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What Kucinich Saw:
Witnesses Describe His Close Encounter
Candidate's
Pals Recall Three Throbbing UFOs; Outed by Shirley MacLaine
By MICHAEL
M. PHILLIPS January 2,
2008; Page A1
The 2008 presidential race has raised many questions about
the candidates' personal histories. Will Barack Obama's past drug use
preclude a White House future? Will Christian conservatives forgive Rudy
Giuliani his two divorces? Will voters forgive Hillary Clinton for
forgiving Bill?
And what exactly did Democratic candidate Dennis Kucinich
see hovering above actress Shirley MacLaine's house 25 years ago?
This fall, Ms. MacLaine revealed in her new book that the
Ohio congressman had seen a UFO and felt "a connection in his heart and
heard directions in his mind." In a Democratic presidential debate in late
October, Mr. Kucinich acknowledged seeing something airborne that he
couldn't identify and then defused the issue with a joke about opening a
campaign office in Roswell, N.M., the capital of unexplained
sightings.
Since then, the long-shot candidate has refused to
elaborate on the experience.
Now, after keeping quiet about the incident for a quarter
of a century, the two people who say they were at Mr. Kucinich's side that
evening have come forward to describe an event which they say left them
convinced that there's intelligent life in outer space.
"At no time did I feel afraid, even though I felt very
small," says one witness, Paul Costanzo. "I sensed that I was in the
presence of a greater technology and intelligence."
The close encounter, says Mr. Costanzo, took place in
September 1982 at Ms. MacLaine's former home in Graham, Wash. -- an
expansive estate on a ridge above the Puyallup River, with a view of Mount
Rainier.
The 61-year-old Mr. Kucinich, who declined several requests
to comment for this article, had been the wunderkind mayor of Cleveland in
the late 1970s and had met Ms. MacLaine through Bella Abzug, the late New
York congresswoman and feminist. The actress says she quickly realized she
and Mr. Kucinich were kindred spirits. Years later he asked Ms. MacLaine
to be the godmother of his daughter.
"We just thought the same," Ms. MacLaine says in an
interview. "We have the same political points of view."
When Cleveland voters ousted Mr. Kucinich after one
tumultuous term, Ms. MacLaine offered him her home as a sanctuary where he
could write his memoirs. He lived there for the better part of a
year.
Also in residence was Mr. Costanzo, a Juilliard-trained
trumpet player and jujitsu black belt, who worked as Ms. MacLaine's
assistant, personal trainer and bodyguard. He and Mr. Kucinich became good
friends, and Mr. Costanzo, now 55 years old, served as deputy campaign
director and security chief for the congressman's unsuccessful 2004
presidential run.
Ms. MacLaine -- well-known for her fascination with things
mystical and extraterrestrial -- was in Canada that weekend in 1982,
performing her one-woman show. But Mr. Costanzo's girlfriend at the time,
a model and actress who is now 50 years old, was visiting when the UFO
incident took place. She spoke after Mr. Costanzo requested she do so, and
on condition that her name not be published.
Here's what happened, according to separate interviews with
Mr. Costanzo and his former girlfriend:
The day was strange from the start. For hours, Mr.
Kucinich, Mr. Costanzo and his companion noticed a high-pitched sound.
"There was a sense that something extraordinary was happening all day,"
says the girlfriend. She and Mr. Costanzo say that none of the three
consumed alcohol or took drugs.
As they sat down to a dinner, Mr. Kucinich spotted a light
in the distance, to the left of Mount Rainier. Mr. Costanzo thought it was
a helicopter.
But Mr. Kucinich walked outside to the deck to look through
the telescope that he had bought Ms. MacLaine as a house gift. After a few
minutes, Mr. Kucinich summoned the other two: "Guys, come on out here and
look at this."
Mr. Costanzo and his girlfriend joined Mr. Kucinich, where
they took turns peering through the telescope. What they saw in the far
distance, according to both witnesses, was a hovering light, which soon
divided into two, and then three.
MORE
After a few minutes, the lights moved closer and it became
apparent that they were actually three charcoal-gray, triangular craft,
flying in a tight wedge. The girlfriend remembers each triangle having red
and green lights running down the edges, with a laser-like red light at
the tail. Mr. Costanzo recalls white lights, but no tail.
Mr. Costanzo says each triangle was roughly the size of a
large van, while his former girlfriend compares it to a "larger Cessna,
smaller than a jet certainly." Neither recalls seeing any markings,
landing gear, engines, windows or cockpits.
The craft approached to within 200 yards, suspended over
the field just beyond the swimming pool. Both witnesses say it emitted a
quiet, throbbing sound -- nothing like an airplane engine.
"There was a feeling of wanting to communicate something,
but I didn't know what," says Mr. Costanzo.
The craft held steady in midair, for perhaps a minute, then
sped away, Mr. Costanzo says. "Nothing had landed," he says. "No strange
beings had disembarked. No obvious messages were beamed down. When they
were completely out of sight, we all looked at each other disbelieving
what we had seen."
At Mr. Kucinich's suggestion, they jotted down their
impressions and drew pictures to memorialize the event. Mr. Kucinich kept
the notes, according to Ms. MacLaine, who said he promised her recently
that he would try to find them.
"It was proof to me that we're obviously not alone," says
the girlfriend.
The next day, the group spotted what they thought to be
military helicopters buzzing around the valley where they had made the
sighting. And the high-pitched sound remained.
Mr. Kucinich called Ms. MacLaine in Canada to tell her what
had happened. "He said it was beautiful, serene, and it moved him," says
Ms. MacLaine, who is supporting Mr. Kucinich's candidacy. "He was not
afraid of it, let's put it that way. Seeing something that close and
sophisticated and gentle."
Ms. MacLaine says she has seen UFOs from a distance in New
Mexico and Peru, but never up close. She was envious. "I'm the one who
reports them, but they never make close visitation. What am I doing
wrong?"
None of the three reported the incident to the authorities.
And over the years that followed, they shared the story with very few
people. "Unfortunately, people are ridiculed when they say they've had
these kinds of experiences, which is why I never came forward with it,"
says the girlfriend.
Ms. MacLaine says she called Mr. Kucinich before she
included his UFO sighting in her book, "Sage-ing while Age-ing," a
recounting of her spiritual and professional journeys. "I can handle it,"
she says he told her.
More recently, Mr. Kucinich has dodged it. Approached by
The Wall Street Journal for comment in December -- moments after he voted
for a House resolution praising Christmas and Christianity -- Mr. Kucinich
looked unblinkingly ahead: "I don't have any comment," he said.
Write to Michael M. Phillips at michael.phillips@wsj.com
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