Tag: Marshall County

The Val Johnson Incident of 1979 in Northern Minnesota

Article by Hannah Shirley                                                 May 4, 2021                                               (duluthnewstribune.com)

• In the early morning of August 27, 1979, Marshall County Sheriff’s deputy Val Johnson was driving his squad car down a dark highway about 16 miles outside Stephen, Minnesota, near the Canadian border. Johnson saw a bright orb of light, about a foot in diameter and hovering 3 or 4 feet off the ground ahead of him. He drove right into the orb which crashed through his windshield and then traveled back out of the car. Johnson apparently blacked out.

• When Johnson came to at about 1:40 am and called his dispatch to report the crash, he realized that he had been unconscious for about a half hour. Both his wristwatch and his car’s clock were 14 minutes slow. “I don’t know what happened,” he said over the radio while he waited for an ambulance. “Something hit me.”

• The incident left the car’s windshield and one headlight smashed, and both antennas bent. Skid marks from the vehicle could be seen for 800 feet. After being examined by a physician, Johnson was diagnosed with “welder-type” burns on his eyes similar to those suffered by people exposed to bright lights. But investigators could never determine the cause of the crash.

• In the forty years since the “Val Johnson Incident”, the patrol car has become a permanent exhibit and the biggest attraction in the Marshall County Historical Society Museum. In recent years, interest in the car and Johnson’s story have only grown, according to Kent Broten, president of the historical society. However, Johnson has never actually claimed that he saw a UFO. He maintains that he doesn’t know what he saw.

• Chad Lewis, a self-described “researcher of the weird” has written extensively about the Val Johnson incident and spoken about it on numerous occasions at the museum. “Some said they were around at that time, and it was all blown out of proportion,” says Lewis. In 1979, “everybody had UFO fever.” But Lewis says that other people in the community were “down to earth, rural people, [who] weren’t quick to make up a ruse for publicity”, and believed that Val had seen something.

• Eventually, the world moved on and the Val Johnson Incident faded from a sensational headline to a quirky part of local history. The new, younger fans of the Val Johnson Incident aren’t as interested in Val Johnson himself so much as they are in the paranormal and unexplained. Some make the trip every year just to see the car.

• Today, the Val Johnson Incident is considered one of the more significant events in ufology due to the facts that the incident left damage to the vehicle, that the reporting party was someone as credible as a sheriff’s deputy, and that independent investigators examined the car and failed to come up with any explanation. The hallmarks of the case – the loss of time, the faded memory, Johnson’s strange injuries, the bright light – would all become common elements of future UFO “sightings”. “If [Johnson] was looking to make this up, he would have been hard-pressed,” said Lewis. “[U]nless he was very interested in UFO literature and folklore, [but] he probably wouldn’t have known that.”

• Many skeptics at the time pointed out other plausible explanations, even if none could be proved. Some believed that Johnson was hot-rodding his vehicle out on the county road that night, and made the event up to cover his misconduct. Others believe he actually encountered a plane smuggling drugs into the state from Canada. Lewis says that people would be surprised how often people in rural northwest Minnesota notice strange things in the night sky. “Most of the people that talk to me said, ‘I’m not saying what it was, it was just really weird…something I’ve never seen.’ I think people are not aware of how common these reports have become.”

 

WARREN, Minn. — Whatever you believe happened the night of Aug. 27, 1979, one

                              Val Johnson

thing is certain: Val Johnson’s police cruiser hit something.

In the moments after the Marshall County Sheriff’s deputy awoke in his car in the middle of the night on a dark road, the front of his vehicle bearing obvious damage, that was the only thing he knew for certain, too.

“I don’t know what happened,” he said over the radio to a county dispatcher while he waited for an ambulance. “Something hit me.”

Johnson’s call to dispatch came at about 1:40 a.m. about 16 miles outside Stephen, Minn. Johnson didn’t know it yet, but he had been unconscious for about a half hour. The deputy was known for carefully setting his watch to match the dashboard clock in his cruiser b

                Val Johnson’s patrol car

efore every shift – but when he awoke, both his watch and the clock were 14 minutes slow.

The details of the crash only got stranger. Johnson told the dispatcher that just before the crash, he saw a bright orb of light, about 8 to 12 inches in diameter and hovering 3 or 4 feet off the ground. The last thing he remembered was driving into the light, and seeing the orb enter the car through his windshield before going back out.

The incident left the car’s windshield and one headlight smashed, and both antennas bent. Skid marks from the vehicle could be seen for 800 feet. After being examined by a physician, Johnson was diagnosed with “welder-type” burns on his eyes similar to those suffered by people exposed to bright lights.

Investigators were brought in, but could never determine the cause of the crash.

Those who were directly involved in the night’s events couldn’t be reached – some loved ones told the Grand Forks Herald that after 40 years of cold calls, they had grown reticent about discussing what has come to be known as the “Val Johnson Incident.”

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UFO Or No? Forty Years Later, a Minnesota Town Still Wonders

Listen to “E85 9-5-19 UFO Or No? Forty Years Later, a Minnesota Town Still Wonders” on Spreaker.
Article by John Reinan                           August 23, 2019                        (startribune.com)

• August 27th marks the 40th anniversary of “The Marshall County Incident” when in 1979, Marshall County deputy sheriff Val Johnson had a mysterious encounter that some have called one of the Top 10 most significant UFO encounters ever recorded. Marshall County is located in Northwest Minnesota near the North Dakota and Canadian borders.

• At the time, the Marshall County Incident drew national attention to a town of only 1,500 residents. Today, the county commemorates the incident with a museum and a festival featuring a re-enactment, an interview with the original sheriff’s radio dispatcher involved in the incident, a costume contest, live music, and appearances by several ufologists.

• In 1979, deputy sheriff Val Johnson, age 35 at the time, had been with the Marshall County Sheriff’s Department for almost three years. In the early morning of August 27th, he saw a bright light in the sky visible for miles across the flat prairie. Thinking it could be an aircraft from the nearby Air Force base in Grand Forks, N.D., he drove toward it to investigate. Johnson said he saw a bright light about a foot in diameter hovering about 3 feet off the ground. Suddenly the light “went at” him and white light engulfed his squad car.

• Forty minutes later, Johnson woke up. His eyes and face were burned and he had a lump on his forehead. The windshield on Johnson’s squad car was cracked in a spiderweb pattern.  There was a hole in one of his red flashers and a dime-sized dent in the hood. Two antennas were bent. Both the electric clock in his car and his windup Timex wristwatch had stopped for 14 minutes. At 2:19 am, Johnson radioed in to headquarters saying, “Something just hit my car… It wasn’t a vehicle. I don’t know what the hell it was.”

• The County Sheriff Dennis Brekke called in experts to investigate. A Honeywell engineer speculated that the deputy had encountered “a highly charged electrical ‘thing’ with enough mass and momentum to create the effects.” The investigation was closed without reaching any conclusions.

• Johnson is now 75.  He has given dozens of interviews and has appeared on the TV show “That’s Incredible”. But Johnson has declined further interviews and has rarely spoken publicly about the incident. Said Johnson, “For the first three years, it was on my mind daily. After that I went on with my life.” “This is what happened to me. If you choose to believe, great. If you choose not to believe, that’s OK, too.”

Sounding groggy but calm, the Marshall County deputy sheriff radioed in from his patrol car at 2:19 a.m. on a lonely country road in northwest Minnesota.

Val Johnson standing with his squad car from 1979

“Something just hit my car,” said Val Johnson. “I don’t know how to explain it. Strange. … Something attacked my car.”
He’d seen a bright light in the sky, he said, visible for miles across the flat prairie, and drove toward it to investigate.

Fellow officers listening in quickly got on the radio and began speculating about what had happened. Perhaps he’d been hit by a small car, one suggested.

Johnson cut them short.

“It wasn’t a vehicle,” he snapped. “I don’t know what the hell it was.”

Four decades later, nobody else knows what the hell it was, either. But that won’t keep Warren from celebrating the biggest mystery to hit this town as far back as anyone can remember.

Tuesday marks the 40th anniversary of Johnson’s brush with a UFO, which drew national attention to this town of 1,500 residents near the North Dakota border, some 320 miles northwest of the Twin Cities. The incident has been called one of the Top 10 most significant UFO encounters ever recorded.

The county historical museum, where Johnson’s rust-colored Ford LTD squad car is the star attraction, will host a presentation featuring a re-enactment of his radio call that night. Several ufologists will be on hand, as well as the dispatcher who spoke with Johnson that night.

There will be an alien costume contest for the kids, and the Jensen Sisters from Thief River Falls will perform their original song “The Marshall County Incident.”

 Val Johnson’s cracked squad car windshield

Sherlyn Meiers, the museum director, says interest in the event has been strong.

“I have been getting phone calls almost every day for the past month,” she said. “Maybe we’re gonna have a bigger crowd than we thought.”

The light ‘went at’ him

Johnson, 35 at the time, had been with the Marshall County Sheriff’s Department for almost three years. Quiet and well-respected, he’d been making a routine patrol on rural roads when he saw the light in the night sky, just across the Red River from Grafton, N.D. He wondered if it might be an aircraft from the nearby Air Force base in Grand Forks, N.D.
Johnson drove toward the light. The next thing he knew, some 40 minutes later, he woke up. His eyes and face were burned — doctors later described them as welder’s burns — and he had a lump on his forehead.

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