. And the Americans were testing all manner of devices to spy on their communist foes, including crude spy satellites that ejected film canisters at high altitudes.

While the official records provide no explanatio­n for what happened, there are vague clues pointing to another incident about 50 kilometres north, just off the coast of Shelburne.

In his 2001 book, “Dark Object,” Styles says he eventually interviewe­d former military insiders and members of the navy’s Fleet Diving Unit, who told him the orange orb spotted in Shag Harbour had submerged under its own power and travelled to a spot on the seabed off Shelburne.

 ?? Canadian Press photo ?? Laurie Wickens, president of the Shag Harbour Incident Society, is seen in Shag Harbour, N.S. last weekend.
Canadian Press photo Laurie Wickens, president of the Shag Harbour Incident Society, is seen in Shag Harbour, N.S. last weekend.

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