The Gulf Breeze Sightings, Part 2, Ed Just Loves Attention
(11/2025) This post from 2011 has been updated. The
links below no longer work.
Sources:
The Gulf Breeze Sightings:The Most
Astounding Multiple Sightings of Ufos in U.S. History, Ed and Frances
Walters, William Morrow & Co., 1990.
http://paul.rutgers.edu/~mcgrew/ufo/don.allen/gulf-breeze2
http://www.freewebs.com/donware/
http://www.ufocasebook.com/gulfbreeze.html;
http://ricksblog.biz/gulf-breeze-ufo-hoax/
http://ufos.about.com/od/visualproofphotosvideo/p/gulfbreeze.htm
http://uforn.bravehost.com/copyright.html
http://j_kidd.tripod.com/b/203.html
http://www.history.com/videos/gulf-breeze-florida#gulf-breeze-florida
http://www.ufoera.com/articles/report-on-the-reopening-of-the-walters-ufo-case_1190311230.html
Plus several emails between myself and Don Ware,
the MUFON State Director for Florida at the time. He and several other Field
Investigators researched the Gulf Breeze case as soon as Ed Walters decided to
take his story to the public.
Just when MUFON thought it had found the gold
standard of UFO events in the Gulf Breeze, FL sightings of ’87 to ’88, the case
began to unravel in a horrendous way. The site that best conveys an overview of
the 1990 developments is http://www.ufocasebook.com/gulfbreeze.html.
The press had a tendency to camp out at the
Walters’ home in Gulf Breeze, so the couple decided to move. It was an ominous
sign that on three occasions, Ed thwarted people going through his garbage. His
house lay empty for almost a year before it sold. At some point a reporter
(from the Pensacola Journal?) came to the door with a TV camera in tow. The
reporter was allegedly looking for the Walters, but since they had moved on,
the new resident, a middle-aged man, was asked if any photos or mementos of the
Gulf Breeze sightings had been found in the house. The answer was no. Were
there any models of the UFO left behind? Why yes. It just so happened that 3
months previous, the new owner was trying to turn off the water to fix a
refrigerator, so he was moving insulation in the attic and found a model of the
Gulf Breeze UFO. It was made of pie plates and pieces of Ed’s architectural
drawings. The reporter asked if he could have the model. The owner reckoned it
would be OK. The story was headlines in the Pensacola Journal.
It was an explosive charge. When I saw this charge
on the Youtube segments, I thought, “No way! What kind of dummy would leave
that behind?” In fact, Ed made the same claim. “Only a fool would leave that
kind of evidence behind.” Furthermore, it turned out that the model was made
from drawings of a failed house deal from two years after the
Gulf Breeze sightings. Considering that it was a newspaper competing with the
Sentinel that broke the story, that Ed’s home was long vacant, and that the
date of the model material suggested planted evidence, the
Walters rode out the first storm with relative ease.
Rick Outzer, a columnist for the PJ, was always
dead certain that the Walters were hoaxers. Of course, it’s easy to assert that
Ed is a genius who knew how to double expose his little old camera, especially
if one ignores all the other photos and videos … the claims of others that
saw ‘Bubba,’ the investigations and interviews done by the MUFON investigators,
and the claim of Duane Cook, editor of the Sentinel, that he was filming Ed
when Ed took one of the photos. Cook actually stood by as the photo came out of
the camera.
For some reason, Ed Walters was the lightning rod
for the debunkers. Destroy Ed’s credibility and Bubba will just disappear like
a bad dream, like it never happened, like there were no other witnesses or
sightings.
But Cook was not the only one who claimed to be
beside Ed as he took a photo. I recently tracked down Don Ware, the MUFON State
Director for FL at the time. In an email he wrote: “I saw the lighted objects
near Gulf Breeze seven times myself, often while standing beside Ed as he
photographed them, once with a diffraction grating on his camera. That time it
changed from the red phase to the white phase while slowly moving away,
appearing the same size to my eye in both phases. Yet the Polaroid image in the
white phase was 15 times the diameter of the red phase image. This shows that
the object was ionizing a volume of air around it that changed between the red
and white phases.”
In June of 1990, a week after the PJ story, a
second challenge arose. A teenager named Tommy Smith claimed that he watched Ed
hoax the photos, using the model, by double exposing them. One of the
documentaries shows Tommy recreating the procedure. It looked a lot like what
Bruce Maccabee described in the appendix of the book, which had been published
that March. What gave the charge additional credibility is that his parents
backed up the claim.
I asked Don Ware if he thought Tommy was part of a
plot, if a lot of money had perhaps changed hands. After all, there is the
issue of other photos from people who had no connection to Ed Walters. And why
would a clever hoaxer show his work to some random teenager and use the boy to
send the phony photos to the newspaper? That is about as logical as Ed leaving
his one and only model in the attic. Don wrote that he thought Tommy had taken
his own photos of the UFO but didn’t want to admit it to his dad. He and his
dad had issues. The dad never changed his story in supporting Tommy.
I don’t know if Don’s suggestion comes from an
interview with Tommy or if he is just speculating. Tommy’s story sounded real
enough to shake up the whole community. BUT, to believe Tommy is to ignore a
mountain of other evidence supporting the reality of the sightings.
Tommy’s claim caused MUFON to send out a Florida
couple to review the photos. Much had been made of the fact that an independent
lab would not affirm the photos as genuine or fake. What slips through the
cracks about that is the fact that the lab stated before examining
the photos that they would be able to spot a double exposed photo, but lacking
evidence of a hoax, they would not be able to affirm that the
photos were real.
Rex and Carol Salisberry reproduced a detailed
report, found at
http://www.ufoera.com/articles/report-on-the-reopening-of-the-walters-ufo-case_1190311230.html,
(link no longer functions) which called into question photo number 19, the UFO
on the road. From there they extrapolated that all of the photos were hoaxed.
The report is full of mathematical charts and graphs. Almost no one reading it
would understand it.
That wasn’t the end of it. I found a website,
included above, that claimed that the first two people to send photos
anonymously to the Sentinel, Believer Bill and Jane, were inventions of Ed. The
accuser tried to prove it by examining copyright laws. By email, I asked Don
Ware (State Director for MUFON, Mutual UFO Network) if he knew who Believer
Bill was. He answered, “I think ‘Believer Bill’ was actually R. G. [I am
withholding the full name]. R — — demonstrated mysterious powers, and he was
associated telepathically with the UFO occupants. He was also a participant in
our monthly MUFON/Truthseeker meetings.”
I will close here with a quote from another MUFON
investigator:
“It should be noted that statistically speaking,
there are now on record over 50 sightings of UFO activity in the Gulf Breeze
area that have no connection to the noted photographer Ed. There are now on
record five photographers of UFOs, only one of which has not been in direct
contact with MUFON investigators. There is now reported to be a second video
tape of a moving and hovering UFO; the photographer is in no way related to Ed.
And, there are over 100 witnesses of sightings who have asked to file reports,
with some accounts involving five and six witnesses.” (Bravehost, Bob Oeschler)
Addendum: Here are Don Ware’s comments regarding
the above information:
Dear Janet, Thanks for your informative Part 2 on
The Gulf Breeze Sightings. I have two comments;
“Ed’s main reason for moving, as told to me by Ed,
was because Frances wanted more garage space to keep her antique cars. I don’t
think that ‘media attention’ was a factor in his move from the Silverthorne
home. At that time, he was not getting much media attention, except from his
friend Duane Cook, Editor of the Gulf Breeze Sentinel, who lived a few blocks
away. The new house had a three-car garage and a three-car carport. Aliens
continued to show their vehicles to him at both of those homes. When he moved
again to the north shore of Pensacola Beach, across the sound from Shoreline
Park where the nightly sky watches occurred, they let him photograph their
vehicles in full daylight below eye level in his back yard, twice. Bland Pugh,
MUFON SD, took a picture of one while with Ed in the front yard of that home. I
think it is the same 8-ft-diameter unmanned vehicle Ed photographed by his pool
in the back yard. Bland’s photo showed a 2-ft-dia red light on the bottom.
“You said that Tommy ‘caused MUFON to review the
photos.’ That was a lie told to other UFO photographers by Rex Salisbury. [This
is a really important point. John Schuessler, ID, stood by the Walters story.]
When Rex worked his way into a SSD position and decided to show his true colors
as a debunker, he chose to ‘reinvestigate’ cases of other photographers of the
UFOs. No other Pensacola/Gulf Breeze MUFON board member knew he was doing that
until the doctor complained.
“Best Wishes, Don Ware, Former MUFON FI, SSD, SD,
and Region 1 Director.
“PS: My file on Northwest Florida MUFON Case #15,
Ed Walters is nine inches thick.”
Thanks to Don for those comments. Don also thinks
that Rex Salisberry was a CIA plant to debunk UFO sightings. He had a CIA
source/friend who told him it was entirely possible and feasible. You can learn
more about Don M. Ware here.
(This link works for now.)
Part 2 can also be seen at https://medium.com/@janetkatherineapplebysmith/the-gulf-breeze-sightings-part-2-ed-just-loves-attention-da3c8ca531b8?postPublishedType=repub and at https://theologylighthouse.substack.com/p/the-gulf-breeze-sightings-part-2. Don’t miss Part 3 here on Medium and at
God, Aliens, and Other Stuff.
Check out my website www.janetksmithpersonal.com where you can read for free my memoir The Legacy: A Memoir of Personal Guidance and Korean War Sabotage.

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