Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

UFO meet draws true believers

- By Caitlin Dineen Staff writer cdineen@orlandosen­tinel.com

Jorge Rigoboulos doesn’t care if you don’t believe him; he knows when he was a 10-year-old boy he saw a circularob­ject with lights on it that flew across the sky.

“It was impressive because it was so close,” the now-48-year-old said Saturday. “It is true what I saw.”

It may have been the first time theMiamima­nsawanunid­entified flying object in the sky, but he said it wasn’t the last. Just four years, ago he says he sawanother set of lights darting around the Florida sky, only reinvigora­ting his interest in the unknown.

“It’s something that me,” Rigoboulos said.

He’s not alone in his quest for informatio­n about what else — or who else — could live in this attracts solar system or another dimension. Rigoboulos was one of nearly 500 people expected to attend the annual MUFON Symposium.

MUFON, short for theMutual UFO Network, is a sciencebas­ed organizati­on that investigat­es and researches the phenomenon of the existence of aliens and their connection or contact with Earth.

This year’s event, “UFOs: From our Oceans to Outer Space,”ends Sunday at the Hilton Lake Buena Vista Hotel nearWalt DisneyWorl­d.

Symposium attendees range from true believers and UFO enthusiast­s to skeptics and those determined to debunk any finding of extraterre­strial life.

“Hollywood has always painted this as an X-Filey, sensationa­lized subject matter,” said Morgan Beall, Florida’s MUFONstate director.

Beall said the importance of the event is to show attendees, including the skeptics, that the work being done isn’t about the stereotypi­cal big-eyed, greenskinn­ed alien.

“There is that ridicule factor, that giggle factor that’s still out there that shouldn’t be because it’s actually a very, very serious subject matter,” he said. “And, if real, think of the implicatio­ns.”

Shari Gackstatte­r, owner of Tempe, Ariz.- based Star Woman Crystals, said the event is important to bring together like-minded people, giving them a safe space to discuss their beliefs without fear of judgment.

“I assume every single person has seen something in the sky that didn’t make sense,” she said.

Beall hasn’t had any personal experience with extraterre­strials, either having an up-close encounter or seeing an object in the sky, but he knows scientists every day are learning more about the possibilit­ies that humans aren’t the only existing life form.

“And I think just putting it into perspectiv­e, we’re a grain of sand in an ocean,” he said. “And we’re young compared to the rest of the universe.”

Robert Powell, MUFON’s director of research, said he’s interviewe­d more than 200 people who’ve had some kind of experience with other-worldly beings, enough to believe there’s something out there even if he hasn’t seen it for himself.

“In a way, it’s really like winning the lottery because there’s lots of UFO reports,” said Powell.

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