SUBJECT: WOMAN SAYS CLOSE ENCOUNTER LEFT SCARS FILE: UFO1276
NEWS CLIPPING SERVICE
DATE OF ARTICLE: March 15, 1989
SOURCE OF ARTICLE: Post-Herald
LOCATION: Birmingham, Alabama
BYLINE: Kathy Kemp
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WOMAN'S CLOSE ENCOUNTER WITH UFO LEFT LASTING SCARS
By Kathy Kemp
Post-Herald Reporter
Cr: L. Phillips
LINCOLN--Betty Cash thought the world was coming to an end.
In the Bible, she knew, it was written that a great flame
would destroy the Earth. And all she could see as she stood on
that lonely stretch of Texas road and stared toward the heavens
was scorching ball of fire.
"It lit up the sky like it was daylight," Mrs. Cash says,
sitting in the den of her sunny mobile home on Lake Logan Martin
in rural Talladega County.
"That's the first thing that came into our minds, that the
world was ending. That thing was so bright, it took us a while
to get our sight to where we could see it was actually an object.
"I have never been so terrified. All we could think of was
how are we going to get out of here without being burned alive."
Eight years have passed since Mrs. Cash--along with her
friend Vickie Landrum and Mrs. Landrum's grandson, Colby--
confronted what they thought was the apocalypse.
The group had gone out the night of Dec. 29, 1980, in search
of a bingo game, forgetting that the halls would be closed for
the Christmas holidays. They were returning to their homes in
Dayton, Texas, on a deserted stretch of road near New Caney when
they had what UFO researchers would later refer to as a close
encounter of the second kind.
After their eyes had adjusted to the ball of fire, the women
and the young boy began to make out a diamond shaped object that
was spitting flames toward the ground. As the flames shot out,
they could hear a whooshing sound, and the object--which Mrs.
Cash says was about the size of a country water tower--would rise
a bit higher in the sky.
Later, while she lay in a hospital bed with burns and what
appeared to be radiation poisoning, Mrs. Cash would tell a
fantastic tale. Mrs. Landrum and Colby, who were treated for
similar symptoms, would confirm her story.
They said that 23 helicopters--the sophisticated double
rotary models that they later identified as CH-47 chinooks--were
flying around the fiery object, as if they were trying to either
pull or escort it to another location.
They said that although the temperature at the time was in
the 40's, their car got so hot that Mrs. Cash had to use her
leather jacket like a potholder as she opened the driver's door
to get back in. An indentation in the dashboard of Mrs. Cash's
1980 navy blue Cutlass is actually the handprint of Mrs. Landrum,
who rested her palm on the dash as she stared out the windshield,
they said.
Since then, both women have developed numerous health
problems, and Mrs. Landrum's grandson has shown signs of
emotional distress. Mrs. Cash said she was in the hospital for
six weeks with blisters, burns, headaches, vomiting and diarrhea,
and she has photographs of herself that show great clumps of hair
missing from her scalp.
Mrs. Cash, who grew up in Birmingham and had lived in Texas
30 years, returned to Alabama in early 1981 to live with her
mother, who provided the nursing the hospital told her she
needed. Divorced from her first husband in 1979, Mrs. Cash
married again several years ago and moved into the mobile home by
the lake.
Although many have dismissed their experience as imaginary,
Mrs. Cash and the Landrums have a strong ally in the Texas based
Mutual UFO Network, a international non profit organization that
investigates and documents UFO sightings.
"As far as I'm concerned, it's one of the most spectacular
cases I've ever seen," says John Schuessler, a Houston engineer
and MUFON deputy directory. Schuessler, who has been with MUFON
since the late 1960s, investigated the Cash-Landrum case shortly
after it happened and has followed it ever since.
"It's a very real situation. Something happened to them.
They were mistreated by some kind of object. You can call it a
UFO. That doesn't mean it was from outer space.
"Whatever it was, I'm convinced that their health state
changed drastically right after it happened. I have doctor's
statements confirming (Mrs. Cash's) burns. And we also had a
number of people in the area who saw what they saw, only not so
close."
Convinced that the fiery object was something the United
States military was moving from one location to another, Mrs.
Cash and the Landrums filed a multimillion dollar lawsuit against
the government. A Texas judge refused to hear the case, but the
women haven't stopped trying to get their story told in either a
courtroom or--better yet, they believe--a congressional hearing.
Encouraged by MUFON and Schuessler, Mrs. Cash has written
dozens of letters--mostly to government agencies and politicians,
who thus far have been able to offer little more than sympathy.
The government has denied any knowledge of the incident Mrs. Cash
has described. Schuessler says MUFON investigators weren't able
to find any military personnel who would acknowledge that a group
of helicopters was in the area that night in 1980.
Most recently, Mrs. Cash has been writing to U.S. Sen.
Howell Heflin, D-Ala. In a letter dated Jan. 31, Heflin told
Mrs. Cash that he has contacted the U.S. Department of Defense
and asked for an investigation of Mrs. Cash's claims and a full
report.
"I honestly don't think we'll have to go back to court," she
says. "I think the government's going to break down and do
something."
In the meantime, she and Mrs. Landrum, who still lives in
Texas, continue to talk publicly about their experience.
Articles about their ordeal have appeared in newspapers and
magazines around the world. Several television shows have
featured them, including "That's Incredible," "Good Morning,
America" and a syndicated special called "UFO Coverup." In the
latter show, which aired last year, two other participants whose
identities were concealed said they worked for the government and
that the Cash-Landrum incident was a top secret maneuver in which
the U.S. military was transporting the alien craft.
Mrs. Cash says she isn't convinced that what she saw came
from another planet. She believes the diamond shaped object was
a military project--perhaps a nuclear powered torch designed to
light up a modern day battlefield, as one MUFON investigator has
suggested.
If the government was responsible, Mrs. Cash says, it should
have to pay her medical bills. Since the incident, she developed
breast cancer that required mastectomy, and she still has bouts
with diarrhea, headaches and stomach cramps, she says.
MUFON's Schuessler believes Mrs. Cash may never learn what
happened that night.
"It had to be something very unusual," he says. "It burned
the road below, and it burned the trees. My personal theory is
that it was some kind of helicopter unit, like the one in Iran,
when they attempted to rescue the hostages."
Mrs. Cash, 60, says she won't give up until someone in
Washington gives her some answers.
"Before 1980, when I heard somebody talk about UFOs, I'd
laugh about it," she says. "I'd think, 'Boy, these people are
ready for the little men in the white coats.'
"But honey, this made a believer out of me."
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5/89
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