THE CLOSE ENCOUNTER CASE OF ALFRED BURTOO, 1983 The remarkable story of Alfred Burtoo's alleged close encounter beside the Basingstoke Canal in Aldershot, Hampshire, during the small hours of 12 August 1983, is a fisherman's tale with a difference: the one that got away was a flying saucer -- complete with little "green" men. If the witness was not lying -- and I for one am convinced he was not -- we are presented with an important and highly detailed account which may teach us a great deal about the UFO phenomenon, irrespective of what inter- pretation we choose to place on it. We may also come to understand more of the reasons why the authorities are anxious to play down the subject. Background Because of its many military establishments Aldershot is known as "The Home of the British Army," and Alfred Burtoo himself had an Army background, having served in the Queen's Royal Regiment in 1924 and the Hampshire Regiment during World War II. Well known as a historian, he had in his time worked as a farmer and gardener, and while living in the Canadian outback hunted bear and fought wolves. Mr. Burtoo told me that he was afraid of nothing, and regarding his encounter, which would have terrified most people, said: "What did I have to fear? I'm seventy-eight now and haven't got much to lose." Prior to his experience he had read no books or magazines on the subject of UFOs, which held no interest for him, yet much of what he claimed has been corroborated by other witnesses. Alfred Burtoo was a keen and experienced fisherman, and since the weather report for 11/12 August predicted a warm, fine night, he set off from his home in North Town, Aldershot, at 12:15 a.m., accompanied by his dog Tiny. On reaching Government Road he encountered a Ministry of Defense policeman on his beat, and after a brief chat headed toward his selected fishing site, about 115 yards north of the Gasworks Bridge on Government Road. He undid his fishing rod holdall and took out the bottom joint of his fishing umbrella, pushed it into the soil, and tied the dog to it. While unpacking his tackle box he heard the gong at Buller Barracks strike one o'clock. He set up the rod rests, cast out his tackle and then sat down watching the water for fish movements. The Encounter "After about fifteen minutes," Mr. Burtoo told me, "I decided to have a cup of tea, which I poured from my thermos. I stood up to ease my legs and was putting the cup to my mouth when I saw a vivid light coming toward me from the south, which is over North Town. It wavered over the railway line and then came on again, then settled down. The vivid light went out, though I could still see a light through the boughs of the trees. I thought, well that can't be an airplane; it's too low, because it was at about 300 feet. "During this time I had set the cup down on the tackle box and lit a cigarette, and while smoking it my dog began to growl. It was then that I saw two 'forms' coming toward me, and when they were within five feet of me they just stopped and looked at me, and I at them, for a good ten or fifteen seconds." Tiny, an obedient dog, had stopped growling by this time, on her master's command. "They were about four feet high, dressed in pale green coveralls from head to foot, and they had helmets of the same color with a visor that was blacked out," Mr. Burtoo said. "Then the one on the right beckoned me with his right forearm and turned away, still waving its arm. I took it that he wished me to follow, which I did. He moved off and I fell in behind him, and the chap that was on the left fell in behind me. We walked along the towpath until we got to the railings by the canal bridge. The 'form' in front of me went through the railings, while I went over the top, and we crossed Government Road then went down on the footpath. The Craft "Going around a slight left-hand bend I saw a large object, about 40 to 45 feet across, standing on the towpath, with about 10 to 15 feet of it over the bank on the left of the path. And I thought, Christ, what the hell's that? -- didn't think about UFOs at the time. When we got down there this 'form' in front of me went up the steps and I followed. The steps were off-line to the towpath and we had to step onto the grass to go up them." Portholes were set in the hull, and the object rested on two ski type runners. "Going in the door, the corners weren't sharp, they were rounded off. We went into this octagonal room. The 'form' in front of me crossed over the room, and I heard a sound as if a sliding door was being opened and closed. I stood in the room to the right of the door, and the 'form' that had walked behind me stood just inside, between me and the door. I don't know whether it was to stop me going out or not.... "I stood there a good ten minutes, taking in everything I could see. The walls, the floor and the ceiling were all black, and looked to me like unfinished metal, whereas the outside looked like burnished aluminum. I did not see any sign of nuts or bolts, nor did I see any seams where the object had been put together. What did interest me most of all was a shaft that rose up from the floor to the ceiling." The shaft was about four feet in circumference, and on the right-hand side of it was a Z- shaped handle. On either side of that stood two 'forms' similar to those that walked along the towpath with me. "All of a sudden a voice said to me, 'Come and stand under the amber light.' I could not see any amber light until I took a step to my right, and there it was way up on the wall just under the ceiling. I stood there for about five minutes, then a voice said, 'What is your age?' I said, 'I shall be seventy-eight next birthday.' And after a while I was asked to turn around, which I did, facing the wall. After about five minutes he said to me, 'You can go. You are too old and infirm for our purpose.' "I left the object, and while walking down the steps I used the handrail and found it had two joints in it, so I came to the conclusion it was telescopic. I walked along the towpath to about halfway between the object and the canal bridge, stopped, and looked back and noticed that the dome of the object looked very much like an oversized chimney cowl, and that it was revolving anticlockwise. "I then walked on to the spot where I had left my dog and fishing tackle, and the first thing I did when I got there was to pick up my cold cup of tea and drink it. And then I heard this whining noise, just as if an electric generator was starting up, and this thing lifted off and the bright light came on again. It was so bright that I could see my fishing float in the water 6 feet away from the opposite bank of the canal, and the thin iron bars on the canal bridge. The object took off at a very high speed, out over the military cemetery in the west, and then a little later I saw the light going over the Hog's Back and out of sight. This was around 2:00 a.m." Mr. Burtoo settled down to wait for dawn, which came at 3:30 a.m., and then, he told me, "I got into what I had come out for -- the fishing!" Incredible though it may seem, he did not feel inclined to report his experience to anyone at the time. He sat there fishing until 10 o'clock in the morning, at which time two Ministry of Defense mounted policemen rode up to him. "Any luck, mate?" one of them asked. "Yes," replied Mr. Burtoo. "I've had three roach, five rudd, a tench of 2 1/2 pounds, and lost a big carp which took me into the weeds." He then started to tell them about the UFO that he had seen, and one of them said, "Yes, I dare say you did see that UFO. I expect they were checking on our military installations." Was this a tongue-in-cheek comment to placate the old boy? At that moment, anyway, a man from the canal lock yard came along and told the MoD policemen that horses were not allowed on the towpath, and so the conversation was cut short. Mr. Burtoo continued fishing until 12:30 p.m., and returned home at 1:00 p.m. He told his wife and a friend of hers that he had seen a UFO, but refrained from telling them that he had been taken on board. "I knew the wife would say, 'No more fishing for you, old man!' " No Witnesses Alfred Burtoo did not return to the landing site until two days later, when he noticed that the foliage between the canal and the towpath was in disarray. Unfortunately, no photos or soil samples were taken. Mr. Burtoo feels that someone in the guard hut of the nearby Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers workshops must have seen or heard something, but checks by investigator Omar Fowler drew a blank. He was also unable to trace the two mounted policemen. And the occupants of a bungalow near the canal lock beside Gasworks Bridge were away at the time. Throughout his experience Mr. Burtoo was hoping that a train would cross the railway bridge (Aldershot to Waterloo main line) which is about 100 yards to the south of the landing site, but there was none, at least, not while he was outside the craft. But even if a train had gone by it is doubtful if anyone would have noticed the object except at those times when it was at its most brilliant, i.e. during landing and takeoff. No cars were seen on either Government Road or Camp Farm Road, which runs beside the Basingstoke Canal at the spot where Mr. Burtoo was fishing, nor have any witnesses come forward. Publicity The story of Alfred Burtoo's encounter made headline news in the local paper two months later, as a result of his having written to the Aldershot News initially inquiring if anyone had reported an unusual light at the time of the incident." The paper then notified Omar Fowler, Chairman and Investigations Coordinator of the Surrey Investigation Group on Aer- ial Phenomena (SIGAP), who subsequently interviewed Mr. Burtoo in October. My first interview with the witness took place the following month, in the presence of local reporter Debbie Collins. The Aldershot News published our positive findings, and this attracted the attention of America's largest-selling tabloid, the National Enquirer, which ran a story on the case in 1984." Details of the Craft Mr. Burtoo told me that the shape of the central room was octagonal and the ceiling very low. The floor appeared to be covered with a soft material of some kind because he was unable to hear his footsteps. The internal lighting did not appear to emanate from any particular source, with the exception of the beam of amber light underneath which he was asked to stand. The lighting in general was rather dim. There were no dials, controls, seats, or other objects seen, apart from the central column with its Z-shaped handle. Mr. Burtoo said that the temperature inside the craft was a little warmer than outside, which would make it about 65 F. He noticed a faint smell similar to that of "decaying meat." If there is any truth to some of the more outlandish hypotheses about the motives of UFO operators, it is perhaps just as well that Mr. Burtoo was found to be too old and infirm for their purpose! The Beings The occupants moved like human beings, although they walked with a rather stiff gait, Mr. Burtoo explained to me. No facial features could be detected since these were covered by the visors. The pale-green one- piece suits also covered the hands and feet, and appeared to be molded onto their thin bodies "like plastic." Mr. Burtoo did not notice if the gloves covered fingers. There were no belts, zippers, buttons or fasteners. All four beings were of the same size and unusually thin shape. Had any females been present, Mr. Burtoo felt sure he would not have failed to have noticed! The beings spoke in a kind of "singsong" accent, similar to "a mixture of Chinese and Russian." Mr. Burtoo, in fact, was convinced that they originated here on earth. "I myself do not think they come from outer space," he said, "for we are told by scientists that this planet is the only one with water. If that is the case, how can they survive?" I asked Mr. Burtoo why on earth he refrained from asking any ques- tions: surely that would be the first thing to do in such a situation? He explained that he simply did not feel it was the right thing to do, as he was anxious to avoid causing offense. As to his "rejection," which he found mildly disappointing, he attributed this to his bronchial and arterial problems, and thought that the amber scanning device (if that is what it was) detected the plastic replacement(s) following an operation for ar- teriosclerosis. Alfred Burtoo suffered none of the side effects sometimes reported by close encounter witnesses, such as temporary paralysis, nausea, diarrhea, skin disorders, eye irritation, and so on; nor is he aware of any amnesia or time lapse. But he told me that he did feel "different" after the experience. He ate little for a while, resulting in some loss of weight, and felt less inclined to go out. He also found difficulty getting to sleep, due to continually turning the events over in his mind. But he had few regrets about his extraordinary experience, which in my opinion ranks as one of the most convincing close encounter cases I have investigated. "Until I had this encounter with the UFO," he told me, "I always took the talk about them with a pinch of salt, but now I know they are a fact. During the time I was with them I felt no fear, only curiosity, nor were they hostile toward me nor I to them. My only regret about the whole affair is that I did not have another person along with me to see and experience something that I did not believe until it happened to me, and I think myself lucky that I am here today to speak about it, for I am sure that these men were out to abduct some person, and that person could have been me. But at the same time I will say that it was the greatest experience of my life." Alfred Burtoo died on 31 August 1986, aged eighty. Mindful of the possibility that he had finally confessed the story to be a hoax, I wrote to his wife Marjorie and asked if this was so. "It was not a hoax," she replied. "What Alf told you was the absolute truth. My friend who was with me when Alf came home can verify what he said. He looked ab- solutely shaken and he told both of us about his experience that he had with the UFO.... He was just like a man that had seen a miracle happen and we knew he was telling the truth because no one could believe otherwise if they had heard him and saw him that morning.... My husband was not a man who believed in fantasies or had hallucinations. He was down to earth, and you can take it from me that Alf never changed his mind on the story of what he had seen and experienced." But the Ministry of Defense remains unmoved. "I was interested to see the report of Mr. Burtoo's alleged encounter," wrote Peter Hucker of Secretariat (Air Staff) 2a. "We have no record of corresponding reports which might support this story. There was certainly no report submitted to us by the MoD police concerning the incident.... MoD interest in the subject is limited to those sightings which are directly relevant to the air defense of the UK.... The majority of reports received here are ...often weeks old, and we simply cannot devote public funds to the detailed investigation of such sightings when no threat to national defense has been demonstrated." Aus: Timothy Good's "Above Top Secret" -- Just the Cases - UFO sightings database http://cs.tu-berlin.de/~thomasg/ufodb.htm