Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Livingston Incident








They were approximately the 10.15 am on 9 November 1979 when the then sixty-Robert Taylor would meet with a UFO.
That day, Taylor was driving a pickup , on the passenger seat was his dog. It was designed to monitor the planting for reforestation of an area just off the M8 motorway linking Edinburgh with Glasgow . Wanted to come km, the truck stopped in a lay by the side of the motorway and went on foot to the place you had to inspect, with the dog at his side, after about 500 meters, as he emerged from a bend in the path that was along, he saw hanging over the clearing in front of him a UFO.
The object was 6 meters wide (20 feet) high and 4, but a circular shape surrounded by a "shield" like a hat. Around the "hat", there were what appeared to be the engines are silent. Later Bob said that her natural color was gray, and that its surface is not shiny and reflective, but rather as rough as sandpaper and that the same ship camouflage behind "a halo of smoke solid". Just after he spotted the object, two small spheres bristling with spikes, similar to Mine were detached from the bottom with the UFOs and began to roll along the ground, stretching out their tips toward the man. They were a little less than a meter wide, and also a light gray color as the body of the spacecraft. When they were close to him, the balls, one on each side, attached themselves to the legs just below the pockets of his trousers and Taylor felt drawn towards the object. An acrid smell and wrapped it, "like burning brakes" a little 'acid that had him coughing , and then fainted falling forward on the ground. When he regained consciousness the object had disappeared. It was hard to stand on one leg but managed to drag the vehicle. He tried to ask for help by radio installed on the pickups but found that he had lost his voice. He struggled to restart his truck, but missed in the rush and tension maneuver ending in a puddle of mud remain locked, and had to return home on foot. For four hours he had headaches, as well as an irrepressible thirst the throat, which lasted for two days, as if it were "piped" to anesthesia.
As a witness, Taylor was considered honest and responsible. He never asked for money for interviews and until his death in 2007 at 89 years, has always defended his version of what he saw that morning Dechmont Law. A plaque (which was later stolen) and a small statue was placed in the place where they say the crimes occurred. 







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