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The Exeter
UFO Incident, Almost 50 years later and it is still unsolved!
The Exeter UFO Incident, Multiple Police
Witnesses, Project Bluebook, Pics
The Exeter incident was a
highly-publicized UFO sighting that occurred on September 3, 1965
approximately 5 miles from Exter, New Hampshire, in the neighboring
community of Kensington. Although several separate sightings had
been made by numerous witnesses in the weeks leading up to September
3, the specific incident, eventually to become by far the most
famous, involved a local teenager and two police officers. The
Exeter incident remains listed as unexplained by the U.S. Air Force.

At approximately 2 am on September 3,
1965, Norman Muscarello was hitchhiking to his parents' home in
Exeter along Highway 150. Muscarello, 18, had recently graduated
from high school and was about to leave for service in the U.S.
Navy. He had been visiting his girlfriend at her parents' home
in nearby Amesbury, Massachusetts; since he did not own a car he
would catch a ride to and from his girlfriend's home. However,
at that time of night there was little traffic on the highway,
and as he walked he noticed 5 flashing red lights in some nearby
woods. The lights illuminated the woods and a nearby farmhouse
(the farm belonged to the Dining family, who were not at home at
the time). The lights soon moved towards him, and Muscarello
became terrified and dove into a ditch. The lights moved away
and hovered near the Dining farmhouse before going back into the
woods. Muscarello ran to the farmhouse, pounded on the door and
yelled for help, but no one answered. When he saw a car coming
down the road, he ran into the road and forced it to stop. The
couple in the car drove him to the Exeter police station.

At the station Muscarello told his story
to police officer Reginald Toland, who worked the night desk at the
police station. Toland, who knew Muscarello, was impressed by his
obvious fear and agitated state. Toland radioed police officer
Eugene Bertrand, Jr., who had earlier in the evening passed a
distressed woman sitting in her car on Highway 108. When Bertrand
stopped and asked if she had a problem, the woman told him that a
"huge object with flashing red lights" had been following her car
for 12 miles and stopped over her car before flying away. Bertrand
considered her a "kook" but did stay with her for approximately 15
minutes until she had calmed down and was ready to resume her drive.
After arriving at the police station and
hearing Muscarello's story, Bertrand decided to drive back to the
Dining farm with Muscarello to investigate the field where he had
seen the UFO.
Bertrand drove
Muscarello back to the place of his sighting. From Bertrand's patrol
car they saw nothing unusual. However, when they left the car and
walked towards the woods where Muscarello had first seen the
objects, some horses in a nearby corral began kicking their stalls
and making loud, frightened noises. Dogs in the area also began
howling. Bertrand and Muscarello both saw an object rise up from the
woods beyond the corral. Bertrand described the UFO as "this huge,
dark object as big as a barn over there, with red flashing lights on
it."

The object moved slowly towards them,
swaying back and forth. Instinctively remembering his police
training, Bertrand dropped to one knee, drew his pistol, and pointed
it at the object. He then decided that shooting would not be wise,
so he reholstered the pistol, grabbed the stunned Muscarello, and
both men ran back to the patrol car. Bertrand radioed another Exeter
policeman, David Hunt, for assistance, and while the two men waited
for Hunt to arrive they continued to watch the object. According to
UFO historian Jerome Clark, Bertrand and Muscarello "observed the
object as it hovered 100 feet away and at 100 feet altitude. It
rocked back and forth. The pulsating red lights flashed in rapid
sequence, first from right to left, then left to right, each cycle
consuming no more than two seconds...the [local] animals continued
to act agitated." When Hunt arrived he also watched the strange
object. The object finally flew away over the woods and disappeared.
Hunt soon saw a B-47 bomber fly overhead and he later told
journalist John Fuller that "You could tell the difference" between
the UFO and the bomber, "there was no comparison." All three men
drove back to the Exeter police station and immediately filed
separate reports on what they had seen. Bertrand then drove
Muscarello home and told his mother what had happened.

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Town Hall and Police Station
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The sightings by Muscarello and the two
policemen received national publicity. John Fuller, a journalist and
regular columnist for Saturday
Review magazine, decided to travel
to Exeter and investigate. Fuller interviewed a number of people in
the Exeter area who also claimed to have witnessed strange lights
and unusual objects. Among them were Ron Smith, a senior at the
local Exter High School, who told Fuller that about two or three
weeks after Muscarello's sighting, he was riding with his mother and
aunt one evening at 11:30. According to Smith, he, his mother and
aunt all saw an object with "a red light on top and the bottom was
white and glowed.
It appeared to be spinning. It
passed over the car once and when it passed over and got in front,
it stopped in midair. Then it went back over the car again." Fuller
also spoke to police officer Toland at Exeter's police station.
Toland told Fuller of a number of calls he had received from
Exeter-area residents regarding UFO sightings. A good example of the
type of calls Toland had received came from Mrs. Ralph Lindsay.
According to Toland "she called in here early, just before dawn. She
said it was right out her window as she was calling. It was like a
big orange ball, almost as big as the harvest moon...and it wasn't
the moon, either...all the time she was talking to me, her kids were
at the window watching it. Now why would people go to all this
trouble - people all over the area - if they weren't seeing
something real"?
When Exeter's
police chief read the reports of Bertrand, Hunt, and Muscarello he
called nearby Pease A.F. Base and reported a UFO sighting. The Air
Force sent Major David Griffin and Lieutenant Alan Brandt to
interview the three men. The Air Force officers asked all three men
to not report their sighting to the press, but since a reporter from
the Manchester Union Leader newspaper had already interviewed them,
it was too late. Major Griffin sent a report of the incident to the
staff of Project Blue Book, the official Air Force research group
assigned to study UFO reports. Griffin wrote that "At this time I
have been unable to arrive at a probable cause of this sighting. The
three observers seem to be stable, reliable persons, especially the
two patrolmen. I viewed the area of the sighting and found nothing
in the area that could be the probable cause. Pease AFB had five
B-47 aircraft flying in the area but I do not believe that they had
any connection with this sighting."
Muscarello, Bertrand, and Hunt all
strongly disagreed with the Air Force explanation. The two policemen
sent a letter to Project Blue Book in which they stated, "As you can
imagine, we have been the subject of considerable ridicule since the
Pentagon released its 'final evaluation' of our sighting of
September 3, 1965. In other words, both Patrolman Hunt and myself
saw this object at close range, checked it out with each other,
confirmed and reconfirmed that it was not any type of conventional
aircraft...and went to considerable trouble to confirm that the
weather was clear, there was no wind, no chance of weather
inversion, and that what we were seeing was in no way a military or
civilian aircraft."
Bertrand
also noted that their UFO sighting took place nearly an hour after
Operation Big Blast was said to have ended, which eliminated the
operation as a possible cause of the sighting. When Project Blue
Book did not respond to their letter, on December 29, 1965 - nearly
four months after the sighting - the two men sent another letter to
Blue Book in which they wrote that the object they observed "was
absolutely silent with no rush of air from jets or chopper blades
whatsoever. And it did not have any wings or tail...it lit up the
entire field, and two nearby houses turned completely red."
In addition to Muscarello and the
policemen, John G. Fuller also ridiculed the Air Force explanation
in print. He wrote that he had observed an unusual object near
Exeter himself, and that it was being chased by an Air Force jet
fighter. Raymond Fowler, the New England investigator for the Nat'l
Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena (NICAP), also filed a
detailed report on the Exeter sightings. In his view the Air Force
explanation was also incorrect. At one point an Air Force officer
claimed that the UFOs people had been observing were merely lights
from nearby Pease AFB. To prove it, he had the lights activated
before a large crowd who were gathered some distance away. According
to Fowler, "he ordered personnel at the base to turn the lights on.
Everybody looked and waited - and nothing happened. Frustrated, he
yelled into the mike to turn on the lights. A voice replied that the
lights were on. The very embarrassed officer slunk back into the
seat of the staff car and drove off amongst the laughs and jeers of
the crowd."

In
January 1966 Lieutenant Colonel John Spaulding, from the Office of
the Secretary of the Air Force, finally replied to the policemen's
two letters. Spaulding wrote that "based on additional information
submitted to our UFO investigation officer, Wright-Patterson AFB,
Ohio, we have been unable to identify the object you observed on
September 3, 1965."
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