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1966: Sheriff reveals UFO encounter and death of dog

(Last Updated On: March 3, 2021)

THINK ABOUTIT SIGHTING REPORT

Date: August 9, 1966

Sighting Time: 10:30 pm

Day/Night: Night

Location: Richmond, Virginia

Urban or Rural: -Rural

Hynek Classification: CE-II (Close Encounter II) Observation of an object in close proximity to the witness, where physical traces (impression, burn, medical effect, etc.) are left or (electrical effect, heat) are felt

Duration:

No. of Object(s): 1

Height & Speed: about 200 feet 

Size of Object(s): 30 feet in diameter

Distance to Object(s):

Shape of Object(s): Disc

Color of Object(s): white

Number of Witnesses: Multiple

Source: Richmond Times-Dispatch (Virginia), October, 1999

Summary/Description:  “I happened to look up and there was that UFO right above the cornfield, it was just hovering right up above the power lines” about 200 feet in the air, Mathews said. The craft, which Mathews described as white and about 30 feet in diameter, made hardly a sound and emitted no light. “It was just like the ones you see on TV,” Mathews said.

Full Report

Sheriff Reveals 1966 UFO Encounter And Death Of Dog

By Mark Bowes – Staff Writer
Richmond Times-Dispatch (Virginia)

If he hadn’t seen it with his own eyes, Henrico County Sheriff A.D. “Toby” Mathews said, he might not have believed it.

On a bright moonlit night 33 years ago this summer, Mathews said, he saw a large unidentified flying object hovering silently near his Varina farm. He suspects whatever was inside the mysterious craft was responsible for snatching and snuffing the life out of his dog.

“I really saw the thing, I really did,” Mathews, 65, said this week when asked to respond to talk of his close encounter. “And I’ve never seen anything like that since then.”

Mathews said he never publicly disclosed what he saw until now because he felt no one would believe him. He talked about his UFO experience this week after The Times-Dispatch learned that he had told the story three years ago to his former chief deputy during a Christmas dinner in Williamsburg.

Matthews, who’s fond of sharing personal stories about his life, was candid about his UFO experience, which he noted occurred during a time when such sightings were reported with some regularity by Richmond-area residents.

During the spring and summer of 1966 –when Mathews said he saw a saucer like object hover over a cornfield near his farm and then disappear in a flash — more than a half-dozen people, including three other Richmond-area police officers, reported spotting similar objects hovering over the city, Henrico and Goochland County, according to news accounts in The Times-Dispatch and The Richmond News Leader.

One Richmond patrolman told The News Leader that he chased the UFO in his patrol car. 

“If I live to be 100, I’ll never forget it,” said former Officer William L. Stevens Jr. in a July 21, 1966, news story.

Mathews’ UFO encounter had been the subject of gossip for years and recently surfaced again as the local election season draws to a close. Mathews, a two-term sheriff, is running for the Varina District seat on the Henrico Board of Supervisors.

With just four days left until the general election, Matthews this week recounted his UFO experience with little hesitation. He said it occurred Aug. 9, 1966, after he returned home from a psychology class at the former Richmond Professional Institute (now Virginia Commonwealth University). He was a road sergeant with Henrico police and was living alone at the time at his farm on Charles City Road in the county’s Glendale area.

At about 10:30 that evening, Mathews said, his German shepherd, tied to a chain out back, began barking loudly, so he went outside to investigate. After turning him loose, Mathews said the dog, which he had acquired only three weeks earlier, ran to the edge of an adjacent cornfield. He was astonished at what he saw next.

“I happened to look up and there was that UFO right above the cornfield, it was just hovering right up above the power lines” about 200 feet in the air, Mathews said.

The craft, which Mathews described as white and about 30 feet in diameter, made hardly a sound and emitted no light. The object was about 4 or 5 feet wide at its widest point, which was in the middle, he said.

“It was just like the ones you see on TV,” Mathews said. “It was a bright moon that night,” so he got a good look at it.

Mathews said he ran back inside his house to get a flashlight, and when he returned and shined it on the craft, the UFO turned slightly, emitted a burst of light and “took off like a bullet, just tremendously fast.”

Mathews said he re-chained the dog and went to bed after the craft disappeared, and he got up about 5 the next morning and went out to check on his dog. He let it run loose for a few minutes, as was his routine, but the dog didn’t come back.

Mathews said he canvassed the area, but the dog was nowhere to be found. When he returned home, he was startled to find his dog lying motionless in the middle of the road just beyond his circular driveway. He was dead.

“He didn’t have a mark on him — no blood, no singe [marks], no nothing,” Matthews recalled. “It looked like he almost was sleeping. And whatever killed him, they had taken his chain collar off” and dropped it on the shoulder of the road. “I couldn’t believe how it got off him like it did.”

Mathews said his neighborhood in those days was remote and largely devoid of traffic at that hour. “I didn’t see any cars come through at the time.” Mathews said he assumed that his dog was killed by whoever, or whatever, was in the UFO. “The dog let me know that they were there,” he said.

The dog’s death remained a mystery, Mathews said. He buried the shepherd that morning in a meadow on his property.

Mathews said the city officer who saw a saucer like object near the State Fairgrounds a month earlier had urged him to notify the news media about his encounter, but Mathews resisted. Mathews was living alone at the time, and there were no other witnesses, he said.

“I wasn’t frightened by it; it was kind of awesome,” Mathews said of the object. “Of course, back in those days I was still in the military reserve, and it didn’t appear to be any type of military craft at all. Because No. 1, it wouldn’t have done what it did” had it been a known military aircraft.

In December 1996, Matthews told his story to then-Chief Deputy Patrick Haley and his wife, Brenda, during a Christmas dinner party at the Seafarers Restaurant in Williamsburg.

“The way he told it was so specific and he was dead serious, he wasn’t joking,” said Haley, who now is deputy coordinator of law enforcement accreditation for the Virginia Department of Criminal Justice Services. “We talked about this for months.”

Haley, who resigned abruptly after about a year as the department’s No. 2 officer because he believed incompetent leadership and dishonorable management practices by Mathews created a host of problems with the sheriff’s office, recalled Mathews telling him a slightly different story about the encounter.

Haley said he remembered Mathews saying the craft had landed and emitted some kind of strong “pull” that drew him toward it, although he managed to resist it. Haley also recalled Mathews saying that his dog, after it was found dead, appeared to have been burnt or singed.

Mathews, however, said those things didn’t happen. And he shrugged off how his strange encounter may be viewed by the public.

“Well, I did see it,” he said. “I really don’t know what it was.”