Dayton Daily News

UFOS AT WRIGHT-PATT? MAN LOOKED FOR TRUTH

Author to speak Saturday about quest for aliens on base.

- ByBarrieBa­rber StaffffWri­ter

When Raymond Szymanski arrived at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base as a college co-op student, he was intrigued when a mentor mentioned aliens and the base in the same sentence.

Szymanski, 65, spent 39 years atWright-Patterson before retiring in 2011, and while he said he never sawany aliens, hewentona truth-seeking quest that took him fromNewHam­pshireandA­rizona across the Atlantic to England to track down those who claimed they had encounters with UFOs.

The Daytonarea resident, a for-

mer Air ForceResea­rch Laboratory Sensors Directorat­e senior engineer, wrote “50 Shades of Greys: Evidence of Extraterre­strial Visitation toWright-Patterson Air Force Base and Beyond.” He is set to speak about his findings in two weekend local appearance­s.

“The book is actually a documentar­y for my quest for the truth,” Szymanski said. “Were the stories I heard about Wright-Patterson true? What about some of the other famous places” where UFO sightings were claimed.

Szymanski points to Wright-Pattersona­sthehome of the Air Force’s past UFO investigat­ions, such as Project Blue Book in the 1960s, and decades-old reports that “exotic” material was brought to Wright-Patterson in 1947 after claims a UFO crashed in the desert near Roswell, N.M.

“Obviously, the Air Force took this seriously to an extent because they had collection and analysis of programs for nearly a quarter of a century, so certainly I took it seriously,” he said in a recent telephone interview.

“The tipping point” to write the book, which iswritten in a first-person, humorous style about his on-theroad adventures for “the truth,” came in 2015 when he visited the place with a former logger who claimed hewas abducted in 1975 by a UFOintheAp­ache-Sitgreaves Forest in Arizona, he said.

“This was some kind of a strange moment where I decided, ‘Hey, I’ve been doing all this research all these years, I’ve got to write a book,’” he said. “So I didn’t really do all my research and say, ’I’m going to write a book, but it was that kind of an encounter with that kind ofpersonwh­ohadthese kinds of experience­s that just motivated me.”

Szymanski also details in his book travels toUFOsight­ings near Exeter, N.H., in 1965 andRendels­hamForest in England in 1980 – along with investigat­ing claims about Wright-Patterson.

“And nowthe million dollar question,” the author writes in the foreward in the book. “DoesWright-Patterson actually house aliens and their artifacts?

“At this point of writing this book, I’m not sure,” he wrote.

Inaninterv­iew, hewas certain whatever crashed in the desert near Roswell in 1947 was brought to Wright-Patterson, but he said he saw no evidence that it included alien beings.

“TheRoswell alien thing is still a little squishy,” he said. “But that’s different from me believing we’ve been visited. Yes, I’ve talked and interviewe­d (UFO) experience­rs and I’m convinced that what they’ve had is a real encounter, and so somewhere along the line people have encountere­d alien entities on this planet.”

More than three decades ago, the Air Force issued an officialde­nialthatWr­ight-Patterson housed alien space technology and the bodies of beings fromanothe­r planet.

“Periodical­ly, it is erroneousl­y stated that the remains of extraterre­strial visitors are or have been stored at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base,” the January 1985 statement said. “There are not now, nor have there ever been, any extraterre­strial visitors or equipment on Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.”

Project Blue Book, a Wright-Patterson-headquarte­red Air Force investigat­ion into reports of UFOs, concludedi­nDecember1­969and found no threats to national security or evidence of extraterre­strial vehicles, the Air Force has said.

In 2013, the CIA reported high-flying spy planes spotted in the 1950s and 1960s weremistak­enforUFOsm­ore than half the time.

Szymanski, a Dayton area resident, said the UFO phenomenon came close to home for him.

“For me, there’s no doubt because as I documented in the book, I saw a UFO in my own neighborho­od from about 200 feet away and 75 feet in the air as it slipped into a low bank of clouds,” he said. “That was kind of an up close and personal verificati­on ofwhat I pretty much was leaning towards anyway. And the people that I talk to about the cases and the evidence that they have is prettymuch insurmount­able, unassailab­le.”

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