Abduction at Devil's Den

Published: Oct. 13, 2019, 8:15 p.m.

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The interview you\\u2019re about to hear is one of the most compelling, fascinating, and terrifying personal accounts we\\u2019ve ever come across.\\xa0 We realize it may also be one of the most controversial subjects we\\u2019ve ever discussed.\\xa0 Our guest tonight knows these sensations all too well. The wonder, terror, decades of trauma, and the consequences from coming forward after a lifetime of these experiences are all part of his story.\\xa0 In June of 1977, Terry Lovelace was in the U.S. Air Force working as a medic and EMT while stationed at Whiteman AFB.\\xa0 He and his EMT partner and close friend felt compelled to take a weekend camping to Devil\\u2019s Den State Park in Arkansas.\\xa0 What started out as a carefree trip to the great outdoors would end in a night of horror and pain as they encountered a massive unknown craft about five stories tall.\\xa0 This experience would lead to not only nightmares and inexplicable panic attacks for Terry along with an intense investigation by the USAF Office of Special Investigations, but the tragic and premature death of his friend.\\xa0 Terry would go on to a successful career in law as a felony prosecutor, eventually becoming an Assistant Attorney General for the U.S. Territory of American Samoa and a State\\u2019s Attorney for Vermont\\u2019s Board of Medical Practice.\\xa0 After retirement, a trip to the Emergency Room for a fall in 2012 would bring all those suppressed memories to the surface once again, memories that began in his childhood.\\xa0 The radiologist had discovered an anomalous piece of square metal about the size of a fingernail with two wires attached, just above his right knee.\\xa0 In the calf muscle below, a strange, flower petal-shaped object with the density of bone was also discovered.\\xa0 To add to the mystery, there were no incision marks anywhere to be found.\\xa0 This discovery and the objects\\u2019 purpose were enough to convince Terry that it was time to tell his story.\\xa0 He believes we all have a right to know what\\u2019s really going on.\\xa0 Some may find his account frightening or at least alarming, while others will dismiss it as fantasy.\\xa0 Many won\\u2019t know what to think about it.\\xa0 But consider this: if you don\\u2019t believe any of it, then you don\\u2019t have to worry, you and your rationale are safe.\\xa0 If you do believe his story, even just some of it, then it may provide a glimpse into one of the biggest mysteries and threats humanity has ever faced.
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