Money Crimes with Nicole Lapin - Travis Walton: Abducted by a UFO | Crimes Of…
Episode Date: December 26, 2025In 1975, 22 year-old Travis Walton was struck by a blinding light in the Arizona forest and vanished without a trace. Five days later, he returned with a story that defied belief. In this episode of C...rimes Of… Sabrina and Corinne uncover the truth behind the Travis Walton Incident: the alien abduction case that made headlines and still haunts UFO history.Follow Crimes Of… on your podcast app: https://play.megaphone.fm/l-fgzmmsrty0mrmlpcbplq To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi, Crime House community. It's Vanessa Richardson.
Looking for another Crime House original podcast to add to your rotation, you will love Clues with Morgan Absher and Kaelin Moore.
Every Wednesday, Morgan and Kaelin dig into the world's most notorious crimes, clue by clue, from serial killers to shocking murders.
They follow the trail of clues, break down the evidence, and debate the theories.
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On the fifth day of Crimes Miss, we look back 50 years on this day when 22-year-old Travis Walton was struck by a blinding light in the Arizona forest and vanished without a trace.
Five days later, he returned with a story that defied belief.
In this episode, join Crimes of with Sabrina DeAnna Roga and Corinne Vienne as they uncover the truth behind this alien abduction case that made headlines and still haunts UFO history.
Here's the episode now. For more, follow Crimes of on your podcast app.
Sabrina, are you ready for another game of would you rather?
Absolutely, especially because today's episode is taking us away from haunted houses and ghosts into space.
Your favorite?
My absolute favorite. I want to live there.
Blast her off into space. Say bye-bye, Sabrina. She'll be the happiest person ever.
That's right. This week we're talking all about my favorite aliens.
And today we're covering the story of Travis Walton, who claimed that in 1975,
he was abducted by a UFO.
Before we get into the juicy deeds,
we are going to pick two moments from the story
and see which one you think is the lesser of two evils.
Okay, Sabrina, here are your two choices, and all of you too.
Would you rather really be abducted by aliens,
but you live in this world where no one will ever believe you?
Or would you rather fake an alien abduction,
but you have to hide that secret?
for decades or the rest of your life i would much rather be abducted easy this is the easiest one
i've ever had to answer and have no one believe me because i don't need everyone i i just need to
have the moment with the aliens yeah that's all i want and also the anxiety of trying to hold a
secret for the rest of your life true to like trying to fake an abduction and then cover it up
forever that seems that would eat me alive right why lie doesn't sound fun no and if you so long as you
Believe in yourself. That's all that matters.
Also, I know that if I was abducted by an alien and I told you, you would believe me.
Oh, I wouldn't want to find it was I believe you.
Yeah, and then if the aliens weren't nice to you, guess who's getting beamed up and's going to start some shit?
Me.
With my boy Bigfoot.
We're going.
Okay, so either option can be pretty isolating, especially in the context of this case.
As we get into the story of Travis Walton's alien abduction, you might grapple with these stories.
to narratives as well.
Was it real?
Or was it all a hoax?
Those are the questions.
According to Travis, the alien abduction
was very, very real.
We believe it.
But not everyone does.
Some people think that Travis is full of it.
We have our own opinions,
which we will get into.
But we believe Travis.
But to this day, it is not really clear
which version of events is the truth.
Was Travis Walton abducted by Anne?
Welcome to Crimes
Welcome to Crimes of the Paranormal,
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Our team's twice a day show bringing you breaking cases,
updates and unbelievable stories from the world of crime that are happening right now.
Today we're talking about Travis Walton, a man who vanished in 1975, and later claimed that
he had been taken aboard a UFO, abducted by aliens. Was this a genuine alien abduction?
Or one of the most elaborate hoaxes in UFO history? Well, let's talk about it.
A warning before we begin. This episode contains descriptions of abduction.
This story is a bit different than the other ones we've covered on the show, which I'm very excited about.
Because unlike a lot of the more grisly stories we've talked about, the case of Travis Walton doesn't involve any death or murder.
Woo!
Yay!
In a way, nobody was harmed, at least physically.
This case does come with what I imagine was and still is a lot of psychological trauma, especially for those involved.
Yeah.
But depending on who you talk to, Travis Walton is either a pillar of a fringe community or is a
biggest grifter. Travis's story has become one of the most well-known and controversial alien
abduction stories in history. It even inspired the 1993 film Fire in the Sky. But whether or not
his story is true is hard to verify, I will say, as we have said already, we personally do believe
that this is true. And while we hear the state the facts, I'm not a journalist. So I'm going to
go ahead and tell you right now, I'm not going to be unbiased. I am going to be. I am going to
bias this entire episode. Yeah, and we'll believe Travis. Yeah, because he's the victim in the story
and we should believe him. He says that's what happened to him. Yeah. I believe in aliens. I believe in
Travis Walton and I believe he was abducted. Put it on a shirt. I'll wear it very proudly.
Bumper stickers. Okay. Tandrum over. Why don't you set the stage for us, Krid?
Okay. On November 5th, 1975, Travis Walton and some friends were driving through the Apache
Sit Grieves National Forest near Heber, Arizona after a long day of work in a logger.
crew. On their way home, they were startled to see a bright light floating in the sky. It was a
UFO projecting a beam of light onto the ground. And despite their friends' warnings,
22-year-old Travis approached this light. They watched as Travis was struck by the light
and then thrown some distance away. And they're terrified, and the friends fled. They eventually
told the police about the event, claiming that a UFO had taken
Travis in front of their very eyes, and police and officials searched for Travis for five days
with nothing to show for it. But shortly after midnight on the fifth day, Travis returned.
And just like his friend said, Travis claimed that he had been abducted by aliens.
There is so much to this case. It is one that I have wanted to cover for so long, one because I'm
obsessed with aliens but two because it really is one of the most infamous cases he's done interviews
like he's willingly speaking on this yeah and so you also get the opportunity to see him recall the
things that happen to him and you kind of get to like sink saying it but like you get to like judge
based on his behavior in the way he's presenting whether you believe him or not but sometimes we don't
get that like people are either hidden away and won't ever talk about it or the way that they're talking
about it feels so outlandish that they just immediately get deemed a hoaxer. Well, then also with
alien cases in general, like the stereotype or the belief is that a lot of people lose time.
They lose memory. They know that they lost time and that something strange happened, but they
don't have memory of what actually happened. Right. This is one of those instances where
the men in black didn't get him. His mind wasn't wiped. Or if some of his mind was wiped, he does
have some memory. And what he does remember is.
wild. Yeah. It's not like Kate McKinnon's experience of a brutal UFO.
Aliens are no aliens, but definitely aliens. Travis Walton's story is fascinating to say
the least. Despite Travis Walton's insistence and never-changing story, by the way, people are
divided. And given that aliens and the existence of aliens or presence of aliens is a hot topic,
it is one filled with lots of controversy, lots of political conspiracies, and real hoaxes. It is
difficult to verify what happened to Travis. We can't call up my BFF alien and be like, hey,
buddy, tell me your side of the story. Did you take Travis? What was he like? Yeah. And it's hard to
know what actually happened to him during that week, that five days and six hours that he disappeared.
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It's a little past midnight on November 10, 1975, somewhere in Hebrew, Arizona. Or is it?
Travis Walton's eyes opened to a blinding white light.
For a moment, he thinks he's still in the ship,
that strange, sterile place where humanoid beings with two large eyes hovered over him in silence,
where he felt paralyzed and weightless.
But then he feels the air, sharp and cold.
It stings his lungs.
He takes inventory of his surroundings.
Beneath him, there's something rough, hard, asphalt maybe?
He can't tell.
Above him, he sees that same light, but now it's shrinking, moving away, disappearing higher and higher into the dark sky.
And that's when his mind is flooded with memories, flashes.
The walls of the craft, the dull hum vibrating through his bones and those ominous beings.
But as he tries to remember what they'd done to him, the UFO careens away into the night sky,
leaving him in the dark, alone, under the stars.
He realizes he's outside, lying in the middle of the road.
He tries to prop himself up, but his body feels like it's been hit by a truck.
How long was he gone?
Minutes?
Hours?
Eventually, Travis regains his strength.
He stands, and he begins to hobble down the road.
When he sees the yellow glow of a gas station sign, he picks up the pace, belining to a row of pay phones.
And shakily, he punches in the phone number of his brother-in-law, Grant.
Travis prays that Grant is still awake.
It rings.
And rings.
Travis's hands shake uncontrollably.
Then finally, Grant answers.
His voice groggy and confused.
Crying into the receiver, he tells his brother-in-law,
brother-in-law, they brought me back. Please, somebody come get me. When he's finally reunited
with his family, Travis is disoriented, convinced he's only been gone for a few hours. But the
truth is, Travis has been missing for five days. In the hours following that call, it was just a whirlwind,
both for Travis but also for his family trying to figure out, like, what exactly happened to him.
He had just been missing for five days.
And in those five days, his family had begun to be convinced that he had been murdered.
Right.
So there's this weird mix of relief.
Travis is alive.
But then they're like, what the heck happened to you, though?
Yeah.
And poor Travis, he's also super confused.
He's disoriented.
He's trying to grapple with the truth of what happened to him.
Right.
Because it feels impossible.
I'm like trying to picture myself just like laying there in a field watching a spacecraft just like take off.
above me and me being like, wait
what? That is so confusing
You start to question like are you losing
your mind? Did you hit your head and you have
a traumatic brain injury? Like what's going on?
So as he's regaining
his sense
of surroundings, he starts
talking to his family about what he'd seen
when he was gone. He talked about the
spaceship full of creatures. They had
unsettling large eyes and abnormal
gray skin. And in short, he basically was like, I think
I was abducted by aliens, which actually
backed up the claims of Travis's friends who fled the night of his abduction, also saying that
he was abducted by aliens. Right. And despite the numerous people who at the time, and even today,
don't believe that Travis was abducted, his family actually did believe him. Which I love. And I think
that's, if anything, taking away from the story, like, I'm glad that Travis has a good support
system around him. But then I guess, like, on the side of the non-believers, it doesn't help that
Travis's family, they were really big believers in UFOs and aliens. So it's also like, well,
was that part of like the groundwork and psyche of Travis? Like, is this hoax perpetuated by
all of his friends and family? Sure. And so then when Travis told him about his experience,
they were like, great. We're glad you're back. We understand you're abducted. And we totally
believe you. Yeah. I love that they believed him. And I mean, also let's look at the landscape here.
So Heber, Arizona, it's Arizona.
We've got the desert landscapes.
It's a UFO hotspot.
It's Sedona's there.
Superstition Mountains are there.
Not far from Area 51.
And people in this area are not strangers to UFO sightings either.
No.
Half the gas stations have like a little hokey alien statue to take a picture with.
Exactly.
And even local police had experience or at least knowledge of alien and UFO sightings in this area.
So the idea that someone could have been taken.
by aliens or by a UFO wasn't fully out of the realm of the possibility, and the more Travis
spoke about his abduction, the more press it generated. Soon, newspapers were breathlessly covering
the tale of the Arizona man who claimed he had been beamed up by a UFO. So since 1975,
since Travis returned, this has turned into an extremely polarizing story. Yeah. And whether you
believe Travis or not, well, that is up to you. But for this episode. How do we feel?
To understand his story and to understand the conspiracies behind it,
we are going to go back to the very beginning to November 5th, 1975,
when the abduction supposedly took place.
The day passed by like any other for Travis.
He was a forestry worker, and for the last few months,
he'd been thinning out trees in the Apache Sitgreaves National Forest.
For hours, Travis worked away that day,
sawing enormous logs into planks that would later be burned in the wet season.
There were seven men in total on this crew, including Travis's friend and future brother-in-law, a guy named Mike Rogers.
The group often carpooled together, spending the long drives talking about their interests and their hobbies.
And according to Mike, this is how things went on the evening of November 5, 1975.
So so far, nothing out of place, just like a normal day, normal conversation, normal group gathering for these guys.
So after a long day of work in the woods, the seven men live.
loaded up into Mike's pickup truck to head home.
The sun had already set, and the truck's headlights were the only thing illuminating the road.
For a while, the truck wove through the two-lane road in the dark as the group just chatted about their plans for the evening.
But then suddenly, out of nowhere, a blinding light is shooting through the trees.
And the men cannot figure out where this thing is coming from.
No, and they're all really confused by it.
And they're like, is that the moon?
But then they can see the moon somewhere else in the night sky.
A new street lamp I'm going to put in today.
Right.
They're very confused by it, but they're trying to think rationally, but they know.
Mine wouldn't immediately go to UFO.
No.
Not immediately.
Unless you're us.
Sure.
So naturally, they're all very curious and they want to know what this thing is.
So they keep driving closer to this light to get a better look at it.
Which we would do, I think.
Yeah.
I would be like, let's go follow this light.
What is that?
Like, yeah, is the moon coming up like so bright and huge to the tree line?
So up ahead, there's a small clearing amongst the trees.
And from what they could tell, it seems like this clearing is where the light was coming from.
So Mike gunned the engine picking up speed so that they could reach the clearing as quickly as possible
before this light disappeared so they could figure out what it was.
And finally, in the thicket of evergreens, as it parted, they saw something unbelievable.
Hovering about 90 feet off the ground was a shining golden spacecraft.
It was small, no more than 20 feet in diameter.
and this ship emitted an eerie glow, casting the surrounding trees in a golden hue.
So now they're looking at this and they're like, oh, that's where the bright light is coming from.
Definitely not the moon, definitely not a street light.
Is that a UFO?
An unidentified flying object.
So Mike slams on the brakes, stops the car on the side of the road, and for a few minutes, like, this whole group of guys is just staring at this thing with nothing to say.
they're like is this real but then it's not moving too it doesn't seem threatening right like
I would imagine myself parking and be like what is going on right right parking and staring at it
yeah all of a sudden Travis throws open the passenger door and jumps out of the truck
and Mike is recalling this and he's saying it's almost like Travis was possessed and so these men
are watching Travis their friend approach this ominous UFO and
they're like yelling at him because I can tell it he's going to walk up to it right they're yelling at him they're warning him like come back come back he is not listening and as Travis would later tell it he walked straight into the clearing toward the strange light and he said that as he approached it the floating spacecraft started to were louder and louder as if it could sense him coming and then a beam of light just shot out of the
craft and on to Travis. I would be shrieking if I were in the car witnessing that. And I think
they were. Yeah. It was so bright. The men in the truck had to shield their eyes. And the noise
from the ship was now deafeningly loud. As their eyes adjusted to the light, Travis's friends
saw him being lifted from the ground. His body was limp and motionless. So whatever this beam was,
it basically knocked him out. So he's just like a limp body there being brought up off the ground.
he's floating 20 feet in the air and then suddenly he falls the light drops him and Travis's body is laying there unmoving unconscious his friends are convinced and terrified that he probably like died from this fall or from being struck by this beam and so they're shitting themselves and they hightail it out of there they drive away they leave him in the clearing which I'm sure you're like what the hellie why did he do that why would what the hellie why would you abandon your friend but also keep in mind you're terrified there's this you
UFO, which is not something you see in everyday life, that just maybe killed your friend. I think
they're all like, oh my God, are we next? Right. Their truck is not going to protect them.
Exactly. They just witnessed something so otherworldly that they can't explain, and it does look like
in an instant it was able to kill her friend. So they chose flight. They storm out of there. Mike
slams on the gas, guns the pickup truck down the road as quickly as it would go, leaving Travis behind.
And as they're speeding away, the men in the truck are in a full panic, trying to understand what the hell just happened, and if their friend Travis really was dead.
And what was that object floating in the sky?
Right.
Had all of them truly just seen a UFO?
All these questions felt impossible to answer, but the further away they drove, the more the men started to calm down.
And whatever had happened back there, they could just agree, it was very, very bad.
Whatever it was was bad.
And the more they were able to calm down, the more they realized that they should not have fled.
Or maybe they should have.
But now they need to go back and find Travis, their friend.
So Mike swings the truck back around and they head back toward the clearing.
Truly only 15 minutes, as they said, had passed since they first fled.
But when they get back to the clearing, there's no sign of a UFO and there is no sign of Travis.
They are both gone.
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The forest is completely still as the men stare in disbelief.
The only sound is that of their ragged breathing.
They're staring at the spot where their friend Travis had just been standing where
mere minutes ago a light hit him and threw him backward.
Where is he?
Where is Travis?
Where is the UFO?
They call for him, yelling his name, searching tirelessly for him.
But there is no sign of Travis.
How could he just vanish?
So panic settles in as the clock starts to tick.
What do they do next?
Some of the men want to keep searching.
Others are convinced that they are still in danger.
Finally, they agree they need to call for help.
But there's no 911 system out here in rural Arizona,
so they have to drive 10 miles to a payphone in the town of Heber, Arizona.
Ken Peterson volunteers to make the call.
But as the line begins to ring, a bubble forms in his throat.
What is he supposed to even say?
Then another voice picks up on the other end,
Deputy Ellison of the Navajo County Sheriff's Office,
and Ken doesn't have any more time to think.
He stammers out that one of their crew, Travis Walton, is missing.
He might be hurt or,
Dead? A short while later, around 7.40 p.m., nearly an hour after Travis was struck and went
missing, Deputy Ellison arrives. Immediately, Ellison gets the feeling that this group is holding out
on him. They know something, and for some reason, they aren't telling him. Some of the men
look away, fidgeting, kicking at the dirt. But seeing the hesitation in his friends,
Ken decides to speak up. He tells the deputy everything about the UFO, how to
Travis was taken away, and then the other men back up his story, insisting that, yes,
all of that is true. The deputy stands patiently, listening to all of it. He doesn't betray a single
expression, which only makes the group of men more uneasy. They start talking over each other,
trying to think of some detail that might convince Ellison that their story is the real deal,
because they know what they're saying sounds totally ridiculous. Finally, Ken looks nervously
at Deputy Ellison and says, quote,
you don't believe us, do you?
There's a long, terrible pause
while Ellison thinks it over.
But then, Deputy Ellison says
he does believe them.
In fact, he believes them so much
that he needs to call for backup.
And this was so much more support
than this group of Ben had hoped for.
Right. How terrifying.
Oh, my gosh.
Because I can't even imagine going through that.
Right.
Like if you and I were together and I was abducted by aliens, you would be like, I need to help her.
Yes, I can talk about wanting that all day.
But in reality, if that happened, it would be horrifying.
Yeah.
Oh, soundly alarms.
This is international news.
Right.
But then what do you do?
I don't know.
We like can barely get to space ourselves.
Exactly.
What's a human to do?
So even they knew that an alien abduction would sound very bizarre to anyone who hadn't been there to see it.
But sure enough, Deputy Ellison said that he believed them.
He was willing to make some calls.
And shortly after, the six forestry workers found themselves talking to the county sheriff himself.
He had them recount the events of that night in great detail, leaving nothing unsaid.
And incredibly, the county sheriff also believed this group.
The sheriff could tell that the group of men had been so seriously,
spooked by whatever had just happened out there in the field.
But this was definitely not a prank.
This was the real deal.
Yeah.
And it wasn't just that because the sheriff himself had personal and professional experience with UFO sightings.
So he told the group that this was not the first time someone had called 911 about seeing a strange unidentified aircraft in this region.
In fact, he himself had even seen a UFO once.
And it looked very similar to what this group of six men.
had described seeing.
Yeah.
So that made him believe them even more.
Right.
And that's so incredibly reassuring to the group of friends, of Travis's friends.
But when the sheriff said that they needed to drive back up to the site of the disappearance,
all six men are suddenly frozen because none of them want to go back up.
They're super scared, not after everything that they'd just seen.
Like the threat is still there.
Yeah.
Like what if it comes back, the ship that could kill them?
But the cops were insistent that at least one of the witnesses needed to join them to help them begin their search.
So after some convincing Travis's brother-in-law, Mike Rogers agreed to join them.
I imagine like them playing rock, paper, scissors, shoot to decide which one of them has to go.
Oh, gosh.
Okay, so as the police cruiser pulls onto the gravel near the forest clearing,
Mike feels the hair on the back of his neck stand on end.
And walking through the grass, he couldn't help but continue to steal glances upward at the night sky,
fearing that this aircraft, spacecraft, UFO, is going to come back for him.
I just had a thought that, like, if that happens today, now that we have drones, like, are there microphones?
I've never used to drone.
Like, could there be, like, a little microphone or, like, attach their back?
I'll FaceTime.
Stick me on the drone on FaceTime, and then I'll drive you there.
Well, I also just, my understanding and belief of aliens is that they are much more advanced beings than we are.
So, like, are any of them really safe anywhere?
No.
Right.
So I imagine that they spend a lot of time paranoid.
But so Mike goes up with them.
And this is when things in the case do start to turn a little bit because when they survey the area, the supposed encounter abduction site, things stop adding up.
Yeah.
Because there was no evidence of any living creature being in this entire area at all.
So there were no footprints, animal, human, or otherwise, which is so weird, just like a completely untouched section.
Which, again, going back to aliens being more advanced than us, I would believe that they would wipe the evidence because they don't want people finding.
Or they have men in black come and sweep the dirt.
Right. But this time a couple days have, yeah, you would still think that there'd be some sort of evidence because I was like, well, maybe it left some sort of like electrobial.
Or magnetic or like some sort of thing where like all the animals were staring clear.
You would think.
But that doesn't mean that prints and feces and things left behind from hours before shouldn't still be there.
Well, and also the group of six men had just been there an hour before calling out for the friend Travis looking for him.
So their footprints should be there.
Right.
Their car prints should be there.
That's exactly.
Like they're a big, heavy work truck.
Right.
That definitely leaves a mark.
So I do understand from the police side of things why they would start to question it because they're like, okay, they brought us back to the site, but there's literally no evidence of anything that they said here.
Yeah.
So they're like, hmm, maybe there's something else happening here.
But they're like, okay, let's continue to search.
Maybe we'll find something.
But they do come back empty handed.
So eventually, the police had to call off the search by the end.
Like, it's getting late.
They can't find anything.
Yeah.
And they couldn't find any clues to lead them to this missing man.
So now by the end of the night on November 5th, 1975, police are starting to worry that maybe there's a bigger crime here, one committed by man, not by alien, that perhaps something happened between these seven men, a fight, an accident, that Travis had been killed and now these six living men were trying to cover it up.
Which is a good theory to have, right?
Like you want to cover all the bases.
But there was also no evidence to back that theory up either.
Right.
So the investigation continued.
And the following morning, the police returned to the site with around 50 people to begin scouring the surrounding woods, looking for Travis or any evidence of Travis.
Yep.
And while the police resumed their search, there was another order of business to take care of, telling Travis's family about his disappearance.
So according to the sheriff's report and multiple interviews, Mary Walton, who's Travis's mother,
took the news really well.
And this is a big factor
that people who are pro hoax
really lean on
because they're like,
Mary was just told her son is missing
and she's super calm.
Ellison even stated that Mary didn't seem upset.
She just asked if they were sure he wasn't dead.
Which, let's unpack that because,
sure, it can be seen as a weird reaction.
Yeah.
But I know in my mind I was just going through
like did she ever have dreams as a young kid of like being abducted or something? And so she's like,
oh, is it the same people who took me once? I love that. That's where you don't. Conspiracy,
tinfoil hat is on. I'm more like, what is a normal? What is a good reaction to being told your son is
missing? Like, it sounds like asking, are you sure he wasn't murdered? Is this like, please tell me he's
not murdered? Like, I'd rather him be missing because then there's hope to find him. Right. And it's
also like, okay, you're about, you're spinning this, what could feel like an outlandish
tail to me.
Right.
So, like, what are you covering up?
Like, is this a cover up from the police themselves, too?
Like, I would also be really suspicious.
Right.
So, according to people, she acted very weird, irregular, and calm when told her son was
missing.
Which maybe, I mean, I feel like I kind of have those same reactions when things happen where
I immediately go to, like, what's the action or, like, how can I plot?
Yeah.
To uncover something or to like solve something.
Right.
Like I can't panic right now.
No, no, no.
Yeah.
There are some other reports that Travis's older brother, Dwayne Walton, also reacted a bit strangely.
And as the case in investigation unfolded, both Dwayne and Mary Walton were very adamant in their belief that Travis had been abducted by aliens.
So much so that they didn't participate in any search efforts.
Which definitely is weird.
Mm-hmm.
claiming earthly searches were pointless.
To play devil's advocate, maybe this is a form of denial, but also, it's really
freaking weird. Even if you think he's abducted by aliens, wouldn't you want to go search for him?
Right. Or like any evidence of like how to get in contact with aliens? Which aliens took
them? I don't know. So by November 6th, 1975, the police are shifting from confusion to suspicion.
They interviewed the Walton family, as well as the six men who were supposed witnesses, or now maybe
potential suspects and they start to build some theories so first and foremost Travis was murdered and this
theory is basically saying like the UFO an abduction story is starting to sound like a really big
cover up right and these men had murdered Travis maybe it was an accident Travis was their friend
but the UFO story is made up this is their cover up to explain why he's missing right the men
start to double down on their accounts, and Mike Rogers even tells officials that Travis
loved aliens and spoke of them on occasion, even once saying, I wouldn't mind being
abducted, which sounds like someone I know.
So basically someone could murder me and then basically like, no, she got abducted by aliens.
She finally fulfilled her wish.
There's years and years.
We're so happy for her.
Of evidence of me saying, I want to get abducted.
Yeah.
So a statement like this only made police believe that there was a cover up and, and, you know,
that they were really now trying to sell the story of like,
it was aliens, it was a UFO.
So now they start operating under this belief
that this is a cover-up of Travis's murder.
But soon a new theory starts to unfold.
Because naturally, man abducted by aliens in Arizona
becomes quite the sensational story.
And as the days passed, local newspapers start to pick up this story.
And quickly, it's gaining a lot of attention,
a lot of other interested parties as well.
and the family and these six witnesses
are starting to get a lot of attention
enough that it's planting little seeds of suspicion
that these people are doing this for attention.
And so investigators and journalists
and people in the public are starting to worry
that this was planned.
Right. And I feel like that's actually something
that comes up with like almost every public UFO story
where it's like the idea that this was for attention.
It's the classic hoax.
It's like, why are you doing this?
Attention.
There's other ways to get attention.
Yeah, starting only fans.
On November 8th, three days after Travis's disappearance,
a local UFO interest group called Ground Saucer Watch interviewed Mike Rogers.
Which we're going to call them GSW for this case.
Yeah, GSW.
They interviewed Mike Rogers, Dwayne and Mary Walton,
this abduction and none of them seemed concerned they all believed that Travis was abducted
by aliens and they're all sticking to the story. We both have brothers. Yeah. What would your
reaction be of Graham? Well, I'd be terrified for him because if he was abducted by aliens,
he would not want that. And I would go look like I would go looking for him. I would do
everything I could to try to bring him back because my brother is an earthbound being. He wants to
be grounded. What would you do? I would definitely go looking for Christian. Yeah, I'm not going to
I do think Christian would end up, like, assimilating very quickly and will.
I feel like Christian would have the Kristen Whig, or not the Kristen Wig, that sketch from S&L.
Like, he would have the, like, really pleasant experience.
Like, he'd come back and be like, those are my best friends.
He also, like, Christian can't talk without smiling and laughing.
So if that's something that aliens like, then he might be, like, very quick, instant friends, like, deemed...
He's the jester.
The jester.
Stay with us.
entertainment. They're like, Christian's the show. But yeah, no, I would definitely
immediately be like, we got to do everything. You'd like take out my walkie-talkie or like
all the radio frequencies, try to like beam some messages up, like do something.
Yeah. So yeah, we'd be worried if our brothers were on the planet anymore. But his
family thought that he wasn't and maybe they weren't overly concerned. So Travis at this
point could have been a million light years away on some alien planet having maybe some terrible
experiences or experiments done to him.
Or maybe he's something specifically.
Maybe I hope you hope.
It gets dropped off at the cat planet.
Who knows?
But people close to Travis didn't really seem concerned at all.
They all start to tell police that they knew Travis would come back with no harm done to him, really putting a lot of trust into this extraterrestrial group that they don't even know which type of alien took him.
And we're speaking on this so much as alien experts.
Yeah, as experts.
But no, it's also so after the fact like we weren't there.
We didn't get to sit with the family and really understand what they were experiencing.
But they're talking about it as far as the narrative has been told as if Travis just went down the street to grab a gallon of milk.
He'll be right back.
That's a weekend away with his girlfriend.
He'll be back.
He's actually having a good time.
Right.
So how this is suspicious to the police, it's also suspicious to GSW.
GSM is the first group to outwardly question if Travis's abduction was a hoax.
So this is literally a group dedicated to aliens in the belief in aliens.
Yeah.
And they're like, ooh, we really don't know about these folks.
Which I do appreciate because I feel like alien enthusiasts or anyone who likes the paranormal on the cryptids get this bad rap where it's like, oh, they just believe everything.
But this is a group from the history channel of that one guy with Spike Kier going wins.
Right.
But this group is like, we're going to investigate all angles and come at this from a rational mindset.
And rule out all rational reason before saying, yes, this is an alien abduction.
Right.
Yeah.
They're looking for proof and evidence of it.
So the cops were also at this point growing pretty wary of the alien abduction theory for the same reasons because something definitely felt off.
People were acting strangely.
Just, yeah, things were weird.
It seemed like the only person who could shed a light on this situation was Travis himself.
But he was nowhere to be found.
He could be anywhere.
He could be lost in the woods.
He could be in an alien spacecraft.
He could be in another galaxy.
So until Travis came back unharmed, the cops were basically at a dead end.
No one knew what happened or what to believe.
So now, just after midnight, on November 10, 1975, five days and some six hours or so after Travis was abducted, Travis Walton returns.
It's wild.
It is.
That's such a long time to be missing and come back.
Yeah.
And Travis frantically calls his brother-in-law grant, and then news quickly says,
spreads to the rest of the family. They're like, Travis is back. Travis is back. Everyone's calling
each other. I imagine the phone lines are going crazy. And in the early hours of the morning,
Dwayne Walton, Travis's older brother got the call. Dwayne wastes no time. He drives over to Grant's
place and he meets with Travis to see how his little brother is doing after being gone for five days
and six hours. Right. Like thinking about if he wasn't taking care of being without food, being without
water, whatever sort of harm could have happened to him, being the elements, whatever that might
be, whether it be space or
earthly woods. Well,
because keep in mind, like, when the six men
had driven away, could Travis
have gotten up and wandered away into the
desert and he had a head injury or something
from his fall? And he got confused.
Exactly. Because he fell 20 feet.
Yeah. Travis could have been in really bad shape.
And he was. He was a mess.
He was completely disoriented.
He's talking about aliens and spaceships.
And so Dwayne takes Travis home.
He tells him to rest.
They didn't need to get into it tonight because
Travis was in a bad state.
Meanwhile, Travis's friends were doing their best to convince police that he really had been abducted.
So also on November 10th, the same day Travis returned, the six men go to the police station to take lie detector tests.
And if you follow true crime, you probably know that lie detector tests are not an exact science.
And a lot of people say it's like just basically the most unreliable thing ever.
They're testing for stress rather than like truth and lies.
and if you're on the spot, I would be stressed.
You can beat, yes.
My heart rate would be like, whoo, through the roof.
There's evidence of like different.
If my name is Sabrina and I'd be like, I don't know.
And keeping there, I think there's like literally tests where like they have thumb tacks in people's shoes.
And if they like press down on it and create this other stimulus, how it can change their answer.
Well, yeah, I did learn.
It doesn't.
It doesn't work.
Well, I learned in the Americans, the show that if you clench your butthole really tight, that it is a way to pass.
The test. Oh, really? So do you just clench the whole time? Yeah, or only when they ask you. Yeah. Just clenched. Wow. If you're trying to pass a polygraph test, there's your answer. Hopefully they don't really use that much anymore. Yeah. Okay, so this is happening because they're trying to figure out if these guys are lying. It's not the best way to test if this group of witnesses was lying, but this is what happened. And one by one, each of the men was asked about that fateful night. And they all told the same.
same story about the UFO, the bright light, and how Travis vanished into thin air.
The person giving the test watched closely as each man spoke, waiting for the needle to jump across
the paper indicating a lie. But as the minutes passed, that never happened. The needle never budged,
not once, because as it turned out, they were telling the truth. But by the next day, a lot more
people were suspicious of this story. Was it a hoax? Had all six witnesses and Travis's whole
family been in on it? Is this why the family was so eerily unbothered by their loved one,
just going missing and being taken by aliens? And the question was like, did they fabricate
this alien story? Was it for attention? Was it for fame? What was the point? It's almost like
Travis coming back made it feel like more of a hoax that everyone was in on because no one was
him and he came back five days later and he's fine and has a tale to tell about aliens right yeah
and we've seen this in other obviously not alien related cases but like there's some true crime
cases that basically are the same formula all elaborate hoaxes yeah Travis can't sleep he's home again
but it doesn't feel like home his body is
weak. His thoughts are foggy and scattered. He doesn't remember where he's been. There's pieces,
a ceiling that glows, faces without expression, the sound of his own heart pounding in his ears.
And the phones won't stop ringing. Reporters. Deputies. UFO people. Everyone wants something
from Travis. Answers, proof, a story. His mother and brother try to protect him, but the house is
surrounded by cars and cameras. When he looks in the mirror, Travis barely recognizes himself.
He's lost weight, his beard's grown uneven, and there's a small mark on the inside of his
elbow like a needle puncture, but he doesn't know where it came from. He's told everyone what
he remembers, and in the dark when he's alone, it keeps coming back in flashes. Sterell white
walls, a blinding light, shapes moving around him, panic. A hand.
reaching for his face. Then silence. He tells himself it couldn't have been real,
that it must have been a dream or a shock or something his mind made up to fill in the
blanks. But the fear feels real. The ache in his chest is real. He closes his eyes
begging for sleep to take him. But the phone rings again. He presses his palms to
his temples trying to study his thoughts. He needs answers, not from the reporters, not from
police from himself because somewhere out there something happened to him and he wants to know
what naturally when Travis returned everyone wanted answers including Travis he's also looking for
answers right so Dwayne wanting to protect his brother and wanting to make sure that he was physically
okay because he lost 10 pounds in five days when he was missing even though he looked physically unharmed
Yeah. Travis was very much mentally struggling as well. So Dwayne had this sort of like protective role. And when Travis got up to pee for the first time since returning, Dwayne instructed him to save his urine for testing. Yeah. Smart. Very smart. Which is what Travis did. In the morning after his return, William H. Spalding, a UFO researcher affiliated with ground saucer watch, visited the house. And keep in mind at this point, Dwayne was working with them while Travis was missing. So he thought,
he could trust this guy and trust this group? So with Spalding, they came up with a plan.
One that Dwayne insisted put Travis's medical health first. He wanted Travis to get a full
medical examination. So Spalding suggested that they actually need to refer out to his friend,
Dr. Lester Stewart. So here's where things get weird and where accounts really do start to
vary because now there are multiple POVs being shared. But according to Travis and
Wayne, they believe they're going to a medical doctor, right? That's what Spalding told them.
But when they arrived at Dr. Stewart's office, his, like, plaque on the door states that he's a
hypnotherapist. So they're confused. And Dr. Stewart, when he opens the door, was like,
who are you? And Spalding hadn't told him they were coming, but he... Which is so sketchy.
So sketchy. But Dr. Stewart is, like, also excited because he's like, I've heard your story. I actually,
I would love to hypnotize you.
you. Come sit in my chair. How was that a full body examination? It's not. So Dwayne immediately
goes protective. He's like, there's something fishy about this. I don't like it. I also, we wanted
to do a medical examination. Travis is mentally struggling right now. He doesn't want to be
hypnotized. Right. So even a full body examination is probably going to be really rough for him to go
through. Exactly. So Dwayne says no. He tells Dr. Stewart, no, no, we're not doing hypnosis. We're going to
get medically examined first. It's very sweet. In his book, Travis recalls how his older brother
was basically his bodyguard and was so protective of him when he returned. So they leave Dr. Stewart's
office without Travis undergoing any hypnosis. But this pisses Dr. Stewart off. And so Dr. Stewart
starts to claim that Travis was shifty and he starts spreading the story that Travis and Dwayne
were hiding things and denied wanting to do hypnosis. And in his mind, it's because,
because they're hiding something.
Which is ridiculous because they didn't even know at the first place that they were going into a hypnotherapist office.
So like, I wouldn't do it either.
They were being taking advantage of and Spalding from GSW is like, oh, this is my chance.
Anyway.
Ugh, frustrating.
Yes.
But the word of this strange experience quickly got back to William Spalding and Ground Saucer Watch.
So GSW, they already had their suspicions about the story.
Remember they were the first people to bring up the idea or the theory that this was actually just a hoax and everyone was.
lying. And this basically was just an extra piece that they took as confirmation of their
uneasiness. So members of the group started talking to press, telling anyone who would listen
that this case was a hoax. So now reporters who are already hounding Dwayne and Travis are
berating them even more, demanding to speak to Travis. They are barking horrible insults at
everyone, calling them liars. Finally, on November 12, 1975, this is not two days after
Travis has returned, Sheriff Gillespie visits the home to take an official statement from Travis
and close the missing person's case because Travis is back.
Gillespie promises that he will not share Travis's location with the media.
So kind of behind the scenes, Dwayne is telling the press and people that Travis is getting
medical attention elsewhere.
And then he called the sheriff to say, hey, he's actually here, but I don't want people to know.
Right.
He's being protected.
Being protected.
And the sheriff agrees he won't tell people.
Travis answers all of the sheriff's questions.
He insists that he was abducted.
And before leaving, the sheriff turns to Travis and says one final thing.
He warns him of the consequences that would happen to him if he were lying.
Travis promises he would take a polygraph test to prove that he's telling the truth.
But Dwayne, being the protective brother, steps in and is like, no, no, no, he'll do it if the media is not alerted that he's not alerted
that he's doing it until after he's completed the polygraph test and after Travis is away from
the sheriff's office.
So basically, again, protecting him.
Right.
So there's not like a mob of people outside.
Exactly.
The next day, on November 13th, after a sleepless night riddled with nightmares,
Travis is finally medically examined.
And this examination lasts hours.
But his test came back completely normal.
Yep.
The nurses saw the small mark on Travis's inner arm, that sort of like needle mark looking thing.
and noted that it likely was from a needle.
They estimated that the mark had been made no more than 48 hours earlier,
so right around the time that Travis came back.
They took Travis's blood, but again, nothing out of the normal scope of blood work.
His blood work came back totally normal.
The mark on Travis' arm was the only physical evidence of something having happened to him,
and they said it looks like a needle.
Right.
And without any proof of what had been injected, that was pretty much.
It was a dead end.
Right.
So again, this could either back up that he was abducted, but they didn't harm him,
or that aliens, whatever they do, is undetectable by us as humans.
Or it could also be evidence that maybe nothing happened to him and he was tucked away hiding somewhere for five days.
And then poked himself.
Yeah.
To feed into the hoax.
That same day, November 13th, Paul Jenkins of the National Enquirer approached Travis and Dwayne and makes the proposal.
The Enquirer was in association with the APRO, the Aerial Phenomena Research Organization,
which I will call the APRO.
Arpo.
Well, no, it's AP.
APRO.
Apro.
Confusing.
And Paul Jenkins says that together, with the Enquirer with APRO and with Travis, they could do multiple things.
One, they could provide scientific testing that would prove Travis's story of abduction.
and two, this would serve as research for APRO,
and then the Enquirer could write a story.
Everyone wins, win, win, win.
Which is just, like, it's annoying that everyone wants something.
It's all about, like, giving everyone what they want.
But at least this is a group that's finally being like,
we want to help you tell your story properly
and give you the medical testing and research that could help do so.
Travis truly believed and hoped that an exclusive with the Inquirer
would put the chaos to bed
because he's sick and tired of being called a liar.
He's sick and tired of reporters screaming at him
outside his window.
So he's hoping that he does this big report
with the Inquirer, with APRO,
and that he can get out of doing
all the other hundreds of other interviews.
Right.
So they move to a nearby hotel in Scottsdale.
It's a room that was paid for in full
by the National Enquirer,
which is a fact that makes people
who believe it to hoax, like they harp on it because they're like, oh, he just wanted money and
look, now he gets to say this fancy hotel. But it also makes sense because Travis is about to undergo
a bunch of medical testing and he wants to be out of his house, like where he's being harassed.
Right. So they arrived to the hotel and Travis felt very tense. He was understandably so. He's
tense from everything in experience and he also doesn't know these people very well. But he's
introduced to Jim Lorenzen and Dr. Harder to APRO scientific consultants. Their first
impression of Travis was that Travis seemed like a caged wildcat. He's that traumatized.
Yeah. He doesn't trust anyone. He's like looking around uneasy. Like could the UFO come back for him?
That makes me so sad for him. I know. Travis spent the evening talking to Dr. Harder, who was trained
in hypnotherapy, something that Travis was skeptical of. But the more they spoke, the more Travis felt
at ease. And while no hypnosis was performed that night, Travis was becoming more warmed up to the
idea, especially because Dr. Harder never pressured him, whereas Dr. Stewart was like,
get in my chair. Right. You have to do this. Yeah. Even though I didn't even know you were coming
two seconds ago. So as they head to bed that night, Travis is starting to feel a little bit more
optimistic. But before they can really get into the testing with the Inquirer in APRO, there's
something more pressing they have to attend to.
The polygraph test.
On the morning of November 14, 1975, Travis and Dwayne head for the Department of Public
Safety headquarters where Sheriff Gillespie had arranged for the test to take place.
Just as they were leaving for the appointment, the phone rang.
It was a reporter who asked for an interview about the upcoming polygraph test.
Gillespie had promised that he wasn't going to share any information about the polygraph test
with media, so clearly someone broke their promise because no one was a little.
supposed to know it was even happening or where it was happening until all of this was already
done. So now pissed off. Travis and Duane were like, well, if they're breaking their end of the
deal, so are we. So we're not going. Right, which I understand. Like, what incentive do you have
now? Right. It's like you're going to, anything that happens, you're just going to immediately
feed it to the media or spin it in whatever way you want. That's how it feels. In that moment,
yes, absolutely. They did later learn that Sheriff Julespie actually did keep his promise. But the
reporters, these news outlets, were just so obsessed with this.
case that they started tailing people and they learned it on their own.
Or I feel like it could be just a tactic from a reporter too to just call and just say something
random and take your best guess.
Either way, in the moment, it felt like promises had been broken.
Right.
So they went back to the hotel where they told APRO and the inquirer what happened.
They seemed to all agree that due to Travis' mental state and stress, he likely would have failed
the test anyway because polygraph tests.
measure stress levels, more than lies.
So maybe he would have failed everything.
He said, what's your name?
Travis, nope.
Fail.
Yeah.
So they decide to perform one amongst themselves.
And sure enough, the polygraph indicated Travis was very stressed while recalling all
the details of his abduction.
And then that evening, Travis underwent his first session of hypnosis.
So that evening of November 14th, 1975, Dr. Harder puts Travis underhypness.
and it's observed by multiple doctors and the entire inquirer crew, and this is what Travis
recalled. On November 5, 1975, as the six other men watched Travis get beamed and thrown by a light,
Travis was knocked unconscious. He regained consciousness inside a craft. He opened his eyes in a strange,
bright room with metallic walls. There was a bitter metallic taste covering his tongue. His mouth was dry,
and he was very thirsty.
His muscles felt weak.
And as he was trying to get his bearings
and understand where he was,
his eyes were struggling to open.
Like, it almost feels like he was, like,
knocked unconscious.
He was grogly waking up.
Yeah.
And even the metallic paste,
I was just picturing,
like, biting his own tongue when he falls.
Like, it's just, like, blood in his mouth.
Yeah.
As his vision became clearer,
he could make out one single light source
that is above his head.
So he's, like, laying down, right?
he looks down and he sees his shirt and jacket are opened and pushed up to his shoulders
and that there is a strange device curved across his body like up into his armpits
and so at first his instinct is like am i in a hospital somewhere yeah i just keep thinking
like would this still have happened to him if he hadn't run into the field or it's hard to tell
now i'm trying to picture myself from the alien's perspective where it's like he ran into the field
they were like, gosh, we have no choice but to abduct this guy now.
And then someone else panics and it's like, why are you abducting it and presses a button?
And then they're like, well, shit.
Now we need to fix him and save him.
But I'm not the alien.
I don't know how things went.
Always thinking of things from the aliens, POV.
So then he sees something.
He sees someone or multiple someone's.
And at first it's very blurry and he's like, oh, these must be the doctors.
But as his vision starts to get clear, he realized.
that before him is not a doctor, it is a creature of sorts, with big, luminous brown eyes, the size of quarters.
And he frantically looks around and he sees that there's not one, but two, but three of these big saucer-eyed beings.
And Travis is now trying to defend himself.
He's looking around and he grabs an object trying to find his way out, like something to beat them up with.
Or, like, threaten them with, yeah.
So he thrusts himself upwards from his laying state, and this strange device that was around him pops off.
It clatters onto the floor.
He sees the door that he has to get to, but between him and the door are the three figures.
And then this is where it becomes, like, a bit of a standoff.
So the being stood mutely still, and they were a little under five feet in height.
They had basic humanoid forms, so two legs, two arms, hands with five fingers each.
a large bald head. But beyond the outline, there were no human resemblances. Their thin bodies
were covered with white, marshmally-looking flesh, almost grayed skin. They had on cover-all type
suits, orangish-brown in color, and they had very small feet. They had no fingernails.
Oh, that detail. There's something creepy about that.
Yeah. A very E.T. phone home. No wrinkles and some oversized
craniums, but very small jaws and very small lips.
As he's taking all of this in, these beings reach out toward him.
And one of the strangest details he recalled is that these beings never spoke.
Not once.
They never spoke to him.
They never spoke to one another.
There was no words expressed at all, which makes Travis in recollection be like,
were they communicating telepathically?
Yeah. So now in the moment, Travis is gathering the courage to push past them when all of a sudden, without explanation, these three beings scurry out of the room. So he's alone in this room. And he's like, what the heck do I do? He's looking around and he's again taking inventory of everything. He sees that the room is devoid of color. It contained only the light fixture, the table that he had previously been laying on, and this device that is now on the floor that had been on top of him before. He decides to leave the room.
room because he has to get out.
That was his instinct.
So he goes out the door, the same door that these three beings have scurried out of,
and he finds himself in a long hallway.
He has to keep moving.
So soon he finds himself in another room.
And this room is massive.
It is dark.
And it has two chair-like objects with, like, a panel with buttons.
As he steps inside, small little lights start to, like, pop up and illuminate on the ceiling around him.
and it dawned on him that these lights appeared like stars.
It was almost as if he was in a planetarium.
And he apparently tried to touch a bunch of buttons
because he was like, well, maybe I can move the ship and get myself out.
But it kind of sounds like to me that maybe this was like their control room.
This is how they navigate space.
But then they were in space.
And all of a sudden, he was looking through the sunroof.
Kind of.
Yeah, maybe they worked.
And, oh, that's wild. That's so creepy to think. Yeah. All of a sudden, Travis hears a noise. And he whips around to find something standing in the doorway. Not just something, but someone, a human being. This is one of the most wild parts of the story to me. I know. So there before him is this man. He's six foot two. He has a helmet and a suit on. So Travis is like, oh my gosh, someone from NASA here to save me from these aliens. So he ran to the man, exclaiming all these sorts of.
of things, but mostly asking this guy for help.
But unfortunately, this human-like man was not there to help.
Well, not really.
The man forced Travis, or guided him forcefully,
into another area where two men and two women stood around a table.
All of them are wearing this same helmet.
They put him in a chair, and then they restrained him.
They then placed a plastic mask over his face,
And Travis immediately blocked out after that.
When he regained consciousness, he found himself laying on a road near Huber, Arizona.
What he thought had only been a couple hours in this spacecraft was five days.
I mean, I have so many questions because I feel like there's always been this belief that maybe aliens and humans are kind of in on things together, that the government knows more than they are saying.
And so, like, this account makes me think that, yeah, there are humans aboard the ship with the aliens working together.
But then I'm like, did they perform more tests on Travis over those five days?
And he just doesn't remember it because he was unconscious.
Or does time work differently?
Right, because he very well could have just been in space.
Maybe it was truly two hours, but wherever they were time just during those two hours, time moves differently.
It's like interstellar.
And even Travis knows that this experience is strange and unusual and that people asking questions, it's fair because even he has those same questions.
Right.
It's hard to make sense of what happened to him.
And also how scary to not know if you were awake most of the time and time just is different or if you were actually subjected to things that you'll never truly remember for five days.
Because if it is five days and he only remembers it as a couple of hours, that means there's five full days.
And four hours of unaccounted time.
Yeah.
So after the first few days, the story of Travis Walton grew to mythic proportions and people started jumping to conclusions.
And over the years, a lot has unfolded regarding the case.
But the police investigation all but dissolved, which makes sense because it was a missing person's case and he returned.
The police don't really pursue UFOs.
Who are you going to arrest?
Right.
They probably have other cases.
on their plate to deal with.
Many reporters and factions like the GSW
proclaimed that Travis was a liar,
that all this was a hoax,
that he, his six co-workers and his family and friends
were all in on it, that they planned it,
they hid Travis away for five days and six hours,
all to get attention.
But Travis has never strayed from his story,
and even today, so Payne Lindsay interviewed him for High Strange,
and he even said that, like,
Travis speaks about this with you can tell he's anxious and kind of goes back to what you were saying that this is one of those cases where you can see how he acts right and whether or not it's true Travis absolutely believes what happened to him is real and it is traumatizing to him he is re-experiencing the trauma every time he talks about it yeah and also I feel like there's so many cases of alien abductions where someone gets abducted and then maybe five 10 20 years later it happens again
And so I do wonder if he...
Is scary?
Yeah.
Like, how much does he know about alien abductions?
Has he sought out in his search for his own answers, other people's cases?
And now he has the fears of knowing what happened to others or what could happen to him again.
Or is this just, like, truly viscerally, his body's response to remembering exactly what happened or all that he can remember.
It's probably a combination.
Yeah.
And I think that's probably what's the scariest part about alien abductions is, like, publicly.
It's still such a debate.
People are like, are aliens real?
Like, there are all these people coming forward who are work with the military who are saying, yes, they're real.
But even with that.
And like outside of the U.S. too.
We look at many other countries and there are leaders and governments and people who are like, oh, 100%.
There's something strange that we cannot explain.
Right.
It's alien to us.
Is it from outer space?
We don't know.
Is it from our own planet?
Yeah.
Is time linear?
No.
Do we live in a simulation?
Probably.
But so I think that's the point.
Rosebud, semi-colon, the colon, give me money.
All the money.
But I think that's probably what makes it even scarier, is that people are admitting it might be true, but we know nothing.
So Travis wrote a tell-all book titled Fire in the Sky, The Walton Experience.
It was written in 1978, which was later adapted into a movie, also titled Fire in the Sky, which came out in 1993.
And to this day, he continues appearing at UFO conventions.
And this remains one of the most well-known alien abduction cases.
Yes, and Travis Walton also has one of the most controversial alien abduction cases.
In the decades following his disappearance, many people in the UFO community still debate whether or not Travis Walton really was abducted by aliens.
And obviously, we wish that there was more scientific evidence regarding this mysterious needle mark in Travis's arm or like any evidence to help Travis prove what happened to him.
But Travis's blood work was totally normal.
Another bizarre piece of the story.
still this has not stopped skeptics from questioning Travis's behavior and also like his mom and his brother's behavior after his return and during his disappearance people have wondered maybe if it was the work of drugs if it was just some very convincing acting if this all was one big fat hoax well some people have also said maybe he like did get a head injury in that fall and woke up in a hospital but was so disoriented.
and had a head injury that this is what his mind processed the experience as.
But there's no record of him being at any hospital in the area.
He literally came to in a freaking road in the middle of nowhere.
Yeah.
So we believe he was abducted.
Unfortunately, despite our belief, there's no real way to prove what happened one way or the other.
This is not a story with clear distinctions between truth and lies.
But in the decades after the abduction, some former believers have turned against Travis, which makes me so sad.
Oh, that makes me so sad.
Yeah.
In fact, one person, Mike Rogers, who we talked about a lot, who back in 1975, really backed up the story recently came forward.
Was that not just his brother-in-law?
Right.
So then I'm, like, curious about the dynamics with their family.
Right.
Like, what happened?
Fighting.
And then Mike is like, well, I'm now going to say that I don't believe your story.
I don't know.
Anyway.
Mike had a weird mid-life crisis.
Yeah, in 2021, Mike posted on social media that he no longer wanted to be considered a witness to Travis Walton's abduction, which could also mean...
Oh, well, that's just maybe like, hey, stop bothering me.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I wasn't the one abducted.
Like, leave me alone.
Let me love my life.
But he did say he believed Travis to be a liar and called his former friend all kinds of names.
So they're probably not spending Christmas together.
Yeah.
So unfortunately, we might never know.
Yeah.
Well, this story of Travis Walton is still shrouded in so much mystery.
And the only information we have is what Travis, his family, and his friends have said over the years.
And even that changes over time.
In the end, there are two choices.
One, you believe Travis and his brother that in 1975, Travis really was abducted by large-eyed aliens only to be returned to Earth.
Mostly physically unscathed.
Or two, you believe that Travis was lying and that this was all an elaborate hoax to get famous in the UFO community, which...
why would you do that?
The choice you make depends on what you believe.
We hear, Corinne and I, we believe in aliens.
And therefore, we also believe in Travis.
And you should too.
Thank you so much for listening.
We are your hosts, Sabrina DeAnna Roga, and Corinne BN.
Join us next Tuesday for another peek inside another crimes of the paranormal.
And if there are any cases that you would like us to cover,
let us know in the comments.
Here at Crime House, we want to thank each and every one of you for your support.
If you like what you heard today, reach out on all social media at Crime House.
And don't forget to rate, review, and follow Crimes of wherever you get your podcasts.
Yes.
Your feedback truly does make a difference.
And we love you all.
Thank you so much for listening.
And aliens, beam me up.
They're real.
Take me.
But not me.
Bye, mommies.
For more episodes like this, follow Crimes of on your podcast app.
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