Pentagon Investigated Werewolf Incident at Skin-walker Ranch
Pentagon Investigated Werewolf Incident at Skin-walker Ranch
It has long been known that the Pentagon is interested in cases of "Unexplained Flying Objects" or UFO's, but if you dig deeper you will find that the government has investigated all sorts of bizarre paranormal phenomenon, including werewolves at the infamous "Skin-walker Ranch."
According to Native American legends & lore a skin-walker is a, "type of harmful witch who has the ability to turn into, possess, or disguise themselves as an animal."[1]
In an article published on military.com, Travis Tritten[2] writes,
"In early 2009, Lacatski and Kelleher sent a sailor whom they described as a senior engineer in naval intelligence, on a four-and-a-half month investigation of witnesses and evidence in the Nimitz case. That work would remain secret for years before being leaked by others.
After the Nimitz investigation, the sailor and two Marines were sent to a Utah property known as Skinwalker Ranch, where Bigelow, the owner, had funded his own private research of UFO and paranormal activity over the previous decade.
Skinwalker sits on just over 500 acres of steppe land near the town of Ballard in northeastern Utah. It has long been an alleged epicenter of strange happenings, dating back to tales from the Native American Ute tribe and Navajo people, who believe in malevolent witches called skinwalkers who can transform into animal-like creatures.
The ranch would later be the subject of a paranormal reality TV show under another owner.
The three active-duty service members, whose identities have been concealed by the researchers and the Defense Department, allegedly witnessed a black void on the land that filled them with fear. Lacatski and Kelleher claim the men experienced paranormal activity after leaving the ranch and returning to homes in the Washington, D.C., area, such as orbs, dark figures in bedrooms at night, and strange noises.
The wife and two teen children of the sailor who investigated the Nimitz incident claimed to have seen a wolf-like creature that walked on two hind legs staring into their Virginia home on two occasions.
Military.com asked the Pentagon whether it could confirm the paranormal research. "No," was the one-word response from Sue Gough, the department's spokesperson on UFOs. She pointed to the boilerplate disclaimer on the Lacatski and Kelleher book, which says the department's clearance for publication does not imply factual accuracy."
If you want to know more about werewolves, please check out my book Legends & Lore of Werewolves available as a kindle e-book and paperback.
If you want to know about non-werewolf shape-shifters see this article.
Sources:
1.) Skin-walker
2.) How Believers in the Paranormal Birthed the Pentagon’s New Hunt for UFOs
Image source: pixabay.com free license, original images edited by me.
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