WE'RE BACK! The Ghostmen Return! AGAIN!
Updated May 8th, 2008

NIAGARA REGION - The Ghostmen return from a departure of almost 4 years.

After yet another very, very long break from the paranormal, The Ghostmen are back! Again! We've been without a group for four years, but now we are back! New stuff... paranormal... government conspiracies and more! Contact us for comments, suggestions or any paranormal news that you think The Ghostmen may be interested in!

Working hard to solve some of the oldest mysteries of the world unknown. The Ghostmen.




Updated July 15, 2004

NIAGARA REGION - The Ghostmen return from a departure of almost 2 years.

After a long, very long break from the paranormal, The Ghostmen are back! We are working on new information and new hauntings in and around the Niagara region. We are going to be making some major updates to the site, please be patient as we get back to business. Contact us for comments, suggestions or any paranormal news that you think The Ghostmen may be interested in!

Working hard to solve some of the oldest mysteries of the world unknown. The Ghostmen.




Updated October 30, 2002 at 1:02AM

ALBANY, NEW YORK - A strange image was captured by a news cameraman in Albany, New York.

A strange sight in the skies over the capital region- no one knows yet what is was- but it was enought to have the F.B.I. scrambling to take a look. It happened to be that a local videographer was on the scene shooting a plane taking off from the Albany International Airport- at the same time the strange object streaked throught the sky- it was moving so fast, he didnt even see it until he played back the tape in slow motion. For some reason the object did not show up on the airport radar.

Below are the stills from the video that the videographer taped.




Clinton aide slams Pentagon's UFO secrecy

Updated: October 22, 2002 at 2:18 PM

By Richard Stenger
CNN


Amateur video of glowing orbs in a strange formation over Arizona in 1997. Thousands of witnesses saw the so-called Phoenix Lights

(CNN) -- One winter night in 1965, eyewitnesses saw a fireball streak over North America, bank, turn and crash in western Pennsylvania, then swarms of military personnel comb the area and a tarp-covered flatbed truck rumble out of the woods.

Now a former White House chief of staff and an international investigative journalist want to know what the Pentagon knows, calling on it to release classified files about that and other incidents involving unidentified flying objects, or UFOs.

Despite earning little credence among many in the American population, cases of strange aerial phenomena that defy explanation abound, whether witnessed by thousands of Arizona residents, commercial airline pilots or a U.S. president.

The new initiative is not setting out to prove the existence of aliens. Rather the group wants to legitimize the scientific investigation of unexplained aerial phenomena.

"It is time for the government to declassify records that are more than 25 years old and to provide scientists with data that will assist in determining the real nature of this phenomenon," ex-Clinton aid John Podesta said Tuesday.

Podesta was one of numerous political and media heavyweights on hand in Washington, DC, to announce a new group to gain access to secret government records about UFOs.

Specifically, the Coalition for Freedom of Information (CFI) is pressing the Air Force for documents involving Project Moon Dust and Operation Blue Fly, clandestine operations reported to have existed decades ago to investigate UFOs and retrieve objects of unknown origins.

One of the most mysterious cases, the Kecksburg, Pennsylvania incident of December 5, 1965, is the first cited in the group's request for records through the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).

Despite an official government story that the object was a meteorite, some eyewitnesses claimed that a military truck took an acorn-shaped object the size of a small car from the rural Pennsylvania crash site to an Air Force base in Ohio.

"We can't come up with a reason why this information is being withheld. The government won't even acknowledge that the incident took place but we know that it did," said Leslie Kean, a California-based freelance reporter who drafted the FOIA request.

In the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s, the government did take the UFO search seriously and top generals considered the pros and cons of informing the U.S. public, Kean said, citing top secret memos.

In 1969, however, the Air Force terminated Project Blue Book, concluding that no reported UFOs were threats to national security.

Paradoxically, Kean notes, the military continues to deny some requests for UFO information by citing national security concerns.

Backed by the Sci-Fi channel, the CFI hopes to reduce the scientific ridicule factor in this country when the topic is UFOs.

"There's definitely evidence of strange phenomenon in the world. These are well documented," said Kean, who has written for The Nation, the Boston Globe and the International Herald Tribune.

"Most people don't think that there is evidence because they haven't look for it. There's such a little green men mindset in this culture. It's hard to work your way through that."

The CFI director, Ed Rollins, also works for Podesta's public relations firm, Podestamattoon, which is coordinating the new group at the behest of the Sci- Fi channel. He said the initiative was a call for serious investigation, not a publicity stunt for the cable network.

"The Sci-Fi channel has had an interest in [UFOs] for some time. The difference here is that they are focusing attention on the serious, factual side of the issue, and that scientists have not had a chance to thoroughly examine it," Rollins said.

"Of course it could help programming. But Sci-Fi thought they had some resources they could bring to the table."

A Pentagon spokesperson could not be reached for comment.




Family convinced woman's "ghost" is image on video

Updated: August 11, 2002 at 5:07 PM

OKLAHOMA CITY - Employees at a local wrecker service claim they've been visited by a ghost.

Those who work at Puckett's in southwest Oklahoma City believe the image is that of a woman involved in a fatal accident.
 
Now, family members of that woman have come forward, convinced the sighting is their lost loved one sending them a message.

Tracy Martin died from her injuries June 30th. But, her family believes she came back 18 days later to let them know she's okay. They say that is exactly how Tracy did things, in grand style.
 
Tracy Martin's father, brother and husband are convinced the videotaped image is that of the 33-year-old mother of twins.
 
Tracy's truck was moved from Puckett's wrecker yard July 17 from the area the surveillance camera records. Overnight dispatcher Kathy Henley saw the image live on her monitors.
 
A family portrait shows Tracy in her favored overalls. Tracy's husband, Brent, now has the awesome task of rearing their twins alone.

Brent has shown the twins the videotape, hoping it will bring them some comfort.
 
A police investigation into Tracy Martin's car wreck revealed she was not wearing a seat belt. Had she been buckled in, in the investigating officer's opinion, her injuries would not have been fatal.

All content © Copyright 2001 - 2002, WorldNow and KFOR-TV .
All Rights Reserved.

The Video




Crop circles appear in Quebec barley field

Last Updated Tue Aug 6 11:04:29 2002

MONTREAL - A dairy farmer near Montreal is trying to figure out how a series of mysterious circles appeared in his barley crop.


(courtesy www.cbc.ca)

John Peddie chuckles at all the attention his field is drawing. "I've no idea how they were made, but they're certainly well made. It's a mystery to me," he said.

Peddie says, however, that he doesn't believe anything extraterrestrial is responsible – like flying saucers. Neither does Andre Bordeleau, a lecturer at the Montreal planetarium. He says the circles are man-made, someone used a plank to flatten the grain.

It's the repetition of a hoax started decades ago by two artists in England. But Bordeleau admits there isn't a lot he can do to stop people from believing UFOs are responsible.

"That's why The X Files was nine years on TV. People are interested in that kind of stuff. They'd like to believe that there's unexplained events, that there's a paranormal aspect of their lives. It makes it exciting, I guess."

Bordeleau notes the crop circles have appeared suspiciously close to the release of a new Hollywood movie based on the practice.

Courtesy CBC News Online

Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

1