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Travis Walton Abduction

Nov 5, 1975

Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest, Arizona, USA

Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest, Arizona — Travis Walton was struck by a beam from a hovering craft in this forest on November 5, 1975, and was missing for five days

Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest, Arizona — Travis Walton was struck by a beam from a hovering craft in this forest on November 5, 1975, and was missing for five days — Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA

Credibility Assessment

Moderate
Multiple WitnessesExpert WitnessPhysical EvidenceOfficial Report

Event Description

Observed Shape
Disc

Craft morphology

Non-Human Intelligence (NHI)
Abduction
On the evening of November 5, 1975, a seven-member logging crew working for Mike Rogers was driving home through the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest near Snowflake, Arizona, after a day's work on a US Forest Service contract. Approaching a clearing, the crew spotted a large, glowing disc-shaped craft hovering approximately 15 feet above a pile of cleared timber. Travis Walton, 22 years old, exited the truck and walked toward the object. As Walton approached to within roughly 50 feet, the craft emitted a beam of energy that struck him, lifting him from his feet and throwing him several feet backward. The other six crew members, in genuine terror, fled in the truck. When the crew returned to the site minutes later, Walton and the craft were both gone. A five-day search involving law enforcement, the US Air Force, and the logging crew combed the surrounding forest without finding any trace of Walton. All six remaining crew members were administered polygraph examinations by an experienced examiner under contract to the Navajo County Sheriff's Office; all passed, confirming their account of the initial encounter. The absence of Walton — a real person with a documented prior existence and family — for five days is the case's most objectively verifiable element. On the evening of November 10, Walton reappeared at a gas station in Heber, Arizona, 30 miles from the disappearance site. He was disoriented, dehydrated, and had lost approximately ten pounds. He reported fragmented memories of awakening on a table aboard a craft, being examined by beings in orange jumpsuits, and later encountering large-headed beings with oversized dark eyes. He subsequently passed multiple polygraph examinations administered by different examiners across subsequent years. The case was investigated by the Aerial Phenomena Research Organization (APRO), awarded the National Enquirer's $100,000 prize for the most credible UAP case of 1975, and scrutinized by skeptical investigators without a conclusive finding of fraud. The Travis Walton case is singular in the abduction literature for one specific reason: six independent witnesses observed the initiating event and reported it to law enforcement before the absence of the missing individual had been established — providing a witness record that precedes rather than follows the extraordinary claim.

5 Observables Detected

Instantaneous Acceleration
Hypersonic Velocity
Low Observability
Trans-Medium Travel
Anti-Gravity Lift

Suspicious Activity

Intelligence Agency
Cover-up Actions
Men in Black
Disinformation
Witness Suppression

Sources

mediaTravis Walton — Fire in the Sky (Memoir), 1978

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