National Park After Dark - Taken? Allagash Wilderness Waterway
Episode Date: December 2, 2024In August of 1976, twin brother Jim and Jack Weiner and their friends Chuck Rak and Charlie Flotz embarked on a two-week camping and canoeing trip to the Northwoods of Maine. Several days into their t...rip they experienced something they couldn’t explain– and it would be over a decade until the truth of that night truly came to light. Remembered as “The Allagash Four” the quartet has gone down in ufology history as one of the most compelling cases of alien abductions in US history.For a full list of our sources, visit npadpodcast.com/episodesFor the latest NPAD updates, group travel details, merch and more, follow us on npadpodcast.com and our socials:Instagram: @nationalparkafterdarkTikTok: @nationalparkafterdarkSupport the show by becoming an Outsider and receive ad free listening, bonus content and more on Patreon or Apple Podcasts. Want to see our faces? Catch full episodes on our YouTube Page!Thank you to this week’s partners!IQBAR: Text PARK to 64000 to get 20% off all IQBAR products and free shipping.Acorns: Use our link or download the Acorns app to start saving and investing for your future today!Laundry Sauce: For 15% off your order, head to LaundrySauce.com/NPAD and use code NPAD.StoryWorth: Use our link to save $10 on your first purchase. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Over time, we have seen repeated examples of people or ideas who have been labeled as crazy.
People scoffed at the thought of the earth not being the center of the universe.
People disbelieved the existence of unseen organisms called germs,
couldn't conceive of the possibility of space travel,
and laughed at the idea that people would desire computers in their pockets one day.
William Harvey, the first scientist to accurately describe blood circulation,
published his theory in 1628.
claiming that blood passed through the heart, not the liver, which was the 1,500-year standing school of thought.
He was criticized so strongly, his medical practice suffered, and he became a recluse, saying,
Much better is it oftentimes to grow wise at home and in private than by publishing what you have amassed with infinite labor
to stir up tempests that may rob you of your peace and quiet for the rest of your days.
Nowadays, we've made some big strides in opening our minds to various possibilities,
and the scientific community in particular is hesitant to label something as truly impossible.
The notion that we are alone in the universe seems to be one of those dated ideas,
especially given the fact that numerous government officials have testified under oath
regarding the existence of non-human biologicals.
But still, abduction cases seem to be our new line in the sand.
They are just a little too far-fetched for most to believe we can be plucked from Earth, studied, and placed back into our beds, or our cars, or our canoes.
It almost goes without saying that not every account of sightings or alleged abductions can be taken seriously, but you can't help but wonder if some of those people are modern-day William Harvey's just waiting for the rest of us to catch up.
Welcome to National Park After Dark.
I think I speak for every single person listening when I say we are so excited for an abduction story.
Thank you.
It's been a long time coming.
It really has.
I don't know if I've done one for like years.
The last one I remember is Travis Walton.
That was the one I was thinking of too.
And I'm pretty sure I did that when I lived in Washington.
Oh my God.
Yes.
We need.
Yes.
Thank you.
We need this.
Yeah.
We all need it in today's climate.
We need an adoption.
abduction story. Take us away. Get us away from here. Yeah. So we're doing an abduction story,
UFO case. And it is, there are so many of them out there. So there are so many stories to
potentially cover, but it's really difficult to find the ones that align with, you know,
the wilderness and outdoors and, you know, so. And this one fits the bill. Cool. But before we
get into it, I guess the only thing that we want to say is it's the beginning of,
the holiday season and if you're looking for a gift for somebody and you're one of those people
who are like, I don't want to give someone like a physical item. I'm into experiences and
things like that. You can give them the experience of a National Park After Dark Patreon subscription.
Yes. Yeah. Just head over to our Patreon account. You can find that on our website. You can find it
through our Instagram. If you go on to Patreon and just search National Park After Dark,
we pop up right there and you can order a subscription for a friend. Yeah.
So, or yourself, you know, treat yourself, that whole thing. Okay, great. That's all we have to say.
You know, when you're shopping and you're like, you know who would love this? Me.
And then you're at the end of the day and you're like, well, I still need to shop for my love for. I know. I have a running list going of the people that I actually give gifts to for the holiday season. And I have two of them done so far. And you were the first person that I got. I'm so excited.
I'm going to be really excited.
I'm so curious of what it is because you've been very secretive.
Yeah, I don't want to spoil the surprise.
But it is, yeah, not a physical item.
That's for sure.
Okay, anyways, UFOs.
All right, let's.
Yes, tell me an alien story.
Okay.
UFO's abductions.
The nightmares were getting worse.
It was 1988, and for Jim Weiner, he spent most of that year,
unable to sleep. He was becoming increasingly more anxious each night, afraid of what he may experience
when he went to bed. Nightmares isn't exactly the right term because that implies that someone is having
bad dreams while asleep, and for Jim, he would have sworn he was awake for these experiences.
They started some time ago, but weren't really causing a problem, aside from freaking Jim out,
until his doctor started to get involved. Ten years prior, in 1978, Jim became injured following a freak
accident. At the time, he was working as an electrician's apprentice and agreed to help a friend
with some electrical work at a newly purchased home. Upon arrival, Jim opened a door he presumed held an
electrical box and stepped inside. The small room that was meant to serve as a landing for a staircase,
leading to the basement, had an issue. A big one. There were no stairs at all. So unknowingly,
Jim walked right in and fell straight down. Ouch. He landed in a seated position, and as a result of the
traumatic compression on his spine, his brain,
stem was affected. He left the hospital with lower back issues and temporal lobe epilepsy, or TLE.
He had managed his diagnosis well for years under the supervision of his doctors. Aside from causing
seizures, TLE can result in other problems like body temperature, dysregulation, olfactory issues,
increased heart rate, and confusion with immediate time. But for the most part, Jim wasn't concerned
about those side effects. What was plaguing him the most were the night terrors. He didn't say anything to
anyone about them for a long time, until they started affecting his seizure activity by increasing
the frequency in which he was having them. This change alerted his doctors to something amiss,
and they pressed him on it. Repeatedly, Jim declined to go into any detail, brushing off their
inquiries in favor of keeping his anxieties close to the chest. But after some time,
the doctors gave him an ultimatum. Tell us what's going on or find another care team. Not wanting to
lose his providers, he spilled. It wasn't every night, but it had been happening
on and off for years, and as of recently, they were becoming more intense and much more vivid.
Jim described a typical experience. He would wake up at some point in the night and have an
overwhelming sense that someone was in the room with him. He felt as if someone was trying to reach out
and touch him or pull the covers off of him. He would hear a flurry of voices, muffled just enough
for him to not be able to understand the actual words, but loud enough and direct enough he felt
as if he was being spoken to.
At times, he'd feel paralyzed, unable to move anything but his eyes.
He'd also have vivid reoccurring dreams that involved his twin brother, Jack, and their friends
Charlie and Chuck.
Jim would be lying on a table in a blinding white room, and the other three men would be sitting
nearby, seemingly unbothered, unfazed, and not helping Jim despite his mental pleas.
Despite the striking similarities to sleep paralysis, Jim felt as if this was totally different,
What he was experiencing was not sleep paralysis, even though it seems like you're paralyzed,
you can't move, you feel like someone's watching you, like all these different things.
Yeah, it sounds very similar.
He became so fearful of these experiences.
Each night, he'd make sure to lock his windows and sometimes even lock himself in his bedroom,
believing he could stop whatever or whoever was doing this to him.
So he felt it was like an outside person.
Yes, yes.
After providing the information to his doctors, more specifically, his psychosovoys,
psychiatrist on his care team. He was promised that they would look into getting him in touch with some
additional resources. As he was awaiting their recommendations, Jim was on the phone with Jack one afternoon.
The two of them were close, as many twin siblings are, and Jack had called in to check in on how
his brother's treatments were going. Until that point, Jim had said nothing to his brother about the
night terrors and the horrible dreams. But perhaps emboldened by speaking about it to his doctors,
Jim decided to open up to his brother. He started by saying he was
having trouble sleeping. And when Jack asked if it had to do with his TLE, Jim elaborated. He told
him of the voices, the paralyzing feelings and sensations of being watched or observed, the dreams
in the brightly lit room feeling helpless while his friends looked on. A beat of silence followed
before Jack said something Jim was not expecting. The same things have been happening to me.
Oh. Oh, that changes things. Within days, Jim's psychiatrist reached out to him with something else that
was completely unexpected. The psychiatrist advised Jim to go to a nearby convention and seek out the
help of one of their keynote speakers named Raymond Fowler. Raymond Fowler served as the director
of scientific investigations at Mufon or the Mutual UFO Network. Wait, his psychiatrist?
Yes. Yes. I would be like, is this a practical joke right now? Is everyone messing with me?
It just seems like a very large leap.
Yes.
Yes.
So move on, a little bit about move on.
This is a U.S.-based nonprofit, and it's the world's oldest and largest civilian-based UFO
investigation and research organization.
And they pride themselves not only on taking unidentified aerial phenomenon reports, but by following up those reports with different investigations.
Over the years, they have compiled over 4,000 accounts.
from several different countries, done hundreds of investigations, and have an extensive
database that serves as a comprehensive collection of information, encompassing reports of flying
saucers, UFO crashes, and even cattle mutilations linked to different UFO activities and
reports. Essentially, Jim psychiatrist, for whatever reason that may be, and it bears mentioning
that I could not find why. He was, like, when I was reading that they were like, we're going to
give you some additional resources. And I just, the last thing in my mind was like they were going to
recommend him to go talk to a UFO specialist for this. And I couldn't find a reason why that was.
But either way, he was referred to Raymond Fowler. Yeah, it seems like a very odd jump from
explaining symptoms to being referred to a UFO specialist. Right. It seems like very odd,
like kind of. Especially through a medical facility, you know, like that would not be. Yeah. That feels very like,
outlandish a little bit. Yeah, it does seem outlandish, but Jim agreed because it just so happens
that he, his brother, Jack, and the two other men that are in his dreams repeatedly, Charles Chuck
Rack and Charlie Fultz, had all experienced something that they could never quite explain nearly
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It was August of 1976 a perfect time to explore Maine, and Jim, Jack, Charlie, and Chuck were in their 20s and ready for an adventure.
The group had all met and become friends as they attended the Massachusetts College of Art and Design in Boston and were ready to get out of the city.
They had carved out a two-week vacation to vacation land.
They were to start with a climb of Mount Catodin, the state's highest peak and epicenter of Baxter State Park,
a mountain in the remote wilderness of Maine that also serves as the beginning or end of the 18th, Appalachian Trail.
Following their ascent, they hopped aboard a chartered bushplane that carried them, their gear, and their canoe even further into the fore.
hours to the north to an area nearly bordering Canada.
The men had heard wonderful things about the Alagash Wilderness and were stoked to explore it themselves.
So this place that they were headed is called the Alagash Wilderness Waterway,
and it's a 92-5 mile or 148 kilometer ribbon of lakes, rivers, streams, and ponds,
and it's a paddlers dream.
Formerly established in 1966 by the state of Maine and adopted as part of the National
Wild and Scenic River System two years later,
visitors can paddle, boat, or raft for days. Fishing is an extremely popular activity here because of the sheer
amount of water. But in the winter, snowmobiling is a big draw ice fishing. No matter what time of
year you go, there's always something to do. And it's very remote. But that wild character is what
draws thousands of people in every year. Yeah, I know people have gone up there for large canoe trips where
they just go out for like, I think, like two weeks at a time and we'll just be going through
the waterways. And I remember seeing people post photos just canoeing on these waterways in the
morning and just seeing moose like lined up on the water sides. And yeah, cool. There's very little
roads up here. So just like these four men did, a lot of people, you have to come into certain
places on bush plains. Like that's just the remoteness of the nature of how remote.
it is up there. The waterways and hundreds of miles of shoreline is protected, and the waterways
are surrounded by commercial forest land and other conservation lands. And while the state of Maine has
maintained control of this area, the National Park Service has filed numerous reports over the
years recommending federal acquisition. So the National Park Service is like, we want a little bit of that.
Fair. Acadia and another one? Yeah, I was looking at the reports, and I think they did it a couple
years after they were first established. So in the late 60s, early 70s, and then they did another
bid for it a couple decades later. So I don't know if they're going to keep trying, but they've put in a lot of
formal requests to acquire the Alagash for federal protection. Interesting. Far before state and
federal agencies started vying over control of the Alagash, various indigenous groups called this part of
the world home and still continued to do so. Most recently, the Abinaki, whose heritage is reflected in many
of the names given to the lakes, ponds, and streams in the area. The word Alagash itself has
one possible origin from the Abanaki word Alagwash, meaning camp on the lake shore. Numerous indigenous
archaeological sites have been documented along the waterways here, while others likely remain
undetected in the thick forests. It's a rugged place home to an abundance of wildlife. Like you said,
moose, tons of moose. There's links. I've never seen them, but... Yeah, allegedly they're
there. Allegedly they're up there. There's links. There's lings.
Black Bear, River Otters, Snowshoe
hairs, and more. Maine as a whole
is far enough north to have habitat
conditions that support species commonly
found in Canada, and some
that have been considered to have gone
extinct or have been extirpated
from the state, including the
eastern cougar and the
wolf. And I just, I love when
people, I mean, whatever
anything's possible up in, especially
the northern parts of Maine. It's
from borders Canada where these species are
prevalent. But
every once in a while people in Maine will post trail cam footage of an animal that they're like,
is this a wolf? Is this a cougar? Like, et cetera, et cetera. And sometimes they are. I mean,
Vermont has had photos of wolves, especially northern Vermont. Same goes for Maine. And I don't know if I've
mentioned this on the show before, but just a quick antidote because it has to do with this
directly. My ex-boyfriend was on a canoe trip in the north woods of Maine. I don't know if they
were in the al-agash or not, but they were up there. And they were there for a week, him and his three
buddies. And they were out paddling at like 5 a.m. And they come around a corner and they saw a cougar
with a duck in its mouth on the riverbank. And then it darted into the woods after like 15 seconds.
But they all saw it. Wow. That's so cool. And like it was the first thing he told me when he came back.
It's so remote up there. Like who knows what's actually going on. There's not enough people up there to
study to say like, oh, these are extinct. It's like, are you sure? Well, yeah, and it's just,
it's so believable because the, the eastern cougar has been officially declared extinct,
like locally extinct there, but that means that they were once there and, you know, I don't know.
We talk about cougars a lot and like how far they travel and, I mean, one was hit in Connecticut
by a car, you know. Yeah. So they're around. For sure. There's been a couple of recent, I feel like every
year. There's a photo posted in Maine, especially of a snowmobiler owl where they see a wolf. And it's like very
quick glimpse. But it's not far fetch because when you cross over into Canada, I mean, Vermont, right into
Montreal, which is not far away at all. Right outside of Montreal, they have a species of wolves that are
there. Yeah. And there's a whole discussion about coy wolves, which we've never talked about formally on the show,
but I found so fascinating.
They're thinking that the northeast is going to be kind of like that's where the coy wolf is really going to take holds as coyotes and wolves start interbreeding.
Anyway, okay.
We need some predators up here.
I know we're talking about UFOs, but we really need some predators up here because the road kill is insane up here.
I was just, that is so crazy that you just say that because this morning, I don't know why, but compared to,
out west. And I don't know what. Maybe it's just because there's larger areas that like the wildlife
isn't pushed to roadways as much as they are here. But the roadway it's here. I don't know what the
hell is going. I counted like every day. I see at least a porcupine and a possum, a skunk, squirrel.
Like not just like, oh, here's a squirrel here and there. Like they're like bigger every single day.
And they're not just like the same ones I'm passing all the time. It's crazy. I'm like, what the what is
happening. Vermont has a season and it's in the spring and we don't have like a major highway system
in Vermont, but we do have a highway. It's like a one lane, two lane highway. It's not anything that
major. But we do have a highway where in the springtime, there are so many deer that are hit that it is
actually people have been talking about in the state of Vermont the importance of reintroducing a
large predator such as a wolf because the problem is so bad because so many people are hitting them,
they're damaging their cars, they're getting hurt, or they're also talking about doing the,
what are they called the over?
Oh, the wildlife pass.
Yes, thank you.
Overpasses, yeah.
The wildlife overpasses in Vermont because it's so bad here.
But there's also, there's very limited predators that are here.
So it's been this conversation that's been happening because, I mean, it's insane.
You may, June time, you're driving down the highway. And every, like, minute of driving, you see a deer on the side of the road. There's a porcupine. Sometimes there's beavers that make it up there. Oh, that's another one. Yeah. Beavours are, yeah. I've seen a couple.
And it's just so sad. And it's because they're so overpopulated. Well, it makes me hesitant to drive at night here. Yes. And I never felt like that in Colorado.
Yeah, you like, you don't have to worry about it. It's like, yeah, there's elk and stuff. And what, like, which is scary.
to think about driving into.
But deer just dart the fuck out in front of you.
And just seeing the sheer amount of roadkill, it's like obviously somebody hit that.
And I don't want to be that person.
No.
It's scary.
One, because you don't want to hurt an animal, but also because you can get really injured
yourself when you hit these large animals.
Yeah.
There's a really big population on my road.
And they're always in this certain area.
And you don't drive super fast on my road anyway because it's a residential.
But like every time I drive at either in the morning or around dusk or after it's dark, I'm nervous because I'm like, because I almost always see deer. Yep. I know. Okay. Anyway, UFOs.
Sorry. Way off track. Here we are. Okay, so we're back in the Alagash. We're talking about it. The last thing I'm going to say about it is it's a very remote place. And visitors, like I said earlier, either take the bushplanes or some of the logging roads that are out there to access different points along the waterway system. But in this case, for Jim, Jack, Charlie, and Chuck, they charted a float plane. Despite not having a heap of backcountry experience, the men had prepared for nearly a year ahead of this
trip, researching the best gear, conditioning, and studying local maps to select their campsites for
their nearly 20-day planned excursion. The men waved the bushplane goodbye as they set up camp for the
night. The next morning after breakfast, breaking camp and packing gear, they pushed off into the waters
of Tilos Lake for the kickoff of their canoe portion of their trip because they already hiked
Katodin and all that got that out of the way or dropped off. Sounds like a really fun trip. I'm like
taking notes here. They paddled all day long in the
lake, making very little headway, though, because of the extreme headwind that they were battling
for hours. Exhausted and not making much progress, they decided to make camp not far from where
they actually began at gravel beach on nearby mud pond. Their spot was exposed, and the wind was
making them absolutely miserable, so they were kind of scouting for another spot to move camp.
Glancing across the water, they noticed some available campsites. There was another group over there,
but their current spot was just near impossible to sleep in, so they packed up, ditched their
sight and made their way to the others. They made introductions to the other small group as they settled in
and were made aware that that group were concerned about two members of their party. There were two
teenagers who had split off from them hours ago and they were canoeing on their own on the lake,
but their group was getting worried about them because they hadn't returned yet, the wind was
picking up, and it was getting dark. Jim, Jack, Chuck, and Charlie offered to help locate the
boys. So Jim picked up some binoculars and was scanning the water when he heard a voice from
the other group behind him saying, hey, what is that? Sweeping his binoes in the direction of the
man's outstretched finger pointing to the sky, he saw it. A bright light in the sky that had a reddish
cast to it in the eastern part of the sky, moving slightly. At first, they all thought it could have been
Mars because of the reddish tint to it. But it was astoundingly bright and seemed to be hovering about
200 feet from the top of the tree line. Suddenly, it inverted on itself, closing in, sort of like an
eyelid closing over an eye, closing from the outer edges inward before disappearing from sight.
From when it was spotted to when it blinked out was less than 30 seconds. And despite some murmurs
of, huh, that was kind of weird. Like, what was that? Being exchanged from, you know, the people in the
group that saw it, no one thought much more of it. Shortly after, the teens were spotted and they were
actually setting up camp in the same spot that the four guys had just ditched. But the mystery was
over. They seemed fine, so they all went to bed. The next morning came and the journey continued.
This time, a paddle across Chamberlain Lake and a portage to Eagle Lake. Their plan was to camp
at the Thoreau Camp site on Pillsbury Island, named after the famed American naturalist, writer and
philosopher who ventured through Maine in the 1800s on various expeditions led by Pinobscot
guides. As the men approached, they were bummed to see that the site had already been taken.
so they went with a plan B, an alternate campsite
camp site called Smith Brook.
At this point, August 26th,
six days into their trip,
they had fallen into a pattern,
have breakfast, break down their camp,
pack up their gear, paddle for the day,
set up camp again, sleep, repeat.
When things were settled and the sun had set,
they decided to do some night fishing.
It was a moonless night and nearly pitch black.
In order to mark their site,
they built a large fire,
big enough to burn brightly for at least three hours
to serve as a beacon,
and it was bordering on like a bonfire size.
It wasn't just like a small.
And this is in the middle of the wilderness.
Yes.
Seems a little dangerous.
Well, it's funny you say that because Jim even remembers thinking that.
Like this is actually a little risky because I don't want it to cause a forest fire.
But it was so dark that night if they paddled out and they got turned around.
Like there would be no way to see where their campsite was.
So they needed a beacon.
and they had no idea how long they were going to be out fishing,
so they built it large enough to burn for at least a handful of hours
and went out to fish.
After loading their fishing gear, the men pushed off and paddled out,
marveling at just how silent it was.
Aside from the sloshing of their paddles slicing into the water
and the occasional loon call,
they all recall this stillness to the water and the air in the woods
that made the night feel a little foreign and creepy.
Leisurely paddling and throwing an occasional line
it didn't take long for the mosquitoes to descend. And if you know about mean mosquitoes, you know,
they're real, for sure. They're relentless. So needless to say, the group who were out for less than 20 minutes decided to start turning back. This is not worth it. We got to go. Chuck was paddling in the back and suddenly felt like something was off. He likened it to the feeling of knowing someone is looking at you through a crowded room. Like you can't explain it, but you feel it. You can feel eyes on you. Yeah, you turn in someone staring.
right out you. Like that's how he was explaining it. So he threw his gaze over his right shoulder
in the direction of that uneasy feeling to see a ball of light rising from the tree line about 200 yards away.
Not the fire. Not the fire. That's correct. Eyes wide, he alerted Jim, Jack and Charlie and they all
turned to look at what he was pointing out. Looking towards the southeastern rim of the cove,
a large round light was rising above the tree line. It ascended roughly 300 feet and seemed to
stop and hover. It was large, the size of a two-story building, its diameter as wide as a tractor
trailer is long, and it was circular and very bright. It appeared to have some sort of energy pathway
between the polar and equatorial sides of it, and it seemed to be divided into four
oscillating quadrants of light that fluctuated between red, green, and yellow. It also wasn't solid,
but rather had an almost liquid appearance, similar to the way they described it, is similar to
sauce. Like if you're making a thick sauce, right before it starts boiling, you know how it like kind of
undulates and rolls a little bit under the pressure of the heat, but it's not like sputtering and
boiling. Kind of like that. Like it had this pulsing energy to it. Interesting. It was also so bright
that it illuminated the tops of the trees below it in a way that it almost looked like daylight.
Most strikingly, it was completely silent. It emitted absolutely no sound. There was no humming,
whirring or buzzing. If it wasn't emanating light, a light source, they would have never known
that it was there. That's so interesting. And it's a couple different colors. Yep. And the silence
really astounded them, especially given how sound travels on the water of a lake, and especially
in a place this remote. I mean, everyone has heard people talking on a lake and they seem, it sounds
like they're right next to you. Yeah. Or if you're across the lake, you can hear the conversation of the
people on the other side because there's just no sound barrier there. Right. Jim remembers having the
immediate thought of this must be what we saw the other night, but everyone was going through
their own, like, what the hell is that question. Yeah, it's so weird. A plane or a helicopter,
a weather balloon, swamp gas. Like they were just kind of rifling through all of these different
trying to make logical. Yes.
Reasoning of what's happening. Just trying to assign an identifier, like identifying this. To what they're
Yeah.
Yeah.
But each time, each thing, they're like, no, can't be that.
No, no, definitely not.
The object was unlike anything that any of them had ever seen.
And they were awestruck.
But immediately after the awe came some anxiety.
Though what the hell is that kind of inquisitively, like that inquisitive like,
huh, I'm curious about this, immediately started to take this edge of, okay, what the hell is that?
Like, let's get out of here.
What is that?
Right.
And they started to feel that way.
especially as it started to slowly and silently move in their general direction.
When it was about 100 yards away, Chuck leaned down to his feet and grabbed a flashlight.
Pointing it towards the object, he began clicking it on and off.
Three short, three long, three short.
Morse code.
The earthly universal distress signal, S-O-S.
As if in response, the ball of light stopped moving,
emitted a beam of light that hit the water surface and started sweeping across the water like a search floodlight as it began approaching their canoe.
The men had a collective, oh crap moment, and dropped the flashlight, turned forward and started collectively paddling to shore while the light approached from behind.
Those without a paddle use their hands.
They're like, get out of here right now. I don't know what that is, but it is coven for us.
And we got to move. Jack remembers the moment very.
clearly saying, quote, I remember looking over my shoulder trying to keep an eye on this object,
and it was coming up behind us. It was getting very close. It was almost on top of us at this point,
and I remember thinking, we are not going to outrun this thing. They weren't terribly far from
shore, but before they knew it, they were skidding up onto the sandy shores of the beach and
climbing out. After getting to their feet, they collectively turned to face the water,
and they watched as the light now directly in front of them less than 30 feet away,
and it started to implode on itself.
At first, they thought it vanished completely,
but after a moment, they watched it as it appeared again slightly further away and higher
up in the sky.
And then it would blink out, almost eclipsing on itself like a camera lens closes in on itself.
And then, again, it would reappear a little higher and further away in the sky.
And it repeated this process of kind of blinking in and out and moving further away
several times until within mere seconds, without a sound, it appeared like most of the other
stars in the sky moving further, further away until it was completely out of sight and gone.
The group trudged up the beach to their camp in what they described as a daze.
Charlie walked up to the fire pit and noticed that it was just a smoldering pile of coals.
Like it was nearly completely out. Nothing more than just a little bit of glow coming from it.
Even though they had only allegedly been gone for like 30 minutes.
Yep. Puzzled.
He turned to the others and asked if they wanted to throw more logs onto the fire.
And they unanimously decided to forget the fire.
And they all felt a little weird, strange, almost as if they were in some sort of altered state.
Chuck compared it to after you get anesthesia, you're completely relaxed, you're really
unconcerned and not really bothered by much and you're really, really tired.
Without any more discussion, they climbed into their sleep.
bags and went to bed. Day broke hours later and the group commenced their vacation routine.
Breakfast, camp break down, gear packing. There was some talk of what they saw the previous night,
but not in the way that you would typically expect four 20-something-year-old guys on a camping trip
that just got chased by an unexplainable light across the lake. Like, there weren't like,
what the like, what was that? They're just like, well, now we're tired. It's like, yeah, that was kind of
weird, right? Anyways. Anyway, time for bed. That was kind of how the morning discussion,
went, just kind of like, huh, like, wonder what that could have been. That was kind of strange.
But when they, by the time they reached their next campsite as the day wore on, they noticed a ranger
patrolling the lake and flagged him down. The men told the ranger about their sighting, what happened
to them on the canoe the previous night, and how they were essentially chased across the lake
by this mysterious light. And the ranger squinted his eyes, cocked his head slightly, and spoke in a gruff,
heavy main accent, and explained it away, saying, well, what you boys probably saw was,
the grand opening of the new hardware store in Milanoch it. They have those big Hollywood spotlights on a truck
parked outside of the store. And the young man kind of like exchanged some wary glances between
like amongst themselves. But they thanked him first time. Like they weren't going to be like arguing.
He doesn't believe us. He's just tracking it up to something that we would clearly know was a normal light.
Right. And it's like, okay, I can understand maybe that line of thinking. However, as the crow
flies from where they were, Milanoch it was more than 90 miles away. And not only that,
Mount Katodin sits in direct obstruction of that path. So they wouldn't have seen it.
Right. And it seems pretty unbelievable that they would have been chased by like the
celebrity. It's like Hollywood spotlight. Over the lake. Over the lake. To the yeah.
Yeah. So needless to say, none of the guys accepted that explanation, but they didn't argue with him
either. But they didn't really have another explanation to assign to it. So the rest of the trip goes
by without a hitch. They enjoy themselves. They don't have another strange encounter. And they just all go
home to Boston. They all told their friends and family about what they saw when they got back from
their trip, but they received the usual brush-offs and strange looks from people that you would expect.
What trucks did you take with you? Sounds like you had a good time. And they had the same repeated conversations
wondering what it could have possibly been.
But as time passed and the conversation surrounding that night in the alagash,
it just started to fade over time.
You know, there's only so much you can talk about it without answers.
Like, yeah, it's weird and it's like, whatever.
You must start to feel a little crazy yourself too when every reaction you get is like,
what are you talking about?
That's...
I feel like you would feel that way if it was just you.
Because you question yourself.
Like, there are four of them having this shit.
experience. Very true. Yeah. And there isn't much detailed information on their lives in the years
following this experience, but there were graduations, marriages, new jobs, and generally just
the normal cadence of life for all four of them until over a decade later when Jim and Jack
realized they had been having the same night terrors. So now we're back to where we started at the
beginning of the episode. And now we're going to the U.S. the movement.
Mufon conference, because that's what the psychiatrist suggested that Jim do. And he did. He went to the
Mufon conference and he met with Raymond Fowler. And in his conversation with Raymond Fowler,
Raymond was had his interest really, he was very intrigued by what Jim was explaining to him,
because he had heard, you know, hundreds, thousands of accounts of sightings and things like that.
But what was really piquing his interest about that, you know, that experience in Maine and all that.
Like, yeah, that's interesting to him.
But what was really the hook for him was that he and his twin brother were having these same exact night terrors however many years after this experience and had just realized that.
Yeah, that they hadn't talked about it before.
And now there's like some link here that might be tied to an event that happened in their lives.
Right. So Raymond suggested that Jim and Jack, along with Charlie and Chuck, undergo hypnotic regression sessions, especially because all four men had trouble recalling a portion of that night, which was the blip of time between when they had that like, oh crap, like let's paddle away fast, to when they bumped up on shore. Like it was like a split second for them. Because like you said with the bonfire, it should have been burning for hours. So theoretically they were missing like maybe two to three hours of their of their.
Right. Yeah. And in their eyes, a few minutes, 10 at most from what they could gather was missing, like from when they started paddling to when they hit on shore. Like that time wasn't two to three hours. Yeah. So either way, to them, it's something that they could easily brush off. Like, I don't know, we were in a panic. We were paddling, you know, losing some time, maybe could be confusing. But when they really start to think about it and they're like, okay, we all can't remember anything that happened during that time. Like that's a little strange. So.
they agree. In January of
1989, Raymond initiated a
careful and meticulous formal investigation
with Mufon investigator and
solar physicist David Webb and
Mufon consultant Anthony Tony
Constantino, who was a professional
hypnotist. That lasted over
the next 24 months. So they
did a two-year investigation into
this. Wow. To obtain
the truest answers possible and to
protect the integrity of the study, they were
instructed, the men, were instructed
to not speak to one another regarding
both the incident or their individual sessions during the duration of this study.
All four men agreed to the terms and started their individual hypnotic regression sessions.
Jim found his first regression session in particular to be extremely difficult.
As soon as he started remembering things from that night, he got so upset, agitated, and
frightened that there was concern that his violent reaction was going to trigger one of his seizures.
So the team had to keep stepping him backwards out of hypnosis to take.
take the process really slow.
Each of the men remembered bits and pieces and fragments of their experiences, and it was impossible
for them to remember everything in sequence, like in a chronological smooth order, and not every
one of the four men had the exact same version of events.
Charlie likened it to the experience of a car accident.
A passenger is going to remember bits and pieces of the accident that the driver does not,
and vice versa.
Even though they experience the same accident, the driver may remember gripping the steering wheel,
the passenger remembers a tire flying past the window.
Yeah, different perspectives in the same situation.
Correct. So that's how he is likening their recollection of this event.
Okay.
The regressions lasted for months. They were all recorded. And as the sessions progressed,
their memories began flooding back. Raymond instructed them to draw what they remembered
and to write down any vivid dreams that related to those newly uncovered memories.
again, not to be shared amongst each other.
And so after lots of research and reading everybody's individual accounts throughout
different hypnotic sessions, this is essentially what they report in a condensed version.
Okay.
So essentially, the following is what Jim, Jack, Charlie, and Chuck remembered of their night
on the lake in August of 1976 through months of hypnotherapy regression sessions.
Again, they didn't recite this exactly the same.
There are slight variations of minor details that do exist between their accounts,
and some men remembered more than others.
However, this is their agreed upon recounting,
a summary of the hundreds and hundreds of hours of sessions.
While on the lake, paddling away from the object,
it caught up to them and simultaneously shown a tube-shaped beam of light
that erupted from the object and hit the water.
It appeared as a glowing ring with a dark center
that was reflecting on the water surface,
indicating to them that the beam was hollow.
Before they knew it,
it was directly on top of them
as they were sitting in the canoe.
It must have acted as some sort of transport beam,
some sort of hollow tube that got them onto the ship,
because before they knew it,
they were all naked and one by one
were laid face up on a table
while the other three men sat by on the side,
on a nearby bench that was kind of attached to the wall,
to the left of the exam table.
Once they were laid down,
they were paralyzed, but not
physically tied down in any way.
They were able to move their eyes, but not their
bodies, and they were unable to speak.
They would note how unfazed
their companions looked as
they laid on their table
internally panicking and not
able to say anything, and then they would
suddenly realize that they weren't alone.
Out of the corner of their eye
appeared three humanoid-looking
beings that would approach them,
They were very thin with slender arms and legs and thin necks.
Their heads were large and they had large, dark, metallic-looking eyes,
described sort of like a phosphorescent beetle that seemed to change colors as they moved.
And they were about the height of an average adult human being,
wearing skin-tight spandex-looking clothing.
Their hands were also unlike those of a human.
They had four digits with an articulating pad in the palm of the hand,
and all four digits seemed to be opposable.
digits like our thumb is. And I'm going to show you because, and I'll post it on our socials so that
like people can see this. But remember, all of these men are artists in some way. They all go to.
Oh, right. They all went to the Boston art school. Yes. So, and some of them did like one of them was
ceramics and pottery. One of them was like a cartoon artist. But they're all in the art field. So they were
really good at, yes, at depicting what they saw. And I believe, don't quote me, I believe this was
Charlie's drawing of the hands because it was just like so like burned into his memory when he
recalled this. But this is what he described. And I'll show you and I'll post it. But this is
what he described that their hands looked like. And interesting. You know what this reminds me of.
So, okay, have this in your mind. It reminds me of a lemur foot. Oh. And. And. And.
And I'll show you the exact, like this.
This is what it reminds me of.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, I can see it.
I'll post the side by side because I'm like, wow.
Even like the pads of their, of the fingers.
Aliens are lemurs.
Maybe.
Pousins to lemurs.
Who's to say, really?
So anyway, the hands were very, something that he remembers very vividly.
And they would hold the tools like in their, like their articulating palm instead of in their digits.
Yeah.
Very interesting.
Anyways, okay, that was just a side to mention.
Each of the men were internally panicking when they recalled their turns on the table.
In particular, Charlie recalls feeling extremely upset and unwilling to be participating in whatever was happening there.
And he remembers repeating in his mind, we shouldn't be here.
I want to be back in the canoe.
I want to leave what is happening.
And these thoughts were all racing in his mind when one of the humanoid figures leaned close to his face, almost touching his.
Its huge black eyes inches from his as thoughts that were not his own started flooding into his mind as well.
And they said, relax, you are not in any danger. Don't move.
So crazy.
Each man was put through a variety of medical procedures, various sample collection procedures,
including blood, saliva, fecal, and sperm retrievals, and some skin scrapings.
Various objects were utilized for different exams, like a small thin rod with a small light,
on the end. While most men recall being on the table, Chuck also remembers being seated on the bench,
saying, quote, I see some sort of device on him, referring to Charlie. They've got this a thing that
looks like a silvery, it looks like it got curves on it. It's almost like it sucks something. He's got
his head tipped all the way back. He's, it's almost like he's in pain. We can't help him. All I can do
is watch. That's so scary. After the medical procedures concluded,
they were led into a room with their clothes in a big heap in the corner, and they slowly got
dressed, still feeling like they're in a daze. Next, they were brought into another room with a
bright light coming out of the wall that looked like some sort of membrane barrier, which they were all
led through. It was painful. It felt like, quote, they were being ripped apart at a molecular
level. It felt like death. And then their next memory was sliding onto the beach. All of the men
recall feeling terror and being in extreme discomfort while in their regressions and found their
experience is really difficult to grapple with. They had gone over a decade without remembering
any more than just this strange light that was chasing their canoe. And now all of a sudden,
they have all of these new painful memories to deal with now. And they're all thinking,
and they all came back with the same memories too, something around the same, like you said before,
different perspectives, but the same thing was happening to all of them.
Yeah, same flow of events.
Which makes it so much more real.
After several months of gathering their accounts, collecting their artwork, and compiling all of
the information, Raymond and his team gathered the men into a room to disclose the results
of their findings.
Because remember, this is two years going by that they're instructed to not say anything
to each other.
Can't talk about it until the end of...
So they don't even know yet that they've all had the same recollection.
So they're in this room and Raymond laid out each of their drawings of different parts of what they remembered.
He basically said, draw whatever you can, you can of this event.
There's the strange light in the sky, the room they were in, the beings they encountered, like anything that they remembered.
And he lays them out and all the guys like just have goosebumps.
They're like, these are all the same exact thing.
Like everything is the same.
They were completely floored by this and started to question, how, how?
How is this possible?
And their first thought wasn't, well, I guess we're all abducted, boys.
That's it.
Like, their first thought was, their first thought was, like, what happened to us?
Did we encounter something that, like, gave us this mass delusion?
Do we have brain tumors?
Like, are we all sick?
Like, why?
Again, trying to find a logical explanation.
Yeah.
What is going on.
So they grappled with all of this.
And then ultimately, they had to face the very real possibility.
that we could have been abducted by extraterrestrials off of our canoe in Maine.
I personally think that's way better than a brain tumor.
Yeah, one would argue.
There were other revelations made during the regression sessions as well.
Most notably, Jim and Jack, the twins,
remembered that their childhood home was haunted.
Raymond checked this claim with their mother, Jean,
and it turns out that the activity was known by everyone in the house,
the adults in the house,
so much so that they nicknamed the entity Harry.
She described it as having a humanoid like appearance
and that everyone in the household had some type of experience
with citing Harry at some point.
Interesting.
Jack added that as a kid,
he used to be woken up by this horrible monster,
how he described it,
who had the power to paralyze him in bed.
That is very scary and oddly familiar.
He and his brother,
would wake to the sound of what they thought was music in the middle of the night,
here knocking on their door when no one was there, and voices calling their names.
Jack also remembered something pulling the covers off of him at night and trying to yank him out of bed.
He also alleged seeing a ball of light moving through his house when he was home alone one day,
and all of these experiences with Harry kept happening until they were about 15 years old when they suddenly stopped.
They always thought it was some sort of ghost or poltergeist activity, but Raymond couldn't
help but believe that there was some sort of connection to their experience as children's to the one
that happened in Maine as adults. Interesting. It does have a lot of correlation. So he's like,
were they being studied? Throughout their entire life. Yeah. And then they just happened,
like Chuck and Charlie were like collateral damage. You're like, oh, well, you're with the twins we've
been studying. Yeah. Guess we got a couple more. There were also events that taken individually and out of
context seemed out of character but not given too much thought, yet put together and looked at as a
collective, seemed kind of odd. For example, pretty much immediately after the Eagle Lake incident,
Jim had revelations about his work. He worked with pottery before. Like remember, that's what he studied
in college. He, that's what he did. But suddenly he had a shift of how he created his pieces,
suddenly inspired out of nowhere to integrate elements of nature into his pieces.
And additionally, he became obsessive, compulsive about ancient temple architecture.
And the belief that ancient temple sites were actually these macrochip technology and that they
functioned as a large computer motherboard.
Like, immediately was like, this is my belief.
That's a strange niche to just jump into with no prior interest in.
Yeah, he's like, suddenly I.
my Roman empire is ancient temples.
I'm passionate about this.
Yes.
And then there's his brother, Jack, who was a painter, whose work prior to the incident were
all classic traditional landscape, nice paintings.
Immediately after the aligash, he never painted those again, and instead became obsessed
with mathematics, geometry, trigonometry, and physics.
He had no idea where this interest came from, but it became what he described as a
compulsion.
He began making 3D constructions of various mathematic patterns, most specifically drawing the mathematical patterns based on Pi.
And Charlie, who was a photographer and printmaker, dual major in school, became obsessed with medical technology.
He started using photography in a different way by using ultraviolet light and film to photograph below the surface of human skin to capture different venous structures.
Sounds like they all came back as spies.
Oh, I did not think about that.
Yeah, look, they came back to study these specific things and to figure out, like, what to find the information of whatever they wanted.
So now they're doing mathematic problems and they're looking at people in a different way.
And they just all have these little spy skills.
I just find it so interesting that, and this is, so this is to be clear, this is after the incident on the lake, but before their hypnotic regression studies.
Yeah, before they knew that they were abducted by aliens, they are spying.
It's crazy. It's crazy. Yeah. And then there was the revelation of a separate abduction. On May 20th,
1988, Jack had another abduction experience from their home in Townshend, Vermont. What he initially
thought was a dream was unveiled in a hypnosis regression in great detail. That evening,
he was awoken to the sound of his dog scratching at the door on the first level of his home.
He got up, went downstairs and into the kitchen, which was illuminated by a bright, blueish light.
He opened the front door to find a bright light hovering and glowing over the field across from his home.
Not again.
He took a few steps towards it before retrieving his dog and going back inside.
He went up to his room and pulled the covers over his and his wife, Mary's head.
Shortly after, he felt the covers being pulled off of them and his eyes met three beings who were standing over their bed.
The couple were told, quote unquote, like telepathically, to walk towards the light and were powerful.
list to object. Oh, so his wife now gets abducted? This is, yeah, so this, he's remembering this
in one of the regressions. Okay. Okay. And I'm going to read an excerpt about this incident from the Mufon
UFO journal article written by Raymond Fowler from 1993 because it's just instead of trying to put it
into my own words. Quote, when they walked outside, they were brought to stand in front of a large
house-sized glowing object sitting on a blue light that enveloped its underside. The glow around the
object itself was changing colors from white to yellow to orange. No noise emanated from the object.
Jack and Mary were made to walk into the bluish light under the object and were instantaneously
transferred from transferred inside of the glowing object. Mary was separated from Jack, who was made
to undergo examinations similar to the ones that he and his friends had experienced 12 years earlier.
After the examination, Mary rejoined Jack and they were floated across the lawn from the craft to
their house, through the unopened front door and into their bedroom, where they went back to bed
in a strange, lethargic state of mind. This experience left physical evidence behind in the form
of burns on the bottom of Jack's feet. Jack also received a biopsy-like scoop mark above his ankle.
The scoop mark was located just above a scar left behind during an operation for an anomalous lump that
had appeared overnight on Jack's leg several years prior. Jack's local doctor thought it was a cyst, but was unable to
drain it. So referred Jack to a surgeon who removed it. Jack was told that the local pathologist
did not know what it was and that it had to be sent to the Center for Disease Control in Atlanta
for further analysis. However, when we checked Jack's medical records, we found that it was, in fact,
sent to a military pathologist in Washington, D.C., where it was examined by a United States Air Force
Colonel. Interesting. Attempts for further information about the anomalous lump were thwarted,
as the surgeon would not cooperate with our inquiry."
End quote.
Now the government's involved and hiding stuff.
Now you know it's aliens for sure.
The government's med is their M.O.
Okay, so that was the quote.
And now once it's discovered that like now Mary's involved and she's kind of brought into
questioning about her experience, she said she remembered that night dreaming about a deer
with huge eyes coming to their bedside that night and looking at her.
Once this was discovered during a regression session, Mary was like, you know, all of this was like kind of laid out and like, okay, Mary's involved.
She was brought in for a session herself, but she expressed a lot of fear of being regressed.
So instead, Raymond used a pendulum to get answers, which ultimately corroborated what her husband Jack had conveyed.
So take that with a grain of salt.
I don't, that's just the information I have on that.
Okay.
As a small aside, Jack remembered during the regression that the beings put up,
round flat objects on either side of his ankle during that. So that's what he remembered during the
regression. But separately, he had always wondered why suddenly his hair stopped growing in circular
patterns above his ankle. Oh, interesting. Right? Like it totally changed. Yeah. The investigation was
thorough. Over the two-year investigation, Raymond and his team conducted witness background checks,
examined medical records and diaries, cross-checked witness testimony, coordinated witness psychological
profile tests, correlated witness accounts with other reports, and conducted 15 hypnosis sessions.
The final 10-volume report numbered over 700 pages. In addition, all witnesses were subjected to
detailed interrogations, rigorous character reference checks, and a battery of psychological
profile testing. All four men also agreed to undergo a series of polygraph testing,
administered by Ernest Reed, who worked previously as a polygraph tech for the FBI, before his
current position at the time for the Massachusetts State Police Department. After giving them all tests,
Reed concluded they were all telling the truth or believed they were telling the truth. And we have
discussed several times on the show about the legitimacy problems with using polygraph tests. So I'm not
going to go into great detail on the issues with that. But I just had to include it because that was part of
this study. They're not admissible in court. Raymond's team also examined a number of alternate theories.
that attempted to explain, you know, what could have happened other than a UFO abduction.
Everything from hoaxes, fantasies, psychoses, to birth trauma memories.
Like, they literally tried every explanation.
And each was critiqued and eliminated in light of the evidence collected during the investigation.
Raymond compiled all of the above information and condensed it and published a book in 1993 called the Al-A-Gash Abductions,
Undeniable Evidence of Alien Intervention.
After its publication, the group was dubbed the Alagash 4 by the media, and their story caught fire.
They made an onslaught of appearances on various television programs such as the Joan Rivers Show.
They were interviewed by a number of local news outlets.
Their story was in newspapers, TV programs, everything.
They were even featured as an episode on Unsolved Mysteries.
Interesting.
At the time of the Joan Rivers Show appearance in the early 1990s, Charlie was employed at a medical teaching
hospital that worked in conjunction with Tufts, B.U and Harvard. And he didn't tell anyone aside from his
boss that he was going to be going on the Joan Rivers show, especially for why. He was really proud
of his position at the hospital and didn't want to be treated any differently by his peers. But unbeknownst
to him, so he goes. And he didn't realize at the time that the program was going to be live and
broadcasted on televisions throughout the entire hospital. Because the Joan River show was huge.
I remember that it was a really big thing.
So he goes and like people meanwhile at his hospital are like, is that Charlie on TV?
So by the time he returned from his trip to New York City, his co-workers were well aware of Charlie's experience.
But instead of being shunned, he was actually approached by several of his fellow employees that were all veterans of the military who came to him to share their own experiences of high strangeness.
Interesting.
In September of 2016, Chuck Rack went on record to say that the abduction was a lie.
Stating the initial citing was true, but that the abduction experience was quote-unquote bullshit.
Hesident to call it a complete hoax, but rather he refers to it as elaborate storytelling.
He claimed that the story was fabricated for money, the four men hoping that there would be millions to be made from such a tale.
He also claims that they were all on drugs, more specifically,
smoking weed. Jim, Jack, and Charlie vehemently deny his allegations and instead revealed the
breakdown of their friendship with Chuck prior to these allegations. Oh, so this didn't come out until
after they had a falling out? Yes. Interesting. Jim stated Charlie was with him visiting Jack and his
wife, Mary, in Vermont shortly before they went on the Joan River show back in the 90s. Chuck arrived
and declared that he had a plan to make millions of dollars off of the abduction prior to going on this show.
Oh, how the tables have turned.
His proposal was that all four of them refute the professional help of Mufon in order to create some big controversy over the handling of their story
in hopes of stirring up a lot of media attention to their story and hopefully in exchange payouts.
Jack, Jim and Charlie were appalled by the idea and shot it down immediately.
They were very hesitant from that point forward to continue their friendship and continue going in public, you know, on public platforms and appearing with him after that.
But they did forgive him and went forward with several different public interviews and attended several conferences together.
But it was clear that Chuck's behavior was becoming more and more difficult to deal with.
Chuck's violent temper eventually resulted in him getting thrown out and banned from several different conventions.
And in response to his allegations, his former friends,
stated that Chuck's disparaging accusations are rants resulting from a very angry and resenting
individual, venturing to guess that he changed his story to control the narrative.
Jim, Jack, and Charlie have continued to agree to various interviews and speaking engagements
to speak about their experience on the allegation and stand by their truth.
Charlie was quoted in the Portland Press Herald saying,
We have nothing to gain by this except public ridicule.
Our goal is to enlighten.
inform and put some type of positive direction on this. He went on to say that they have been called
crazy more times than they can count and have been ridiculed for decades now, but he doesn't care
whether people believe their story or not. Nowadays, he dismisses debunkers as close-minded and
sometimes ignorant of the breadth of scientific knowledge there is out there. He says, quote,
they weren't there, Jack Wiener said in the same article, I didn't see them there. If they want to stay
ignorant, there's nothing I can do to change them. I know differently from my own experience. And he went on to
suggest that naysayers perhaps have some sort of restrictive worldview and cannot possibly fathom that
aliens exist, saying, quote, what we describe threatens them in some way. The only way they can
maintain some sense of self is by denial or accusation. It's much easier to say, oh, you're making
it up or oh, you're crazy, or you're a fraud, than actually accept what could have possibly happened to
to them. It's not wrong. That's true. The years have passed, but the trio remains adamant of their
experience, both what they consciously recalled at first and what was later revealed to them all under
hypnosis. Chuck Rack has not made public comment regarding the incident in nearly 10 years
and has spent the years following his time in Maine traveling the country and throughout the world.
He lives in the Austin, Texas area, where he expresses his talent and love of the arts by creating
beautiful portraits, caricatures, and pastel paintings. And the other three are all New Englanders
and continue to talk about their experience and give lectures and just live really simple lives
here in New England. Very interesting. We'll never truly know what happened that night because,
as Jack said, we weren't there. We just have to ask ourselves, do we think they're crazy? Or will we
eventually discover that they were right all along? And that is the story of the Al-A-A-A-H-H-Four.
and the alleged abduction in the Alagash Wilderness Waterway.
Well, I believe them.
Okay.
I believe them.
I do think that something happened that night.
And I do think with regression therapy, there is some studies of, like, how valid your
memories are, like how much you really recollect.
And there's also to be said that in those sessions, you can be led to believe something.
And that is all dependent on the person that you're working with.
if they're leading you to believe these memories.
So, I mean, of course, you have to question the person who is performing this to make sure they're legitimate.
Well, and if I didn't personally listen to the hundreds of hours of tape or read the 700 pages of transcript or whatever, but they're out there.
Like, so if somebody is really, really interested in this and wants to know the answers to that question, like, were they led?
You know, what was the atmosphere around their sessions?
like it's out there to it you know it didn't happen without being recorded so that is out there if you
if you want to investigate that further but I totally agree I mean just like with the polygraph testing
that it's not a solid like just because that happened and now okay they were regressed and that's
what their account was that is now truth like there's clearly room for debate on that yeah but to
them I think the most important thing about this whole thing is like it's really
to them. And it's affecting their real lives and their real psychological well-being. And for them,
this is their experience. Yeah. And I mean, you could say that for people who are struggling with
mental illness, too, for them, this is real. But they are all experiencing it. And regardless,
something did happen that night. I personally believe their story. I'm just saying there are a lot of
questions to certainly be investigated and asked, especially if you're someone who's interested in
this because of especially the means that it was to be investigated.
discovered with regression therapy, there are so many faults in that. So I think that it's definitely
worth asking questions, but I believe that. As is worth to ask questions for everything. I totally
agree. It's just, I think there's elements of this story that make it a little more like,
huh, okay. And again, you're taking their word for it, but like the element of the fire. Like,
that's a physical, that, that, the fire is down. The burns on his feet. The burns on his feet. The weird
lump that was sent out to the military for some reason. Yeah. Like, you know, there's just different
elements that are just a little more at an additional level of curiosity for me into this one.
Because there's some, there's some UFO. This is coming from a diehard believer in extraterrestrial
life at this level, like, not just like, there's microbes out there on other planets. Like,
I think there's intelligent extraterrestrial life out there that is light years ahead of us,
evolutionarily. But even coming from somebody with that line of thinking, there are a lot of UFO
sightings or abduction claims that I even am like, okay, probably not. You know? And this one is not
one of those. And that's why I chose in part to cover it. And also it happened to correlate
with the wilderness. And yeah. So totally. I thought it was a really cool story. And you mentioned
one thing in passing. And it's been on my mind this whole episode. So I wanted to
ask you. When they were abducted, you mentioned different samples that they were taking, and one of them
was sperm. And I am curious, what do you think that extraterrestrials are doing with human sperm?
Well, if you want the, like, totally out there answer. I do. I mean, there's a theory that they are
creating or experimenting with another, like, creating hybrids, essentially. Yeah. Like, human.
alien hybrates. But there's also, if we, okay, we're really getting, we're going to lose half
our listeners with this theory. But there is a theory out there that humans, us, are a result of
some type of human alien hybridization that happened thousands and thousands of years ago.
Interesting. I haven't heard that before. There is, and I'm probably going to butcher this because
I know of this theory and I've thought about it, but I'm not like really into it. So I've never really
like super researched it. But essentially there's a theory that we, because we have this, you know,
we have this fossil record of, you know, different humans like throughout human history,
homo sapiens, homo, you know, all these different things. And have you heard of like the missing link?
Like what is the missing link? How did we jump from this to where we are now? Like what there's a
gap there in our knowledge of our own evolution. And so a lot of people fill in that gap with alien
intervention, essentially, that they came to Earth when we were, you know, at whatever time,
point in human evolution and took individuals and hybridized them with aliens.
And now that's what we are.
And that's why they are coming down and abducting us because we're a continual study to them
because we, they created us.
Hmm.
Okay.
I can see where that's coming from for sure and who am I to say whether it's right or wrong.
One of the things I was thinking when you said that they were.
are collecting sperm and really studying them as people and like taking samples of their skin and
they want to look under their skin. Like later they go on their spies later in life and they're
figuring out all this stuff for them. Yeah. So that is my theory. But I was thinking, what if this alien
population that's coming down and studying people is actually a struggling population that similar
to how humans are destroying our own planet, destroyed their own planet. And now they are looking for
ways to increase their population, but they've run out of genetic, different genetics to do so.
So they're coming down and they're getting sperm to create, like you said, hybrids to be able to
expand their genetic gene pool and create a new civilization somewhere else.
Also a possibility.
Like they're using us to repopulate their another planet that they have because they're clearly
not interested.
I mean, maybe they are, but they don't seem all that interested in staying or hanging around.
it seems like they're specifically doing studies on people, which makes you wonder why.
And if their planet was like great and lovely, why are they here?
Well, that's the question.
But I don't know.
I just, I always refer back to the analogy of us, the darting animals in the wild and
studying them and leaving.
Like, we're not staying out in, you know, like, I just think of, we've also taken,
we have stayed, though.
We've taken up their entire.
landscape and taken over where all of these animals live and now they're sectioned to the small. Maybe that's
not the greatest analogy because we're all confined to this planet to live here. But I'm saying like if we
found a way to get to another planet that has life forms that we're really interested in studying,
it doesn't necessarily mean that we're going to be like, okay, well, we're staying. Like we have Earth
to go back to, but we still want to see what's going on over here. I think that if human beings found another
planet with other intelligent life on it. I think that they would murder everyone, take prisoners,
and take over the planet. I don't think that there would be any studying. I think that we,
in history, throughout everywhere we've ever been, we don't study, we invade. And so I'm just
trying to have a little bit of, you know what I mean? I don't know. So it makes me think, like,
of course, alien species, we don't know about them. Like, maybe their thought processes are
totally different than ours.
And we wouldn't even think of like what they would be needing because we don't have their
perspective.
But I just think like maybe they need something from us.
And that's why they're coming in, taking samples and studying because they are doing something
on their own turf and their own planet.
Yeah.
Maybe he has a sun on some planet.
Galaxy's way.
Well, for me, my line of thinking is you're correct in your, when you said they have a
different perspective. They wouldn't do that.
Like, to me, the answer is yes, because they are so ahead of us.
Like, they have to, like, to them, I feel like we, they view us, like, we view Neanderthals.
Like, look at them, like, so stupid.
Stupid.
And, like, they have so much, like, learning and growing and evolving to do.
Like, I feel like other intelligent life forms are just so far advanced.
They have such a, like, they are.
they aren't self-destructive. They aren't, they aren't always warring with one another. Like,
even if you look at that, okay, here we have. And now there's only a small piece of them left. And they
have worn and destroyed everything. And now they're trying to recreate. Like, because we, they were
where we were thousands of years ago. Okay. And they've gotten over that and they've evolved. And they're
just like these enlightened species, this enlightened species that is just like we have, we've done all this. We've
made all those mistakes, but look at us now. Like, we are just so far past you evolved. And not only,
like, in the way they think or whatever, they've just moved past. If you look, okay, oh my God,
okay. People can turn this off now. I'm going to still talk to you about this. Okay. So,
if you're looking at the descriptions of what people describe, the typical gray alien,
kind of like they describe, they're thin, they have large heads, they have big eyes, they have big
heads, everything else is really thin. They don't have any musculature. They're just, you know,
they're slight. They communicate telepathically. Like even evolutionarily wise, it seems as if they've
evolved past the need for, they don't need big muscles. They don't need this physical strong body
because they've intellectually developed so much that they just use their mind for everything.
They don't need physical strength anymore. Maybe that's why their head's so big because their brain
is so big. Their brain is so big. And, you know, like, what are we doing? Toying.
with right now with freaking what's the what is Elon Musk doing with like mind link or whatever
what is that I don't I all I know are the robots I don't know what mind link it's not mind link
it's um sorry this is important to my to my argument so hold on um I want to get this right
maybe Elon Musk is an alien that was came here ner link sorry neurolink so it's a chip
that is being implanted in people's brains and it records electrical signals from neurons.
So it basically serves as like a digital device, like a computer or like via Bluetooth.
So there is footage of somebody that has Neurlink that is playing a video game with their
thoughts and their mind.
And he developed it initially for people who are paralyzed and don't have the function of
their hands or things anymore.
That's very interesting.
The technology is like with people with like spinal cord injuries and things like that to help them.
But these the thought processes is that it's going to just be a chip that you use your mind to control everything.
Very interesting.
Does Elon Musk have one implanted?
And to read thoughts and to like communicate with other people that also have a chip without having to verbally speak.
And it's just like I view it as a step.
That's like a little lazy though.
I just view it as a step in this like evolution of like telepathic.
I don't know. I'm just going off the rails right now and I don't know if it makes any sense.
It would be cool to be able to speak your mind, like to speak with someone next to you. And especially like say you're in a, you're in a dangerous situation where you need to speak with a person next to you without someone else hearing. That would be cool. Or just to say like, I don't know to make it less morbid than that, but like say you and I are in a business meeting and we could like speak to each other about what's going on and know like what to say. And. And.
You know, like that would be cool. But then also it feels like there's an element to that where like is there
a huge invasion of privacy? Like can I read your mind at any point in time? No, I just, well, that's the
question, right? But I don't think that would be the case. I don't think it's just a free for all all of a
sudden. I think it would be similar to speaking. Like you can choose what to express and not express.
Yeah. Even if you're still thinking. If you're reading Akitar, if you don't have your shields trained
to be up. Mental shields trained and up, then anyone can get in. Right. I don't know. And that's, this is just all to say when people are like, I would never want to be. Okay. I just told you an hour long story about how terrifying the abduction was and how like it's impacted their lives and night terrors and psychological stress and all that, which I'm sure there would be an element of. But kind of like we were just talking about with Dan Cummings. Like, what an opportunity.
I would love to hear if you got abducted by aliens and you told me the story, I would believe you and I would be very happy for you and I would be thankful that I am not involved.
I would just have so many questions.
Like not, I don't care.
It sounds like you don't get to ask questions.
I feel like they would be, I guess, surprise and stunt.
Usually people are like, no, my God, stop help.
And they're like, relax, relax, relax.
Hey, about time, I got some stuff to ask you.
Yeah, they'd be like, oh, what?
Anyways, so on the alien subject, I know you haven't seen it because it's such a, I don't want to say it's a niche movie, but it's older.
Is it signs?
No.
It's a movie that is, if somebody is out there, like, I want a good movie that has to do with aliens.
K-Pax.
I have not seen that.
Oh, my God.
It's so good.
So it's from the 90s.
It was one of my dad's favorite movies.
And it's actually one of the, when I was going through his apartment after he passed away, I was just grabbing things that had his handwriting on it.
And he had a lot of VHSs with like a label that he would handwrite because he would like record.
Yeah.
And one of them just happened to be K Pax.
But it's from the 90s.
And it's not like this classic or anything.
It's a classic in my mind.
But it has Kevin Spacey and Jeff Bridges are the main characters.
Okay.
And it's essentially the story of this like mysterious patient that somehow comes to this mental hospital.
And he claims that he's from a planet called KPax.
and his psychiatrist is played by Jeff Bridges,
and he's trying to figure out how to help this patient.
But over the movie, like, it turns out that, like,
he really is an alien from K-Pax and he's on earth studying humans.
Oh, interesting.
And it's not like a super serious or creepy movie.
This sounds familiar to me.
Maybe I have seen, like...
Snippets of it.
Like, now that you're talking about it, I'm like,
maybe I saw it, like, once, like, a very long time ago.
And because it's, like, ringing some bells for me.
It's not funny, but it's kind of lighthearted.
Yeah, movie night.
I do.
Have a movie night with Capex.
Yeah, anyway.
So, okay.
Well, God, this went a different way than I thought.
But anyways.
Well, anyway, thank you, everyone for hanging out with us for an alien episode.
I, for one, was very excited.
And I know you all were too.
So thank you for hanging out.
I know you're all still here because this was a very riveting conversation about aliens afterwards.
Yeah, and probably so well presented.
And clearly experts.
Okay.
Well, we will see you next week.
In the meantime, enjoy the view.
But watch you're back for aliens.
Right.
They'll get you.
Yeah.
Bye.
Thank you so much for joining us again this week.
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