"It was the most difficult project of my life," Paulides said. So was it an easier road with the third documentary for Paulides? The area is a natural aquifer that raises questions when you study underwater submerged vehicles in the study of UFOs.Ĭould this area be used as a way to move UFOs onto the surface without detection to conduct their mysterious work? and points out a piece of the center of the country with no cases. Paulides sums up his beautifully shot and well-engineered documentary discussing his 64 geographical clusters of missing people in the U.S. Still frame from documentary of David Paulides. The local sheriff explains that there is nowhere to hide in the area and is unfamiliar with any animal that would cart a body away. The weeklong search turned up no evidence. Rock Springs, WY, teacher Terry Meador also went missing in an open desert area. Searchers did find Gustafson’s rifle and fanny pack, but the man was never found. The six-day search was hampered by bad weather. Retired Carbon County Sheriff Jerry Colson explains the intense search that included canines, foot patrols, and helicopters. Just east of this area 72-year-old elk hunter Charles Gustafson went missing in Medicine Bow on October 11, 2006. She also pointed out that he had never had a vasectomy. His girlfriend Kim Meese was able to tell investigators that he had seen a UFO in the same area and that it hovered and then followed him to the point that he was scared. He offers interesting case details.īad weather set in as the rescue teams searched and no tracks were ever found. ![]() The victim was also an elk hunter with 15 years of experience as a big game hunter.īryce Martin was part of the search and rescue team at Saratoga, Wyoming, and participated in the extensive seven-day search for Strittmatter. This disappearance is strangely the same time of year as the Higdon missing case, but 25 years later. MUFON Wyoming State Director Richard Beckwith explores the disappearance of Mark Anthony Strittmater, 44, who went missing on October 19, 2019, from Medicine Bow. Still frame from documentary showing a missing person poster about Mark Anthony Strittmater. Leo Sprinkle from the University of Wyoming was part of the investigation. Higdon passed several lie detector tests but was amazed when a doctor told him the tuberculosis spots on his lungs had cleared up.įamed alien contactee researcher Dr. It is implied that Higdon is going home once the being discovers he had a vasectomy. ![]() ![]() The witness is eventually returned, but only after the being explains that his people come to this region for elk, deer, and fish. Instantly, he finds himself inside a craft with the five elk. When he says he is, four pills float through the air toward him and he eats one. Then a man-like being shows up with odd features and asks Higdon if he’s hungry. The object was about seven feet by five feet. Then he soon noticed what appeared to be a glass cube floating in the air that you could peer directly through. Higdon noticed a group of five elk standing close to each other, except they weren’t moving. The most unusual case of oil driller and elk hunter Carl Higdon is explored after he went missing on October 25, 1974, in Medicine Bow, Wyoming. Still frame from documentary of news story about Carl Higdon. Kelleher of the highly-rated book, Hunt for the Skinwalker, and appeared in the excellent Jeremy Kenyon Lockyer Corbell-directed documentary Hunt for the Skinwalker. One federal agent told Knapp that they were interested in Paulides’ work. government does indeed study paranormal activity. The paranormal activity at Skinwalker is best summed up as both playful and dangerous. Las Vegas-based network reporter-broadcaster George Knapp is first up to talk about similarities between Paulides’ work and his research with the now-famous Skinwalker Ranch in Utah. ![]() They go missing near water, boulders, swamps, or bogs. Victims are often found in areas that have been searched multiple times. And just as the person disappears or when a search begins, bad weather moves in. Professional trackers cannot find tracks. Some of these profile points include the fact that in 97 percent of missing person cases that meet his criteria, canines brought in cannot pick up a scent.
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