
The Travis Walton case is, by any measure, the most thoroughly investigated alleged alien abduction in history. It involves six independent corroborating witnesses to the initial event, multiple polygraph examinations across five decades, a criminal investigation, a full-scale search by law enforcement, and the eventual return of the subject in a state consistent with his account. It has never been explained.
On the evening of 5 November 1975, Travis Walton and six fellow forestry workers — employed by a contracting crew led by Mike Rogers — were driving through the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest in Arizona after a day of thinning operations. Walton, then twenty-two years old, noticed a glowing disc hovering approximately 100 feet above a clearing and asked Rogers to stop the truck. Against the advice of his colleagues, Walton approached the craft on foot. A beam of bluish-white light struck him and threw him backwards. The crew, in panic, drove away. When Rogers returned minutes later, Walton was gone.
Navajo County Sheriff Marlin Gillespie launched a full investigation. The six crew members were interviewed separately and their stories were consistent. They were given polygraph examinations — the administrator, Cy Gilson of the Arizona Department of Public Safety, concluded that they were telling the truth as they understood it. A search of the forest found no trace of Walton. The sheriff considered the possibility that the crew had murdered him; the polygraph results and physical evidence made this untenable.
Five days later, Travis Walton reappeared. He was found at a petrol station in Heber, Arizona, disoriented, dehydrated, and having lost approximately ten pounds. He described being on a craft surrounded by large-eyed non-human figures, then encountering apparent human figures in flight suits who took him to another location before he found himself back on a roadside. He passed polygraph examinations administered by independent examiners. In the decades since, he has never altered the core of his account under any circumstances.
Sceptics have proposed explanations: that Walton fabricated the story for financial gain (the crew had a financial incentive related to their forestry contract, though this cuts both ways), that the polygraphs were flawed, that the five days were spent in concealment. None of these explanations account for the corroborated testimony of six witnesses to the initial event, the physical condition in which Walton was found, or the absence of any evidence of deception across fifty years of sustained scrutiny. The case was dramatised in the 1993 film Fire in the Sky. The real account is more credible, and more disturbing, than the film.
Watch: Travis Walton — The Full Account: Fire in the Sky Interview
Documentary and witness testimony available on YouTube.
Watch on YouTube →Recommended Reading
Fire in the Sky — Travis Walton
View on Amazon →The Walton Experience — Travis Walton
View on Amazon →