A Manhattan housewife claimed she got abducted by aliens in 1989 — and now she’s suing Netflix over doc: ‘I was a lab rat’



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The truth is out there. 

“The Manhattan Alien Abduction,” (now streaming on Netflix), covers the bizarre true story of Linda Napolitano, a New York City mother and housewife who claimed she got abducted by aliens in 1989. 

At the time, Napolitano, now 77, had her story discussed on “Ricki Lake” and “The Oprah Winfrey Show.” Now, she’s suing Netflix over the new docuseries.

Here’s everything to know.

Linda Napolitano in 1989. Courtesy of Netflix

What did she claim happened? 

On November 30, 1989, Napolitano, a housewife and mother of two who had grown up in Little Italy, alleged that she got abducted by aliens.

She claimed that she was levitated out of the 12th floor window of her Lower Manhattan apartment, and was floated towards the Brooklyn Bridge, into an alien space ship.

Onscreen, she recalled, “they take me up, all the way up. [The space ship] opens almost like a clam and then I’m inside. I’m gonna shut my eyes. I don’t wanna see.”

A dramatized reenactment of Linda beaming up into the space ship in “The Manhattan Alien Abduction.” Courtesy of Netflix

Napolitano added, “There were these creatures around me and they were examining my stomach. One of them came after me with a needle the length of a turkey baster…I didn’t want to believe that I was a lab rat being experimented on. But after a while, I just couldn’t deny it anymore.”

She took her story to the late UFO researcher Budd Hopkins, who died in 2011.

In 1996, Hopkins published a book about her account, “Witnessed: The True Story of the Brooklyn Bridge UFO Abductions.” 

An unspecified number of years after the alleged incident, Napolitano claimed that the extraterrestrials returned and targeted her family, giving them “nosebleeds.”  

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A dramatized rendition of Linda being levitated, as shown in “The Manhattan Alien Abduction.” Courtesy of Netflix

What was her proof? 

At the time, 23 witnesses claim they saw Napolitano floating in the Manhattan skyline like Criss Angel. Or at least, that’s what Hopkins alleged in his book, but he didn’t provide all of their identities.

Onscreen, one witness alleged that he saw her levitating in the sky, and, “I thought it was a movie; special effects.” 

Another witness was an unnamed delivery man for the New York Post, who said he saw it while he was on his delivery route.

“It scared the heck out of me. And I saw a woman coming out a window and just disappear,” he recalled.

“I realized exactly what I saw and I could not just let it go. Who was the woman in the white gown? I don’t know what the big secret is. I don’t know why they’re keeping it from the public. But we’re not alone.”

Linda Napolitano talking about her alleged experience onscreen, in “The Manhattan Alien Abduction.” Courtesy of Netflix

Napolitano also produced an X-Ray showing a supposed metal object that she alleged aliens put up her nose, to track her. 

Her son Johnny, who appeared onscreen with a hidden identity, also backed up her story that her family was targeted, too. 

“It’s got to be the most terrifying and hopeless thing that I’ve ever felt. So I was very reluctant to even start talking about this again. It’s been over 30 years since I sat down and seriously talked about this to anyone but my therapist,” he said, with his face obscured onscreen. 

He added, “I just try to erase it from my life. It happened a long time ago. I was quite young. Obviously, as a kid, you don’t know what to think.”

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He claimed that he saw three “beings” in their family living room. 

“I know my mom better than anyone else and I will tell you right now — there’s no way I believe she would want to make anything like this up,” he concluded, adding that there were over twenty witnesses. 

“So, she either planted a seed in all those people’s heads and mine or this is a real experience.” 

Linda Napolitano in The Manhattan Alien Abduction Courtesy of Netflix

What were the holes in her story? 

Napolitano visited Hopkins frequently, and he taped hypnosis sessions where she recalled her alleged ordeal. 

His widow, Carol Rainey, said onscreen in the doc, “I had access to all of Budd’s original source material so I started building a library of hypnosis sessions that Budd was doing with people.”

She added, “When I would hear people go under hypnosis, they would sound like they were a little drunk and they were struggling to pull it all together. But when Linda was hypnotized, she didn’t sound the way the others did when they were deep down. She had a clear coherent narrative. I just didn’t believe that she was under hypnosis.”

Rainey also said Napolitano may have fed her son what to say.

“I listened to the phone call that Budd had with her son Johnny and I could hear are a couple of points where he pauses and you’re not sure why,” she recalled. 

“She could have coached him to get aligned with her own story…Did Linda convince her son he had been abducted by aliens? You don’t lie about things like that to children. It would have been traumatizing for him.”

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Rainey doubted Napolitano’s “proof” in the form of the X-Ray of the metal implant in her nostril. She explained that wouldn’t be hard to fabricate, if she held the metal up to the outside of her nose. 

As part of her account, Napolitano claimed that mysterious government officials named Richard and Dan were visiting her to find out about her abduction. But when Rainey had a handwriting analyst study Richard and Dan’s signatures on documents, the analyst found that it matched Napolitano’s handwriting, Rainey said. 

Linda Napolitano in “The Manhattan Alien Abduction.” Courtesy of Netflix

Why is she suing Netflix now? 

According to Forbes, the complaint that Napolitano filed in New York Supreme Court alleges that Netflix featured Rainey in the docuseries as an “expert,” when, in reality, Rainey was allegedly an “embittered, alcoholic ex-wife hell bent on revenge against her husband.”

Additionally, Napolitano’s complaint claims the show sets her up as “a villain for purposes of controversy and conflict,” and that “The Manhattan Alien Abduction” will “destroy her reputation as an honest and decent person.”

The Post reached out to Netflix for comment. 

“Manhattan Alien Abduction” is now streaming. 



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