Main Image: A young Travis Walton pictured in Netflix’s Top Secret UFO Projects: Declassified. An analysis of the famous 1961 alien-abduction story draws on previously unpublished information, hypnosis session transcripts and the observations of Betty Hill's niece to provide a full account of everything that actually happened, sharing additional coverage of the Hills' life after going public and Betty's subsequent work as a UFO investigator. Without physical evidence to prove Walton’s story, we may never know exactly what happened on that November night in Arizona - but there are many more UFO sightings and alien abduction stories where that came from in Top Secret UFO Projects: Declassified, now streaming on Netflix. “It’s best, in my case, for me to just focus on dealing with the facts of my case and attempts to discredit things, and expose the people who are making such accusations,” he says, “and show that they’re the ones who really need to improve their thinking ability, you know, their rationality.” An analysis of the famous 1961 alien-abduction story draws on previously unpublished information, hypnosis session transcripts and the observations of Betty Hill's niece to provide a full. Walton says he’s not bothered by the skeptics. “Travis walked up to a vehicle and got too close to its electromagnetic field, and it probably stopped his nervous system and they took him to help him actually, and resuscitate him,” Smith says in the docuseries. Air Force scientist and medical researcher, supports Walton’s theory. “It took me years to realize that they weren’t just collecting humans in order to dissect them or some horrible thing… they were most likely intervening in what happened to me to correct severe extreme damage that was caused by a burst of energy that was probably accidental,” he says in the docuseries.Įmery Smith, a former U.S. Walton was interviewed about his story in the Netflix docuseries, where he explains that he’s secure in his story and believes the aliens meant him no harm, and that they were actually trying to save his life. “Two weeks before Walton’s abduction, with the logging deadline growing near, NBC aired their prime-time made-for-television movie The UFO Incident, about the 1961 Betty and Barney Hill abduction case,” Shermer states, adding: “Walton and his co-workers were about to miss their deadline of November 10th to finish the logging job, after which they would be docked 10 percent of the contract.” ![]() Michael Shermer casts doubt on the credibility of the lie detector tests in his essay The Moment of Truth: Travis Walton’s Alien Abduction Lie Detection Test published on eSkeptic, and says that Walton’s story may have been influenced by a TV movie about an alien abduction that had aired not long before he went public with his story. Travis Walton, pictured in Netflix’s docuseries Top Secret UFO Projects: Declassified
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