Tuesday, April 14, 2009

The Great UFO Hoax of 2009

If you prefer to keep a little magic in your life—by which I mean believing in the possibility of UFOs—then read no further. For I am going to tell you about the latest UFO hoax.

You may remember the sightings of a UFO over Morristown, N.J., in January, which was blogged about and even captured on video that has been posted to YouTube as clips from TV broadcasts and an amateur astronomer.

Last November, Joe Rudy and Chris Russo, two 20-somethings, were sitting around discussing pseudoscience and the many people who believe one or another form of it. Rudy describes himself as “an avid reader of Skeptic magazine” who teaches science and gives private music lessons. Russo works in sales and says he “intends to continue his quest to spread reason and truth, one pseudoscience at a time. “We had always had a strong interest in why people were so easily fooled by such irrational superstitions as psychic ability, spiritual mediums, alien abductions, and the like,” they write. So they “set out on a mission to help people think rationally and question the credibility of so-called UFO ‘professionals’.”

They cooked up a spaceship hoax “to show everyone how unreliable eyewitness accounts are, along with investigators of UFOs.” They used five feet of fishing line to tie flares to each of five three-foot helium balloons and launched them from a field on Jan. 5, 2009. “Once all five balloons were ready for takeoff (with our fingers on the verge of frost bite),” they write, “we struck the 15-minute flares and released them into the sky in increments of fifteen seconds,” filming the UFOs as they floated away.

Media coverage was extensive. A lot of it featured Paul Hurley, a pilot, and his family, who appeared on several news broadcasts describing the strange lights they saw in the sky. (For some reason, reporters find pilots’ UFO sightings especially believable.) Rudy and Russo repeated the performance four more time, gaining media coverage for each. Conspiracy Web sites and radio shows covered the sightings, but “the icing on the cake came when the popular History Channel show UFO Hunters featured the Morristown UFO as their main story one week,” the duo recall. “Bill Birnes, the lead investigator of the show and the publisher of UFO Magazine, declared definitively that the Morristown UFO could not have been flares or Chinese lanterns.”

This was the pair’s main quarry, to expose the foolishness of UFO “investigators.” They write: “Are UFO investigators simply charlatans looking to make a quick buck off human gullibility? ... If a respected UFO investigator can be easily manipulated and dead wrong on one UFO case, is it possible he’s wrong on most (or all)\of them? Do the networks buy into this nonsense, or are they in it for the ratings?”

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Followed by..........



MORRISTOWN, NEW JERSEY: DISTRICT ATTORNEY TO CHARGE UFO HOAXERS


Prosecutor plans press conference on UFO hoax claims

Morris County Prosecutor Robert A. Bianchi will conduct a press conference to discuss the claims by a pair of Whippany Park HS alumni that they staged a UFO hoax involving road flares and balloons earlier this year.

Earlier this week, the two men posted videos online that demonstrated how they used flares and balloons, launching them to create the illusion of red-lighted UFOs hovering over Morris County five times in January and February.

The mysterious lights made headlines across the U.S.

Authorities have said the flares and balloons could have interfered with air traffic in the region, including Newark Liberty International Airport flight patterns, and also posed a fire hazard as they floated over homes in the Morristown area.

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