RE: STEPHENVILLE UFO - RADAR EXPERT LAMENTS MEDIA APATHY


Billy Cox
Glen Schulze suspects the reason the military corrected its
version of events over
"Four days after our FOIAs hit the FAA, they knew we’d show
they had planes all over the place that night," Schulze says from his home in

At age 78, Schulze brought an impressive career to bear in the Mutual UFO Network’s Special Research Report — released July 10 — on the UFO that surged toward restricted airspace over President Bush’s Crawford ranch seven months ago.
In the 1950s, Schulze received a special Army commendation
for upgrading missile-tracking antenna sites for the White Sands Proving
Grounds. The following decade, he delivered a revelation to
Schulze, who co-wrote the MUFON report with Robert Powell,
wasn’t sure what to expect when he filed his FOIAs with military and civilian
agencies in January. What he knew was that, two days after witnesses reported
seeing a huge UFO and jet fighters over rural
Almost two weeks later, Air Force Maj. Karl Lewis blamed an “internal communications error” for getting it wrong. The public affairs office has been mute on this affair ever since.
See video #2 for Glen Schulze’s report on Larry King Live
What came as “a fairly mild shock” to Schulze upon reviewing
the FOIA data was how primary and secondary radar systems at Fort Worth tracked
an aerial intruder — without a transponder — for more than an hour as it made a
steady southeasterly course from the Stephenville area toward the Bush ranch.
With F-16s thundering about in the general vicinity, the
thing apparently slipped below the radar coverage from 7:03 p.m. to 7:10 p.m.,
accelerated minutes later to 532 mph within a 30-second span, then skidded to
49 mph 10 seconds later. The narrative comes to an abrupt and tantalizing halt
at 8 p.m., the end of the 4-8 p.m. data window requested by Schulze’s FOIA. At
that moment, the UFO was just 10 miles from Bush’s home, and 4 miles from the
edge of the no-fly zone.
“The data shows there was definitely something there that
was going on a fairly straight line,” Schulze says. “All the other planes in
the air that night were turning and banking, but this was not. This was not on
a chaotic path. It shows some intelligence for its ability for staying on a
straight course.”
Schulze wants to know why the flight logs for 10 military
aircraft separate and apart from the F-16s were censored in his FOIA. He wants
to know why the F-16s encroached into civilian airspace, creating a potential
safety hazard. And, of course, he wants to know what defense radar was
tracking.
None of that information has been released by the military.
Schulze fears FAA data acquired after 8 p.m. was auto-purged months ago,
although he hopes puzzled records-keepers were curious enough to have archived
that material.
Perhaps most disappointing is the lack of media interest.
“Neither the Denver Post nor the Rocky Mountain News has
shown any curiosity about this story, and I’m in their backyard,” Schulze says.
“There was one article about a guy who wants to form an E.T. welcoming
committee that ran on Sunday, July 13, two days after we shared our research
with Larry King.”
Well, one ignores an E.T. welcoming committee at one’s own risk.
Source: Herald Tribune - Billy Cox
204 - JUNE ARTICLES – on one page

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