UFOSFROM PAGE 1agrees it’s silly, according to years of polling data fromlt; ialhip. Bloomberg News and others.But those same polls show that nearly half the country believes UFOs are not silly, that they do exist.Now, nearly every UFO sighting in the world is routed to a small office near John Wayne Airport, where Harzan hopes to make his dream t ome true.How? Harzan flips through some papers and taps on his laptop.Then he starts talking about Case 60042.CASE STUDIESA Canadian man was driving home in Kitchener,lt; ntario, on July 20, 2011. when at 9:45 p.m. a glowing orange sphere - 30 feet in diamet er -dropped within 40 feet of traffic on Homer Watson Boulevard. Three drivers pulled over and tried to record it with their cellphone cameras, but all three phones went dead, according to t lie witness.The sphere hovered, completely motionless, illuminating nearby treetops for 45 seconds, then wandered off.Harzan then reads Case 38293 * a father and son flying an Ovation 2 from Charlotte, N.C.. to Richmond, \ a . on Feb. 18,2012, when a glowing 30-foot sphere hung 50 feet off their right wing, causing their engine to sput ter and electronics to shut down. The orb then shot off at an incredible s|eed and their electronics blinked hack on.We've got intelligently controlled crafl visit ing our planet from somewhere else,” Harzan said, and I'd like to know who they are. Where are they from? And why are they here?”He culls through 200 emails a day and UMX) formal reports a month. He meets regularly with a team of field investigators, film analysts, researchers and state directors to ensure every report is investigated and categorized.“Within our field, you’ve fn got the far left - scientists sa looking for facts, data, something they can set* - all the firway to the far-out fringe, like capsychics and people with prcrystals,” Harzan said. MU- orFON is left of the center; we hrlean toward the scientific side.” hsAbout 40 percent of his Ureports turn out to be non- saalien, such as planes, flares thor Chinese lanterns. An ad- thditional 10 percent have in- thsufficient data to decide anv-t hing. About half are deenu*d di unidentified, which doesn’t necessarily mean they’re Yi