Location: Levelland, Texas
Date: November 2–3, 1957
Source: Declassified U.S. Air Force Reports (Project: Redlight )
Summary:
Over a dozen independent witnesses — including police officers — reported a glowing, egg-shaped object hovering near highways outside Levelland. As vehicles approached, their engines and lights failed completely. Once the object departed, power was restored instantly.
• Witness count: 10+ credible reports
• Description: “A bright, torpedo-shaped craft glowing bluish-white, approximately 100–200 feet long”
• Phenomenon: Simultaneous vehicle failure near the object
• Official explanation: Ball lightning — despite clear skies and no storms in the area
Cover-up Pattern:
Despite multiple consistent testimonies and widespread media coverage, the U.S. Air Force dismissed the event with a boilerplate explanation. No investigation into the electromagnetic interference was publicly acknowledged.
Each of these cases includes:
• Multiple trained eyewitnesses
• Technical evidence (radar, communications failure, nuclear shutdowns)
• Incongruent or dismissive official explanations
• Strong signs of pattern suppression
This isn’t speculation. These are declassified U.S. government cases — carefully buried, selectively redacted, and quietly forgotten.
Flying Saucer (National Archives Identifier: 305558934)
Access The Hidden Files
We’ve extracted these and other case files from:
• Project: Redlight declassified archives
• FOIA requests
• Private investigator releases
• Leaked communications and veteran interviews
Many of the original scans, transcripts, and photographic evidence are now online here for the first time.
· Why These Cases Matter ·
Malmstrom AFB Nuclear Shutdown
Location: Malmstrom Air Force Base, Montana
Date: March 16, 1967
Source: FOIA-released documents, veteran testimony, Project: Redlight
Summary:
Ten nuclear Minuteman missiles suddenly went offline. At the same time, security teams reported seeing a glowing red-orange object hovering silently above the launch sites.
• Confirmed by: Multiple USAF personnel, radar operators, and missile technicians
• Effect: Entire silo system rendered inoperative — simultaneously
• Description: A silent, pulsating object “like a burning eye”
• Air Force response: Denied connection between object and missile failure
Cover-up Pattern:
Personnel were allegedly instructed to remain silent. Some were even told the object was a weather anomaly. Public records made no reference to the coinciding unidentified aerial phenomenon.
Kirtland AFB Radar Incident
Location: Kirtland Air Force Base, New Mexico
Date: November 4, 1957
Source: Project: Redlight file Kirtland AFB, internal USAF communication
Summary:
An object was visually and radar-tracked descending near the base runway. Air traffic controllers described it as a metallic, egg-shaped craft, hovering and darting silently.
• Radar confirmation: Verified on both tower and aircraft systems
• Visual report: 15–20 ft craft with no visible means of propulsion
• Duration: Nearly 20 minutes of airspace violation
• Official explanation: “Possibly a small civilian aircraft” — despite no flight logs, no transponder, and impossible maneuvering
Cover-up Pattern:
The official Air Force documentation intentionally omitted radar logs. Witnesses later reported being discouraged from mentioning the encounter, even internally.