Residents of New York Thought They Were Witnessing An Alien Spaceship -
Called Authorities
The truth is out there — and it’s hovering over The
Bronx.
A mysterious light in the sky so freaked
out some Hunts Points residents that they called authorities to report their
only possible explanation: the arrival of aliens from outer space.
A “flying spaceship” is moving swiftly
over East 149th Street and the Bruckner Expressway, one terrified woman told a
911 operator Saturday night, according to an FDNY source.
Juan Marrero said he, too, had a close
encounter.
“I look up and see this fireball,
‘Whoosh!’ and then another, ‘Whoosh!’ ” said Marrero, 57, a pigeon fancier who was on the
roof of his building at 11:30 p.m. when he saw two bright lights streaking
across the sky. “From one side of the sky to the other, too fast for an
airplane.”
Andres Morales, 25, said he also saw the
speedy orb — and did his best to document his out-of-this-world experience.
“I stuck my hand out the car window and
snapped like crazy,” he told The Post. “I don’t know what it was but it was
moving crazy fast.”
It’s not the first time locals have said
extraterrestrial immigrants boogied down from another galaxy to check out the
neighborhood. Unusual lights in the sky were seen in the same area last year,
and also in 2011, according to self-described “UFO journalist” Ryan Sprague.
“I definitely think we’re dealing with
anomalies that could potentially be nonhuman,” Sprague said.
East 149th Street is close to La Guardia Airport, which could lead to
“misidentifications,” Sprague conceded, though he said witnesses should not be
discounted.
Those who saw the orb on Saturday, and
the one last May, echoed the same description — a light that “just sort of
hovered, stationary, and then shot off in the blink of an eye,” he stressed.
“The maneuvers these objects seem to be
making don’t fit with any current technology that we’re aware of,” Sprague
said.
“They’re not moving, then darting off at
unbelievable speeds,” he explained. “I just don’t think that’s something a
human could survive.”
But why The Bronx?
“To study us,” one longtime resident
offered. “Maybe they want to learn to break dance.”
Additional reporting by Rebecca
Harshbarger
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