This show looks into the
1974 UFO crash incident in
Coyame, Chihuahua,
Mexico, where the retrieval of crash material was subsequently suppressed by
Mexican authorities.
The
Coyame UFO incident was a reported mid-air collision between a UFO and a small airplane said to have taken place on August 25, 1974 near the town of Coyame, Chihuahua, close to the
U.S.-Mexico border. Some conspiracy theorists believe the UFO was retrieved by a
United States government rapid response team assembled by military and intelligence agencies.
On 24
August 1974, a U.S. air defense radar detected an unknown object in the
Gulf of Mexico, traveling at some 4,
000 km/hr and headed towards
Corpus Christi, Texas.
Suddenly the object changed direction and headed towards Coyame, Chihuahua, Mexico. At approximately the same time a small airplane took off from
El Paso, Texas, headed towards
Mexico City.
The U.S. radar detected both, the UFO and the small plane, and monitored both for a while until their signals disappered simultaneously and at the same location over Mexico.
The Mexican government sent a team to recover the small plane and its passengers, while the U.S. continued to monitor the situation. The U.S. military offered its recovery expertise to the
Mexican government, but the Mexican government declined. At the
U.S. military radar air base, four
Huey helicopters were readied up as well as a 15-man recovery team to head to Coyame, Mexico. The group entered Mexico surreptitiously after intercepting a
Mexican radio communication giving away the location of the crash site.
Upon their arrival to the crash location in Mexico, the
American group came across a strange metallic object in the shape of a disk and exhibiting what appeared to be frontal impact and noticeable wreckage, together with the burned remains of the small plane, a
Cessna 180. A short distance from the wreckage was also an
Olive green Jeep belonging to the
Mexican military and containing the bodies of four Mexican soldiers. Their bodies displayed signs of death by asphyxiation. They were also in possession of their firearms, but showed no evidence of attempting to use them. One of the American Huey helicopters picked up the UFO and carried it some 15 kilometers, where an American convoy awaited to take it via rail to the
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
The whereabouts of the UFO are, to this day, unknown. As for the dead Mexican soldiers, the Mexican military denies that such incident ever took place. This, despite the overwhelming evidence presented in Mexican radial reports of the time and available at the general archives of radio communications of the Mexican military. The names and ranks of the Mexican soldiers are, to this day, officially denied by the Mexican government as well.
- published: 27 Nov 2013
- views: 2904492