From 'The Unexplained' No. 10. Orbis Publishing. 1991.
As UFO sightings increase, so allegedly does the
harassment of witnesses - by the sinister so-called Men In Black.
Albert Bender, director of the International Flying
Saucer Bureau, an amateur organisation based in Connecticut, USA, once claimed
to have discovered the secret behind UFOs. But unfortunately, the rest of the
world is still none the wiser - for Bender was prevented from passing on his
discovery to the world by three sinister visitors: three men dressed in black,
known as 'the silencers'. It had been Bender's intention to publish his findings
in his own journal, Space Review. But before committing himself finally, he felt
he ought to try his ideas out on a colleague. He therefore mailed his report. A
few days later, the men came.
Bender was lying down in his bedroom, overtaken by a
sudden spell of dizziness, when he noticed three shadowy figures in the room.
Gradually, they became clearer. All were dressed in black clothes. "They looked
like clergymen, but wore hats similar to Homburg style. The faces were not
clearly discernible, for the hats partly hid and shaded them. Feelings of fear
left me... The eyes of all three figures suddenly lit up like flashlight bulbs,
and all these were focussed upon me. They seemed to burn into my very soul as
the pains above my eyes became almost unbearable. It was then I sensed that they
were conveying a message to me by telelathy."
Bender's visitors confirmed that he had been right in his speculations as to the
true nature of the UFOs - one of them was actually carrying Bender's report, and
provided additional information. This so terrified him that he was only too
willing to go along with their demand that he close down his organisation, cease
publication of his journal at once, and refrain from telling the truth to anyone
'on his honour as an American citizen.'
But did Bender really expect anyone to believe his
story? His friends and colleagues were certainly baffled by it. One of them,
Gray Barker, even published a sensational book, 'They Knew Too Much About Flying
Saucers'; and Bender himself supplied an even stranger account in his 'Flying
Saucers and the Three Men' some years later, in response to persistent demands
for an explanation of what had occurred from former colleagues. He told an extraordinary story, involving
extraterrestrial spaceships with bases in Antarctica, that reads like the
far-fetched contactee dream-stuff; and it has even been suggested that the
implausibility of Bender's story was specifically designed in order to throw
serious UFO investigators off the track...