01 · DISCLOSURES
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01 · DisclosuresFD · FindingsJUN 12 2026

Findings · War.gov June 12, 2026

The June 12, 2026 War.gov release. A mixed tranche of Cold War saucer files, FBI field reports, AARO western-site witness statements, NASA debriefings, and modern orb media. The findings keep old bureaucracy and current unresolved cases in the same frame.

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20 of 20 findings

  1. 01PDFDepartment of Warp.11

    The 1947 discs came with checkboxes.

    This file catches the 1947 saucer wave at the moment it became paperwork: standardized Air Force checklists, military witnesses, civilian witnesses, and short official evaluations. The Muroc and Portland clusters matter because the record is already asking for speed, shape, sound, exhaust, maneuvers, and corroboration.

    Muroc Officers and Portland Police Report Discs, 1947

  2. 02PDFDepartment of Warp.1

    Kansas got a meteorite, a battery case, and a problem.

    The Norcatur packet treats the February 18, 1948 event as a likely meteorite fall, but it preserves harder-to-file details from witnesses who described an object, flame, smoke, and a hot battery case. Lincoln LaPaz rejected simple Moon and Venus theories while still calling the falls unusual enough for serious investigation.

    Powered Object Before Norcatur's Meteorite Fall

  3. 03PDFCIAp.2

    Harare saw a disc. Langley cc'd everybody.

    A SECRET//NOFORN CIA report says observers at Harare International Airport saw a disc-like object with a hollow center, rotating underside lights, and beams. The distribution list is the finding: White House, DNI, DIA, NSA, FBI, and many commands received a report that weighed both foreign reconnaissance and extraterrestrial interpretations.

    Rotating Disc Over Harare International Airport

  4. 04PDFDepartment of Warp.1

    Six agents saw orbs. AARO solved sixty percent.

    AARO explains roughly sixty percent of the October 2023 western-site observations as military aircraft deploying infrared countermeasure flares. The remaining portion stays unresolved because radar and ADS-B data did not support the same explanation, while the case rested on consistent reports from six federal law-enforcement agents.

    Federal Agents Track Orange Orbs, October 2023

  5. 05PDFFBIp.1

    The homeowner brought clips, sensors, and a privacy request.

    The FBI form records a source bringing video clips, repeated orb observations, trail cameras, other sensors, and reported gamma, electronics, and GPS effects near a northeastern residence. It is also a privacy file: the source wanted the observations documented without turning the home into a public spectacle.

    Trail-Camera Plasma Orbs With Radiation Spikes, Northeast

  6. 06PDFFBIp.3

    The FBI went to verify the orbs. The orbs obliged.

    Two FBI special agents visited the northeastern residence to evaluate years of reports and videos, then logged their own short observations of white, blue-white, and red-white lights. The report is narrow, but it moves the case from witness submission into agent-observed field notes.

    Two FBI Agents Witness Red-White Lights, November 2024

  7. 07PDFCIAp.3

    Australia read Blue Book and noticed the shrug.

    The 1971 Australian defense review reads Project Blue Book as a public posture that never quite matched the statistical problem underneath. It argues stronger reports produced more unknowns, not fewer, and says Australia lacked the scientific and intelligence structure to assess the subject properly.

    Blue Book's Stronger Reports Yielded More Unknowns

  8. 08PDFDepartment of Warp.1

    A 20-foot orange circle is a poor hillside accessory.

    Witness 1 describes a large orange object near a hillside, smaller red lights appearing to leave orange lights, and a partly transparent vehicle-like object over terrain measured later at about 1,100 meters away. The value is not just the imagery; it is a signed AARO memorandum preserving one agent's first-person sequence.

    Federal Agents' Orange Orbs and Transparent Vehicle

  9. 09PDFDepartment of Warp.1

    Vehicle mimicry failed the terrain test.

    Witness 2 describes bright orb-like lights, red formations, and objects that appeared to imitate vehicles over terrain ordinary vehicles could not cross. The account repeatedly notes no sound, interference, or physiological effects, which keeps the odd movement claims separated from effects the witness did not report.

    Federal Agent's Red Orbs, Western US, October 2023

  10. 10VIDFBI

    Two red backyard orbs, filmed on the good phone.

    The video file tracks a July 2025 backyard sighting in which witnesses described two brilliant red spheres, a white plasma-like center, silent tandem motion, and an apparent merge before disappearing. The companion FBI material matters because the Bureau assessed the eyewitnesses as credible and noted nearby related reports.

    Twin Red Orbs Merge Over Northeastern Backyard

  11. 11PDFIntelligence Community Agencyp.3

    The potato got a low-confidence sunlight theory.

    An IC partner assessed the Cheyenne Mountain object as possible sunlight backscatter with low confidence, while recording that five soldiers described a stationary, angular, panel-like object. The analysis leaves the event unresolved as of June 2026, so the finding is the mismatch between a mundane hypothesis and a cautious confidence level.

    Five Army Witnesses, Angular Potato Over Colorado

  12. 12PDFCIAp.1

    Blue Book had three staffers and 90 percent bad gratings.

    The 1953 CIA status memo reduces Project Blue Book to its institutional mechanics: one officer, one airman, one secretary, a transfer to Air Defense Command, and a camera program whose gratings mostly failed. It also repeats the Robertson Panel recommendation to strip UFOs of special status and mystery.

    Bluebook's Hundred Cameras, Ninety Percent Failure

  13. 13PDFCIAp.1

    The British saw a saucer, then studied public opinion.

    Chadwell's 1952 memo says a British messenger relayed a Yorkshire RAF sighting of a perfect flying saucer during a demonstration. The same memo quickly turns from object description to public reaction, warning systems, emergency communications, and the danger of panic.

    RAF Officers Witness Flying Saucer, Yorkshire 1952

  14. 14PDFDepartment of Warp.11

    The Army checked saucers and found no Russian shortcut.

    The 1949 Army study reviewed roughly 210 incidents and explained about twenty percent, mostly as misidentified weather balloons. Its more important conclusion is negative but official: no tangible evidence tied the reports to a foreign nation or to highly secret U.S. experimental projects.

    Army Evaluates 210 Flying Saucer Incidents, Clears Russia

  15. 15PDFCIAp.2

    Soviet astronomers dismissed saucers, except when they didn't.

    The CIA report captures Soviet astronomers publicly leaning on Donald Menzel's skeptical explanations while privately acknowledging interest and at least one reddish-object report that stayed uncomfortable. It is not a Soviet UFO program file; it is a field report showing how scientists talked when the subject followed them across observatories.

    Soviet Astronomers Witness Red Saucer, 1967

  16. 16PDFFBIp.1

    Five soldiers watched a white bean hold still, then vanish.

    The FBI interview records five soldiers seeing a silent, matte white object over Cheyenne Mountain for several minutes before it vanished when they looked away. The strongest detail is mundane process: the group later compared independent drawings, and the report says the drawings were consistent.

    Five Soldiers Watch White Bean Over Fort Carson

  17. 17PDFFBIp.3

    Passaic's saucer photos got background checks before belief.

    The Newark file shows the Air Force doubting the 1952 Passaic saucer photographs while asking the FBI to check the photographer and witness. Newark found no criminal record or prior fraud history, but ATIC still leaned on the absence of wider witnesses in a populated area.

    Passaic Saucer Photographs, ATIC Skepticism, 1952

  18. 18PDFFBIp.5

    Seattle learned UFO paperwork had a routing problem.

    The Seattle file is less about one perfect case than about routing: UFO reports moved among the FBI, Air Force, OSI, Coast Guard, and AEC contacts. One 1954 Neah Bay thread adds radar contact, an attempted F-86 intercept, and a pilot visual sighting to that procedural record.

    Radar Contact Prompts Fighter Intercept, Neah Bay 1954

  19. 19PDFFBIp.2

    The potato vanished; the forensic artist got work.

    The forensic-sketch form preserves the former Army intelligence officer's description of a potato-shaped, opalescent object made of uneven panels or scales. It exists because the FBI's Operational Projects Unit needed enough detail to produce a digital interpretation of the 2022 Cheyenne Mountain report.

    Fish-Scale Articulating Object, Cheyenne Mountain 2022

  20. 20PDFCIAp.1

    CIA destroyed the records, then called fairness awkward.

    The 1958 CIA memo says Davidson's inquiry about a space message and transmitter could not be answered because the originating agency had destroyed the records. The author admits the noncommittal answer was the only bureaucratically possible one, and also hardly fair to Davidson.

    Chicago Office Stonewalls Dr. Davidson on Space Message

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