Belgium UFO that puzzled NASA was polystyrene fake

'It's too easy to fool people, even with a cheap model', The man behind the hoax, Patrick said.


Afp July 27, 2011

BRUSSELS: An unidentified flying object photographed high in the Belgian sky that puzzled even NASA scientists turns out to have been a fake made out of foam, the man behind the hoax said Tuesday.

Though scientists pored over the picture of a triangular-shaped flying saucer with four lights, allegedly photographed in April 1990 by a young worker, the mystery remained intact until the man's revelation on the RTL-TVI network.

Made of polystyrene in a matter of hours and photographed that night, the picture was released after several sightings of UFOs over Belgium in 1989 and 1990.

Then aged 18, the man identified only as Patrick said he and a few friends "made it, painted it, hung it up and then photographed it".

The photo was the sharpest available to experts in a two-year period in which thousands of people across Belgium reported UFO sightings.

Several days after its release, a Belgian airforce plane was ordered to hunt down the UFOs across the country, but to no avail. Some believed the UFOs were new stealth fighters being tested by NATO.

"It's too easy to fool people, even with a cheap model," said Patrick, adding he had decided it was time to come clean.

COMMENTS (2)

wgalison | 12 years ago | Reply And can’t the Tribune be bothered to use the actual photo in question rather than some stock image of a flying saucer? The image of the purported Belgian UFO can be easily found on the internet and is public domain. How lazy and incompetent is your editorial staff?
wgalison | 12 years ago | Reply

Belgium UFO that puzzled NASA was polystyrene fake.

Why does your title say that the UFO was a fake when in fact only one photo of the object has been claimed to be a fake by some anonymous guy?

Does the Herald Tribune not understand the difference between an object and a photo of an object?

Here is documented information about the Belgian UFO sightings of 1989:

http://blog.ufo-blog.com/2007/12/general-wilfried-de-brouwer-belgium.html

The object was chased by two f-16's and tracked on radar over many hours.

Saying that the case is solved because someone came forward saying it was a hoax is ridiculous.

If I tell you that I faked the Apollo moon landings, would that "finally explain" those?

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