Herbert Schirmer is an alleged victim of an abduction . His case was considered by the Commission Condon .
The alleged kidnapping took place in Ashland (Nebraska) on 3 December 1967 , when Schirmer was 22 years and served as Sergeant of Police . On 13 February 1968 he was examined under hypnosis by psychologist Ronald Leo Sprinkle of the University of Wyoming .
Schirmer told of having seen a white object on the road, which had initially mistaken for a truck as he had red lights flashing. He received a communication telepathic from the vehicle, which forced him to pull out the gun. Schirmer said under hypnosis that the beings who were on the vehicle they looked a little like reptilian humanoids , wearing overalls with a kind of emblem of a serpent, winged, were friendly and said to prevent from a nearby galaxy, and have bases of Venus .
Dr. Sprinkle thought Schirmer believed what he was saying and did not consciously invented the story. After investigation, the Commission concluded that Condon "based on the evaluation of psychological tests, interviews with the police and the lack of any evidence, one could not conclude that the experience had been physically real."
Schirmer's experience has been reported in the book Gods, Demons and Space Chariots.
The alleged kidnapping took place in Ashland (Nebraska) on 3 December 1967 , when Schirmer was 22 years and served as Sergeant of Police . On 13 February 1968 he was examined under hypnosis by psychologist Ronald Leo Sprinkle of the University of Wyoming .
Schirmer told of having seen a white object on the road, which had initially mistaken for a truck as he had red lights flashing. He received a communication telepathic from the vehicle, which forced him to pull out the gun. Schirmer said under hypnosis that the beings who were on the vehicle they looked a little like reptilian humanoids , wearing overalls with a kind of emblem of a serpent, winged, were friendly and said to prevent from a nearby galaxy, and have bases of Venus .
Dr. Sprinkle thought Schirmer believed what he was saying and did not consciously invented the story. After investigation, the Commission concluded that Condon "based on the evaluation of psychological tests, interviews with the police and the lack of any evidence, one could not conclude that the experience had been physically real."
Schirmer's experience has been reported in the book Gods, Demons and Space Chariots.
0 件のコメント:
コメントを投稿