Sources: UFO Days
A respected Pierce County village police officer, who has the satisfaction of knowing that many other persons saw the same flaming ball he did six months ago, confesses his life “isn’t what it used to be.”
First, George Wheeler hasn’t felt well since that clear spring night April 6 when a “flaming ball the size of a football field” raced over a hill from the northeast and flew silently over Wheeler after he halted his squad car abruptly and drove into a nearby ditch.
“Nobody seems able to determine what my ailment is,” the 70-year-old Wheeler said, even though he looks 15 years younger than he is.
“I’m reluctant to say it, but I think it is possible I got a good dose of radiation from that UFO.”
Second, the veteran police officer (20 years here in Pierce County and 10 years as a New York State Highway Patrol trooper) says he’s a believer now that UFOs exist.
“Before (April 6) I more or less shrugged them off.”
Third, Wheeler’s name has been added to the mailing lists of UFO enthusiasts all over the U.S. and Canada and he has received correspondence from government agencies as well as from many organizations interested in UFOs.
Wheeler’s story has appeared in the weekly tabloid The Tattler magazine and in about two weeks this same picture of him with today’s story will appear in the National Enquirer, another weekly tab newspaper distributed nationwide.
And his voice will be on a new record now being produced by Columbia Records which is compiling eyewitness accounts from many of the estimated 32 million Americans who claim to have observed UFOs. That record is due for release late this year or early in 1976.
But what is past is prologue and the next time George Wheeler sees a UFO, he’ll be prepared.
In his squad car now are field glasses and two types of cameras, including one specially adapted to night photography.
“I’m dying to get another change at seeing one,” he said this week.
Last April 6 while on night patrol duty just north of this small Pierce County village, Wheeler saw what appeared to be a huge airplane in distress, coming right at him from over a hill to the northeast. Wheeler halted his car, dove into a nearby ditch and prepared to brace for the expected whine of jet engines.
Instead, he heard no sound. The silent, flaming ball he estimated to be about 1,500 feet above and about the size of a football field, made no noise.
Still thinking it might be a 747 jet attempting to avoid crashing in the village, Wheeler hopped back into his squad car and drove to the southside “flats” where he hoped to get a better look. When he arrived there and stopped, he observed the flaming craft hovering motionless before it speeded up “at tremendous speeds, making 90-degree turns without slowing.” It finally took off to the west.
Wheeler, father of former University of Wisconsin football player Sam Wheeler, later learned that several persons in North Carolina also observed a UFO the same night.
“What saved me,” Wheeler recounted this week, “is that several other respected persons in Pierce County saw the same thing.” These persons include a young mother and Pierce County deputy sheriffs.
Before April 6 George Wheeler was like most Americans, doubting stories told by UFO sighters.
Wheeler said that whenever he is on night duty, assisting Elmwood Police Chief Gene Helmer on a part-time basis now that he has “retired,” he constantly is “looking up in the sky. I’m a firm believer that they are coming back, that we’ll see them again.”
Many persons around here were skeptical when they first heard of Wheeler spotting the flaming ball, “but when others said they saw the same thing it stopped being a joke.”
Wheeler said the craft made no sound, there was no radio interference and “my wife knew the minute I arrived home that something was wrong. I guess it was written all over my face.”
Sources: UFO Days