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CIA RDP81R00560R000100010001 0
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Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP81 RO9569R000100010001-0.. up six
four times the light’s diameter. A smaller body light was visible
on the underside. The object was tracked by ground radar, and
an F-94 interceptor obtained a radar lock-on while chasing it.
At one point, the UFO suddenly raced away at a clocked speed of
300 knots (about 345 mph.), dividing into three separate radar
targets at spaced intervals. Contact with the UFO either by
radar or visually, was maintained for over 30 minutes. During
this period, scattered witnesses saw the UFO exactly where
radar showed it to be. Conclusion: Officially ‘‘unknown.””
1951-1952 Period; East Coast Air Force Base
Period of September 1951 to November 1952; prominent east
coast Air Force Base.
Confidential report, certified by Rev. Albert H. Baller, Ger-
man Congregational Church, Clinton, Mass.
Extracts from letter by Air Force Control Tower Operator
to Rev. Baller, dated March 10, 1954:
“About 3 a.m., on a clear moonlit night, a buddy of mine
who was radar operator on the same night shift called me
rather excitedly on the intercom, and asked me if I could see
any object in the sky about’ 15 miles southwest of the base.
Using a pair of powerful binoculars I carefully scanned the sky
in that direction and assured him that I could see nothing.
It was then that he told me why he was so concerned.
“For several minutes he had tracked an object on his
radar’ scope, then all of a sudden it had stopped at a range of
about 15 miles from the base and remained stationary. Being
an experienced radar operator, he knew that whatever it was,
it was of good size, at least as big as any of our larger
transport planes. But what amazed him was the fact that it
stopped and remained motionless on the scope. A full half
hour passed and still this object remained in the same
location on the radar screen. Remembering that I had an in-
bound C-124 Globemaster coming in from that direction, I
thought that perhaps the pilot would see something out there
that we couldn’t. 1 gave the pilot a couple of calls and finally
raised him just south of on his way in. I told him
what we had on radar and asked him if he would mind swinging
off his course slightly so that he could take a look for us.
“] then turned him over to the radar operator who had
picked up the inbound aircraft on radar and he guided the pilot
to a new heading that would bring him directly into this blip
that was still stationary on the screen. The pilot slowed his
aircraft and he and his copilot and engineer started looking
about them. I could hear the radar man giving the pilot di-
rections on a monitoring speaker in the tower.
“The aircraft got onto a line on the radar screen that would
intersect the blip that was unidentified; then as the minutes
went by the aircraft slowly approached the object on the scope.
Both blips were equally bright and distinct. Then when it
seemed that the two would collide, at about a half mile
separation on the scope, the stationary object simply dis-
appeared, vanished seconds before the big Globemaster reached
its location.
“None of the crew on the plane had seen anything at any
time, although they were all observing closely at the time and
were told how close they were getting all the way to the object.
“How anything could vanish so suddenly from a radar
screen without even leaving a trace of what direction it went is
really amazing. When you bear in mind that a radar scanner
usually has a sweep of better than 50 miles, that would mean
that whatever the object was it went from a dead standstill
at 15 miles and disappeared from the scope covering over 35
miles in a split second. Remember also that this object was
there for over a half hour and did not disappear until seconds
before the aircraft reached its position: certainly this couldn’t
be any electrical disturbance or other phenomena. Why then
would it disappear precisely when it did?”
Summer 1953; Yaak, Montana
Unidentified objects were tracked at an Air Force radar site
several times. S/Sgt. William Kelly described the incidents in
a taped interview with Olean, N, Y., newsman Bob Barry.
‘On one occasion Sei Other radarme:
unidentified targets. In five sweeps of the antenna (about 1 min-
ute), the UFOs changed direction 5 times, sometimes making 90
degree turns. When radar indicated the UFOs had approached
within 10 miles of the station, the crew went outside to look for
them. They saw six objects in trail formation, switching to in-
line abreast, then stack formation. Other radar stations were
notified and they also tracked the UFOs.
The radar crew calculated thé objects’ speed: 1400-1600
mph. (In 1953 the official world speed record for aircraft was
755.14 mph.; see table).
At other times, the station tracked UFOs making similar man-
euvers. Sgt. Kelly had also tracked UFOs climbing vertically out
of the radar beam, with height finder equipment confirming the
rise, until the objects went off the scope.
July 3, 1954; Albuquerque, N.M.
Nine greenish spherical UFOs which invaded a restricted
flying area were detected by Air Defense Command radar and
sighted visually. The Albuquerque radar station’s message on
the sighting was accidentally intercepted at Chicago Midway
Airport by an airline operations employee:
0105-C, . . NINE UNIDENTIFIED SPHERICAL OBJECTS
GIVING OFF GREEN LIGHT REPORTED 20 MILES NORTH
ABQ [Albuquerque] FIELD AT 24,000 FEET. OBJECTS
HOVERED MOTIONLESS FOR 6 MINUTES THEN PRO-
CEEDED 340 DEGREES AT APPROX 2600 MPH. ALTI-
TUDE AND SPEED BY TRIANGULATION. . . ABQ ADIZ
RADAR.
(NICAP Note: ‘“ADIZ’’ means Air Defense Identification Zone;
only aircraft which have filed a flight plan are allowed to fly
through an ADIZ area.)
March 23, 1957; Los Angeles, Calif.
Confidential report obtained from CAA (now FAA) radar op-
erator confirming visual sightings at Oxnard AFB and vicinity.
Report certified by NICAP Board Members: Rev. Albert Baller;
Dr. Earl Douglass; Mr. Frank Edwards; Col. Robert B, Emerson,
USAR; Prof. Charles A, Maney; Rear Admiral H. B. Knowles,
USN (Ret.).
‘At 9:55 p.m., Mr. K, E, Jefferson, Pasadena, saw a brilliant
flashing object moving over Downey. Between that time and
midnight, police switchboards throughout the Los Angeles area
were flooded with hundreds of calls reporting a-UFO. The re-
ports poured into the Pasadena Filter Center.
According to Capt. Joseph Fry, commanding officer of the
Center, the first official report came in at 11:10 p.m., at which
time Capt. Fry notified Air Defense radar.
“Between 2310 (11:10 p.m.) and 2350,” Capt. Fry said ina
statement to newsman Russ Leadabrand, ‘(we had many reports.
We had reports that indicated the UFO was orange-red, flashing
a bright white light. Some of the callers claimed they heard the
‘sound of reports’ when the light flashed from the object.”
At the Filter Center itself, Air Force T/Sgt. Dewey Crow and
newsman Les Wagner watched the UFO maneuver slowly around
the area for over an hour. Just after midnight, Mrs. Robert
Beaudoin, wife of an Oxnard AFB Captain, telephoned the base
tower to report sighting the UFO. It was described as a large
silent object, flashing a brilliant red light, and maneuvering
above the Santa Rosa Valley.
An F-89 interceptor attempted to locate the object, but the Air
Force denied it was able to make contact, although at the same time
witnesses on the ground could see the UFO plainly near one of the
Oxnard runways.
Reports continued into early morning hours, with witnesses
in various locations describing objects which sometimes hovered,
and sometimes moved swiftly.
The CAA radar report, obtained later, virtually proved that
unexplained objects were operating over Los Angeles. The
radar operator’s report:
“At 2350 (11:50 p.m.) I was watching the radar scope,
when I noticed a target about 15 miles northwest and moving
northwest. At first I thought it was a jet, then I noticed it
was moving much faster than anything I had ever seen on the
scope. About 40 miles northwest it came to an abrupt stop and
Approved For Release 2001/04/02 CIA-RDP81 R00560R000100010001-0
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