And the lack of any names is irrelevant and trivial next to my main point which was ignored...
So, we're agreed that the lack of third party names in the police's letter to Ian Ridpath is not, in itself, unusual?
According to the records, the police were called a mere 17 minutes after some captain 'terminated' the Penniston/Burroughs exploration of the forest. Very oddly, the police report makes no mention of who at Bentwaters made the call, and makes no mention of the police ever meeting or speaking to any of the witnesses...
Re-reading that, I think you / others might see why I might reasonably have thought you were referring to this police log (below) recorded at the time, not the letter written in response to a query from an interested but uninvolved member of the public three years later.
Agreed that it would make sense to us that the primary witnesses (Penniston, Burroughs, Cabansag) meet the Suffolk Constabulary officers,
but we don't know the priorities and concerns their shift leader (Buran?) had.
With the initial suspicion of a crashed aircraft, sending an ad-hoc party out to check is admirable; but when it became clear this wasn't likely, having on-duty, uniformed USAF men "investigating" something off-base in this context might have been problematic.
They had no jurisdiction or authority off-base, and while relations between USAF personnel and local communities in the UK have been overwhelmingly positive, that doesn't mean the locals would want USAF Security Police policing
them.
-In passing, the Rendlesham village sign carries a US flag to this day, as can be seen on the
Rendlesham Parish magazine website.
The linked-to issue has an article about the local Cold War museum- and notes how the role of the local US bases changed over 42 years
External Quote:
...involving both bases with USAF fighters providing first air defence, then nuclear strike and ending with ground attack.
The twin bases were not involved in hostilities or a major exercise in December 1980. It is likely that they were operating on minimum staffing scales over Christmas. The USAF Security Police on duty would have the responsibility of patrolling the perimeters and securing access points and key sites on the bases; physical security. In addition, they would have been responsible for garrison police duties (I don't know if US service police use that term): the maintaining of military discipline amongst service personnel and the day-to-day policing, and police support, of the base's population. Investigating allegations of theft, looking for lost pets, intervening in fights between young men, attending domestic incidents, ensuring traffic safety and driver sobriety.
Military bases have a disproportionately large number of young, physically fit men, and the problems that young men sometimes cause.
Large American military bases overseas are like small towns- married quarters, stores (definitely the ubiquitous PX), fast food outlets, bars, a bowling alley etc. etc. (I don't know if the USAF bases in England had schools, some US bases in other nations do).
Christmas, a time of happiness and peace if we're lucky, can be testing for some, and for many of us involves some drinking; police are kept busy as always. (And it has to be said, RAF Bentwaters/ Woodbridge are not in an area with many diversions for young men off-duty).
The three airmen might have been required elsewhere, or at least their shift commander might have wanted them available for duties elsewhere. They had been sent off-base to investigate lights, and we know what some of the light sources they ended up seeing were- a farmhouse and Orford Ness lighthouse, which they reported back to the CSC.
It was clear no aircraft had crashed. There was no indication of major criminality involving base personnel, or of a quantifiable breach of base security (e.g. the theft of munitions or small arms) or any signs of hostile action against the bases. There were no losses or injuries of any sort.
We don't know if the farmhouse and lighthouse were the sources of
all the lights they saw, and
@Scaramanga correctly points out it is hard to reconcile those sources with the subjective accounts of the airmen (particularly Penniston).
But the UK's visiting forces protocols do not make provision for allied military units to investigate unidentified lights in the surrounding countryside under their own recognisance.
Again, we might think it would make sense for the three airmen to describe their observations to Suffolk police in person, but they had made their reports back to the Central Security Center, and there was nothing resembling a major incident. Like many policing remits, the USAF SP operation at Woodbridge/ Bentwaters would of necessity been continuous; duties, information and responsibility have to be transferred from person to person and shift to shift. We can draw an analogy with acute care in a hospital: Continuity of care is important and is the ideal, but after several hours nurses and doctors hand over responsibility for their patients to others due to a shift change or perhaps because they are required elsewhere.