
Bridgeport, CT: The Surprising Origin of the Men in Black and Early UFO Sightings
According to the Bridgeport Library, one of the strangest and most famous UFO legends in American history actually has roots right here in Connecticut.
Long before the Men in Black movies turned the idea into a comedy franchise, the original story reportedly started in Bridgeport with a local UFO enthusiast named Albert K. Bender.

Back in the early 1950s, Bender was one of the first people in the country to seriously investigate UFO sightings. He even created one of the earliest UFO research organizations, the International Flying Saucer Bureau, which operated out of Bridgeport and attracted members from all over the world who were fascinated by the possibility of extraterrestrial visitors.
Then things reportedly got weird.
In 1953, Bender suddenly shut down the organization without much explanation. Not long after, he claimed he had been visited by mysterious men dressed entirely in black suits who warned him to stop researching UFOs. According to Bender, the strange visitors delivered a very clear message: drop the subject immediately.
Read More: Danbury Man Shares His UFO Eyewitness Story and Photos
Whether you believe that story or not, it became the foundation for what we now know as the Men in Black legend. Over the decades, countless UFO researchers have told stories about shadowy government agents showing up after sightings, supposedly trying to silence witnesses.
Now, I’ll admit something here—I’m a huge UFO nerd. Stories like this are my jam. And the fact that one of the most famous UFO conspiracy legends may have started in Connecticut makes it even better.
Think about it: while everyone associates the Men in Black with Hollywood now, one of the earliest versions of that story might have begun in Bridgeport more than 70 years ago.
Not bad for a state most people only talk about because of pizza.
Did a White Plains Researcher Get Too Close to the Truth About UFOs?
Gallery Credit: Lou Milano
CT Got on the UFO Map in 1987 When 200 People Reported Something Strange in the Sky
Gallery Credit: Lou Milano
The Forgotten Connecticut Inventions That Changed America
Gallery Credit: Lou Milano
Visual Guide of Mark Twain's Redding + Hartford , CT Homes and Years
Gallery Credit: Lou Milano
In 1970, Two Men Robbed a Danbury Bank + Blew Up the Police Station
Gallery Credit: Lou Milano
More From WRKI and WINE









