Awesome UFO light show in Knox County Tennessee on 2/10/09 (The Examiner, 02-11-2009)

From The Black Vault Encyclopedia Project

Jump to: navigation, search

© 2009 owned by or licensed to The Examiner

The Article

by Eddie Middleton

Yesterday shortly after dark in a rural area in Knox County near Knoxville, Tennessee, a mother and her three young children were returning home. They had just stopped at their mailbox at the entrance to their 1/2 mile long gravel driveway leading up to their house. The mother said it was then that they noticed some extremely bright lights at the far end of the field that stretches out to the left of their house. The mother said this thing lit up the field as bright as a baseball diamond. She then noticed it was triangular-shaped. It had three white lights on the corners and a really huge red light underneath it in the center. This description of the arrangement and color of the lights is typical of many of the sightings of the mysterious triangles that have been appearing with such frequency in recent years. They have been especially prevalent in East Tennessee. Black or dull gray is the usual color of the body of these craft, the mother describing it in this case as a dull/silver gray . She said the edges of this craft glowed "with a dull, yet still bright, silvery light. She was reminded of the neon lights seen under some cars.

After so dramatically calling attention to itself, it began to move in a circular path till it arrived at the opposite end of their driveway. They watched it for about 45 seconds, long enough so that the alert mother got off a few photo shots of it with her cell-phone camera. If these turn out good, she has promised to send them to Tennessee MUFON which I will then plan to post on this page. After allowing these totally startled witnesses to get a good eye-full, this thing began to move off quickly. The mother said it didn't go behind any trees or hill. It just moved away in the unobstructed distance and simply vanished.


Credits

Special thanks to The Examiner.


External Links