Case Submission Number: 15675
Submission Date: February 23, 2009
Date of Event: March, 1943
AN1, CAT 1, Other
Bering Sea, Alaska
Number of Witnesses: Multiple
Investigators: Brent Mitchel & Michael Puckett
Disposition: Unknown
Case Summary by Cassidy Nicholas
The year was 1943. It was a clear spring night with calm seas.
While
on patrol in the midst of WWll, the USS Williamson Destroyer glided
through the waters of the Bering Sea north of the Alaskan Peninsula
bearing north at 20 knots. The witness, accompanied with three other
crewmen, were on watch at the starboard 20 mm gun on the gallery deck
around 11 p.m.
Off
of the port side, both port and starboard gun crews noticed a row of
deep red lights traveling parallel to and slightly forward to the bow.
According to the witness, he could not relay at which direction the
lights approached the ship, and questioned whether they came out of the
sea itself.
This
unknown craft had at least eight evenly spaced lights in a row and
canted diagonally to the horizon at approximately 15 degrees. The
witness estimated that these unknown lights were no more than 100 yards
from their location. At roughly 10 feet apart, these lights outstretched
a mere 30 feet off of the water's surface.
The
witness used the example of needing a “cantaloupe held at arm's length
to cover just one of the eight lights.” According to the witness the
lights did not cast any sort of beam or glow, and that even though he
could not see, he noted nothing but darkness could be viewed in between
the lights.
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