A large object with a turquoise hue plummeted out of the sky earlier this
summer and plowed into the earth south of Las Vegas near Needles, California.
Eyewitnesses say this was no meteorite, especially since a bunch of
helicopters came looking for it and then hauled it away.
The object was seen in the early morning hours of May 14. It appeared to
crash into the ground just west of the Colorado River. And that's when things
got interesting for residents of the area.
Somewhere in the rough terrain just west of the Colorado River and south of
Needles is a point of impact, maybe some burn marks, created by something that
fell from the sky. Frank Costigan saw it because he got up at 3 a.m. to let his
cat out -- a fiery object that flashed across the sky, but it wasn't a meteor he
says.
"It was bright, bright enough that it illuminated the ground," he said.
For seven years, Costigan worked as the chief of airport security at L.A.X.
He says the mystery object flew out of the north east, heading southwest,
traveling very fast, but at one point it slowed down, then sped up again.
"It went behind a hill, and I waited to see if I could hear it crash because
as big as it was, it was bound to make noise," he said.
But he didn't hear a crash. Hours later, David Hayes, the owner of KTOX Radio
in Needles, was coming to work when he spotted an odd formation of dark vehicles
getting off the highway. He drew a picture of the lead vehicle, a large truck
with a dome on top and a black structure that reminded him of a stealth fighter.
"It seemed like it was some kind of surveillance vehicle -- four-wheel drive.
It had government plates, U.S. government plates and behind it were a couple of
vans that looked like support vehicles," said Hayes.
The men inside had a military bearing, Hayes said, but weren't in uniform. He
made eye contact with one of the drivers and the guy followed him. Later in the
day, one of the vehicles was parked outside the station, seemingly conducting a
surveillance of the place.
"These guys staring you down had a 'Men in Black' feel to it?" asks Knapp.
"Absolutely. Very serious, serious as a heart attack," said Hayes.
Coincidentally, Costigan, the ex-cop, works on investigations for Hayes. When
he came in to the radio station, he told Hayes about the thing he had seen in
the sky, and Hayes told him about the Men in Black.
Then they got another piece of the puzzle -- a call from a man who lives in a
houseboat on the river, who said he saw the fiery object -- that it had crashed
about 100 yards west of the river, that it landed with a thump. Hayes says he's
known the witness for years by the name Bob on the river. Bob thought a plane
had crashed and tried to call 911 but his cell wouldn't work, so he moved his
boat out into the river, and then heard the helicopters.
In an interview with journalist Linda Howe, Bob says he saw at least five
helicopters flying in formation, including a large sky crane. The crane picked
up the oval shaped object, still glowing, and flew away, heading in the
direction of Las Vegas. One odd detail, the choppers arrived only 17 minutes
after the object crashed. He described it to Hayes.
"It was about the size of a semi-trailer, he says, oblong shaped thing," said
Hayes.
Out of the blue, the station got a call from a friend in Laughlin who said
the Laughlin Airport had been inundated on the night of the crash with so-called
Janet planes. That's the airline that flies workers to top secret Area 51.
Costigan says the airport could not confirm this because no one is on duty after
6 p.m. at night, not even in the tower.
The black vehicles have left Needles. Bob the houseboat guy can't be found
either.
"The fact that there were people here the next day, it was almost like they
were doing some sort of cleanup or whatever. The point is, something definitely
happened.
The I-Team phoned nearly every agency we could think of to see if they had
received any report or knew anything. We were not surprised to learn that no one
knew anything.
Here's the list -- police agencies in three states, the Laughlin Airport, the
weather service, the FAA and several military bases.
A military watchdog group found a public record showing there was at least
one army helicopter in the air in that area at that time. The helicopter, oddly
enough, is listed as being attached to a U.S. base in Europe.
We are filing freedom of information requests and will report back when we
get responses.
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