Falcon Lake 1967 — Stefan Michalak Burned by Exhaust Blast from Landed Craft — Grill-Pattern Burns, Vegetation Scorched, Intermittent Recurrence

May 20, 1967: Stefan Michalak was prospecting near Falcon Lake, Manitoba when two glowing objects descended. One departed, one landed close enough for him to approach. He attempted to hail occupants. When the craft took off, it blasted hot air from an exhaust panel — setting his shirt on fire and leaving a distinctive grill-patterned burn on his chest. Vegetation at the site was burnt. Authorities initially disbelieved him until he showed them the physical evidence at the site. Michalak suffered from intermittent recurrence of the chest burn for years afterward. This case has documented physical evidence: burn marks on a human body, burnt vegetation, and a physical site. It is one of the few cases involving direct physical trauma from UAP proximity. Royal Canadian Mint commemorated on a $20 silver coin in 2018. CROSS-REFERENCE: Grill-pattern burns + exhaust blast = propulsion exhaust from a UAP at close range. The physiological effects are consistent with radiation or directed energy exposure — connecting to Amy Eskridge’s documented DEW burns and radiation cases in our scientist dossier.

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