SUBJECT: M.I.B. EXPERIENCE - 1976                            FILE: UFO2740




                         M.I.B. EXPERIENCE  -  1976 *
                         ----------------------------

   In 1976   the journal "Flying Saucer Review"   published  a  series  of
   articles about a UFO case in Maine.  A physician, Dr.  Herbert Hopkins,
   had  been  one of the primary investigators in the case.   Hopkins  had
   accumulated tapes and other documentation on the case and had performed
   extensive hypnotic regression on the witnesses.

   On  Saturday,  September 11,  1976,  at 8:00  p.m.  Hopkins received  a
   telephone call from a man asking if he could come over and discuss  the
   UFO case with him.  The man said he was associated with a UFO group  in
   new  jersey.   The  man asked Hopkins if he was  home  alone.   Hopkins
   responded he was.  Despite concerns about drug-related robbery, Hopkins
   found himself agreeing to the request.

   Although  Hopkins was a bit confused by his positive reply to the  man,
   he walked to the back door to turn on the porch light.  When he got  to
   the door,  the man was coming up the steps. This concerned Dr. Hopkins,
   he could not figure out where the man could have called from and arrive
   so quickly at his doorstep.  Still, Hopkins opened the door and let the
   man in without even asking the man who he was or what he wanted.

   The man's appearance was strange;  he was about 5'8"  tall,  no hair  -
   completely bald,  had no eyelashes,  no eyebrows.  He was dressed in  a
   neatly pressed black suit with a black derby and black shoes.   Hopkins
   noticed  the  man was extremely pale,  but had ruby red lips.   Hopkins
   noticed the man was wearing lipstick and grey gloves.

   The man asked a number of questions about the Maine UFO case,  speaking
   in a monotone voice and did not emphasize words in his sentences.

   Suddenly,  the man told Hopkins that he had two coins in his pocket and
   to  take one out and put it in his hand.  Hopkins only had two coins in
   his pocket and he pulled a penny out.

   The  man  told Hopkins to stare at the penny.  As he watched the  penny
   became blurry and disappeared.  The man then asked Hopkins what he knew
   of Barney Hill.  Hopkins said Barney died after a long illness. The man
   told him he died because he knew too much.

   Hopkins  was  taken  by fear at this point.  The man  told  Hopkins  to
   destroy   all  his  notes,   tapes  messages  he  had  concerning   the
   investigation  immediately.  The man stood up,  and began talking  much
   slower. each word dragged as the man slowly walked to the door. Hopkins
   opened the door for the man, and he walked down the steps very slowly.

   Hopkins saw a light at the end of the driveway, and thought it was from
   the man's car,  but the man walked in the opposite direction.   Hopkins
   ran to a window to see where the man was going,  but he was not  there.
   He ran to the door, looked out, but the man and the light were gone.

   When his family returned, he and his son looked in their driveway,  and
   they  found  a  series of four-inch wide tracks about  eighteen  inches
   long.   They  were deep into the driveway and resembled tracks  from  a
   tractor.   The marks disappeared the next day.  that evening,   Hopkins
   destroyed his UFO records.

   [From "People of The Web", by Gregory L. Little, copyright 1990]




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