Article Courtesy Of: Reuters
Charles
Hickson, the Mississippi man who claimed he was abducted and probed by
aliens while he was fishing with a friend in 1973 and never backed off
the story despite the ridicule he endured, has died.
Hickson, 80, died last Friday of a heart attack, his family said on Tuesday.
Hickson,
then 42, was fishing with 19-year-old Calvin Parker Jr. on a pier near
Pascagoula, Mississippi in October 1973 when they said a cigar-shaped
UFO with flashing blue lights suddenly appeared above them.
A
door opened up, the two men later told authorities, and they were
pulled into the craft by aliens, who paralyzed them, examined them on a
table and then let them go.
Although
Hickson was reluctant to share the story -- he said all he and Parker
wanted to do "was go fishing" and he feared people would "laugh me out
of Jackson County" -- he and Parker eventually went to local police and
reported the incident.
"They
weren't lying," the chief investigator for the Jackson County Sheriff's
Department told reporters at the time. "Whatever it was, it was real to
them."
As word of their claims
leaked out, Hickson and Parker became minor celebrities, celebrated by
believers in extraterrestrial life but derided by skeptics.
In
1974, after wire services picked up the story, Hickson appeared on a
number of national TV programs, including The Dick Cavett Show.
In 1983, Hickson wrote a book about the incident called "UFO Contact at Pascagoula" with William Mendez.