It is November 30, 1989, in New York City. Linda Napolitano was walking across the Brooklyn Bridge at around 3 a.m. when she saw a bright blue light above her. She then felt herself being lifted into the air by a beam of light and taken into a large, oval-shaped craft that hovered over the bridge. There, she claimed to have met three gray-skinned beings with large black eyes and small mouths, who performed various medical procedures on her. She also said that she saw other human abductees on board, some of whom were in distress.
AI Generated Recreation
Napolitano’s story might sound like a typical case of alien abduction, but what makes it different and more compelling is that she was not the only one who witnessed the event. According to her account, there were at least two other witnesses who saw her being taken by the aliens: a security guard named Richard and a United Nations official named Javier Perez de Cuellar. Both of them independently contacted Napolitano’s UFO researcher, Budd Hopkins, and confirmed her story. They also claimed to have experienced missing time, memory loss, and emotional trauma after the incident.
The Brooklyn Bridge abduction has been widely discussed and debated by UFO enthusiasts, skeptics, and researchers alike. Some have argued that it is one of the most convincing and well-documented cases of alien abduction ever reported, while others have dismissed it as a hoax, a hallucination, or a false memory. The case has also inspired several books, documentaries, and fictional works.
But what really happened on that night in 1989? Was Linda Napolitano really abducted by aliens? Or was she a victim of a psychological phenomenon or a clever deception? And what about the other witnesses? Were they telling the truth or were they part of a conspiracy?
The answers to these questions may never be known for sure, but one thing is certain: the Brooklyn Bridge abduction remains one of the most fascinating and mysterious cases of alien encounter in history.