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Why Colorado became central to official UFO history
The key Colorado episode was not a dramatic landing claim or a single famous photograph. It was a government-funded scientific review. In 1966, the US Air Force contracted the University of Colorado at Boulder to carry out an independent study of UFO reports under physicist Edward U. Condon. The project’s formal title was Scientific Study of Unidentified Flying Objects, but it soon became known simply as the Condon Report or the Colorado Project. Its stated purpose was to examine whether UFO reports justified continued scientific or national-security attention. [NCAS Files]files.ncas.orgFiles Condon Report, Section IIFiles Condon Report, Section II
The report’s top-line conclusion was sceptical. Condon’s team argued that two decades of UFO study had not added materially to scientific knowledge and that a large continuing research programme was not justified. The Air Force then cited the Colorado report, a National Academy of Sciences review of it, earlier Air Force work, and its own experience when it announced the termination of Project Blue Book in December 1969. [The Black Vault]documents2.theblackvault.comSource details in endnotes. [Defense Logistics Agency]esd.whs.milDefense Logistics Agency IMMEDIATE RELEASEDefense Logistics Agency IMMEDIATE RELEASE
That decision gave the Colorado Project unusual influence. Project Blue Book had collected 12,618 reports, of which 701 remained “unidentified” in the Air Force summary. The Air Force’s public position was not that every sighting had been neatly explained, but that the unexplained residue did not show a national-security threat, unknown technology beyond modern science, or extraterrestrial origin. [Air Force]af.milSource details in endnotes.
The controversy is important because it still shapes how UFO evidence is argued about today. Supporters of the report see Colorado as the place where the US government finally brought scientific discipline to a confused subject. Critics argue that the project’s sceptical conclusion was effectively baked in before the work was complete. The National Academy of Sciences review accepted the report’s broad recommendation, while also acknowledging that some sightings were not easily explained and that transient reports are hard to study scientifically. [Defense Logistics Agency]esd.whs.milDefense Logistics Agency IMMEDIATE RELEASEDefense Logistics Agency IMMEDIATE RELEASE
The Condon Report: useful archive, disputed verdict
The Condon Report is often remembered only as a debunking document, but that is too simple. It is also a large archive of case studies, methods, witness problems, photographic issues, radar-visual reports, and the difficulties of turning fleeting sky observations into reliable evidence. For a Colorado-focused UFO history, its value lies in both halves: it documents how official investigators handled reports, and it shows why many witnesses and UFO researchers distrusted official conclusions. [The Black Vault]documents2.theblackvault.comSource details in endnotes.
The most persistent criticism concerns the so-called Low memorandum. Robert J. Low, a University of Colorado administrator involved in setting up the project, wrote before the contract was accepted that the study could appear objective to the public while being conducted largely by “non-believers” with little expectation of finding a saucer. When this became public, it damaged trust in the project and helped prompt the National Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena, a major civilian UFO group, to break with the committee. [Wikipedia]WikipediaCondon CommitteeCondon Committee
There is a fair counterpoint. A prejudicial memo does not prove that every case analysis in the report was worthless. Some later defenders and participants argued that the memo reflected early administrative manoeuvring rather than the actual work of every investigator. The report also includes cases where investigators did not force a tidy answer. The more careful conclusion is that the Colorado Project is both indispensable and contested: it is too important to ignore, but too politically and institutionally fraught to treat as the final word on every case. [Wikipedia]WikipediaMutilation of "Snippy" the horseMutilation of "Snippy" the horse
For readers trying to judge Colorado’s UFO history, this matters because the state’s most consequential UFO event was not a single sighting but a decision-making process. The Condon Report helped move the federal posture from active public investigation to institutional closure. Later US government UAP work, including the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office, has reopened parts of the question in a different national-security language, but AARO’s 2024 historical review likewise said it found no evidence that any US government investigation or official review had confirmed extraterrestrial technology. [AARO]aaro.milOpen source on aaro.mil.
Colorado’s Cold War military and aviation setting
Colorado’s UFO history is hard to separate from its military geography. Colorado Springs, in particular, sits close to major aerospace and defence sites. Peterson and Schriever Space Force Bases are official US Space Force installations in Colorado, and Cheyenne Mountain Space Force Station houses the Cheyenne Mountain Complex, which serves as NORAD and US Northern Command’s alternate command centre and training site. [Peterson Schriever Space Force Base]petersonschriever.spaceforce.milPeterson Schriever Space Force Base Peterson & Schriever SFBPeterson Schriever Space Force Base Peterson & Schriever SFB [Space Force]petersonschriever.spaceforce.milPeterson Schriever Space Force Base Peterson & Schriever SFBPeterson Schriever Space Force Base Peterson & Schriever SFB
This setting creates two different effects. On one hand, military and aviation infrastructure can generate legitimate reports: aircraft, exercises, satellites, missile-warning activity, drones, and restricted installations can all produce sightings that ordinary observers cannot immediately identify. On the other hand, the same infrastructure makes rumours more attractive. A strange light near Colorado Springs can quickly become a story about NORAD, Cheyenne Mountain, or hidden military knowledge, even when no evidence connects the object to those facilities.
Project Blue Book records also show Colorado’s place inside the official reporting network. A 1953 Project Blue Book status report refers to briefings at Ent Air Force Base in Colorado Springs, Lowry Air Force Base in Denver, and the 4602nd Air Intelligence Service Squadron at Peterson Air Force Base. These references do not prove extraordinary events in Colorado; they show that Colorado was part of the Air Force’s practical UFO-reporting machinery during the Cold War. [Wikimedia Commons]upload.wikimedia.orgCommons The Project Blue Book ArchiveCommons The Project Blue Book Archive
That distinction is crucial. A military connection can make a case more worth checking, especially if radar, pilot testimony, or official records exist. It does not, by itself, make a sighting extraordinary. Colorado’s military landscape is best understood as a reason for careful documentation, not as automatic evidence of alien craft.
The San Luis Valley: folklore, dark skies, and the Snippy case
The San Luis Valley is Colorado’s best-known UFO region in popular culture. Its wide skies, sparse settlement, mountain horizons, and long tradition of unusual-light stories have made it a magnet for skywatchers. The UFO Watchtower near Hooper, opened by Judy Messoline in 2000, turned that reputation into a roadside attraction and local identity marker, drawing visitors who want a place to watch the sky and participate in the lore. [Colorado Public Radio]cpr.orgufo watchtower celebrates 25 yearsufo watchtower celebrates 25 years
The valley’s most famous case is the 1967 death of a horse popularly known as Snippy, near Alamosa. Reports described a mutilated animal, strange circumstances, and rumours of lights in the sky. The story became nationally associated with UFOs and later helped shape the wider American cattle-mutilation narrative. The Denver Public Library’s account is careful about the gap between the evidence and the mythology: unusual details and local rumours encouraged alien speculation, but the leap from unexplained animal death to extraterrestrial cause was not supported. [Denver Public Library]history.denverlibrary.orgufos and horse called snippyufos and horse called snippy
The Condon Committee investigated the Snippy case and found no evidence that the horse’s death was linked to abnormal causes. Later summaries of the case note mundane possibilities, confused reporting, and the way sensational press treatment helped turn a poorly resolved animal-death story into durable UFO folklore. In that sense, Snippy is important less as evidence of a UFO event than as an example of how Colorado lore developed: a puzzling local incident, amplified by headlines, became a template for later mutilation stories. [Denver Public Library]history.denverlibrary.orgufos and horse called snippyufos and horse called snippy
The San Luis Valley remains useful for another reason: it shows how UFO culture can be both sincere and touristic. Many visitors treat the Watchtower playfully; others arrive because they believe the valley is genuinely active. A balanced account should allow for both. People do see things in the sky there, and the landscape is well suited to dramatic misperceptions of lights, aircraft, planets, satellites, and distant vehicles. The evidence does not justify treating the valley as a confirmed UFO corridor, but it does justify treating it as Colorado’s most culturally important UFO hotspot. [Colorado Public Radio]cpr.orgufo watchtower celebrates 25 yearsufo watchtower celebrates 25 years
Red Rocks and the modern witness-report problem
The June 2024 Red Rocks Amphitheatre report is a good modern test case. According to a National UFO Reporting Center report described by local and national outlets, about a dozen employees said they saw a large, silent, disc-shaped object north of Red Rocks after a concert. The object was described as hovering briefly, moving slowly, and then fading from view. Westword reported that Red Rocks communications director Brian Kitts said the report was not submitted by the venue and that the witnesses could not be identified through the venue. [Denver Westword]westword.comDenver Westword Red Rocks Employees Report UFO Sighting at the VenueDenver Westword Red Rocks Employees Report UFO Sighting at the Venue
What makes the case interesting is the number of claimed witnesses and the specificity of the description. Multiple-witness cases are usually stronger than isolated impressions, especially if observers independently describe the same thing. But the weaknesses are also obvious: there was no clear public photograph, no radar record, no identified chain of custody for testimony, and no official investigation confirming the object’s nature. The case is therefore notable, not conclusive. [Denver Westword]westword.comDenver Westword Red Rocks Employees Report UFO Sighting at the VenueDenver Westword Red Rocks Employees Report UFO Sighting at the Venue
The Red Rocks case also shows the value and limitation of databases such as NUFORC. They preserve reports quickly and make patterns searchable, but they are not the same as adjudicated investigations. NUFORC’s Colorado index contains thousands of entries, and its location table lists Colorado among states with substantial report totals. That is useful for seeing public-reporting volume, but the raw count reflects willingness to report, population, media attention, internet access, and skywatching habits as much as it reflects genuinely anomalous events. [NUFORC]nuforc.orgOpen source on nuforc.org.
The eastern plains drone wave: when “UFO” means unidentified, not alien
One of Colorado’s most instructive recent episodes was the 2019–20 mystery-drone wave over north-eastern Colorado and western Nebraska. Residents and law-enforcement officials reported groups of lights or drones flying at night, sometimes in grid-like patterns. Reuters reported in December 2019 that Phillips and Yuma county deputies had tracked more than 16 drones between the two counties, while local officials described the aircraft as startling but not apparently malicious. [Reuters]reuters.comOpen source on reuters.com.
This episode sits right on the boundary between UFO history and drone-era aviation. The objects were generally framed as drones, not alien craft, yet the public experience was classic UFO territory: repeated night sightings, uncertain operators, anxious residents, law-enforcement involvement, rumours, and incomplete explanations. The War Zone’s reporting on FAA documents found that hundreds of pages of records still left many questions about who, if anyone, was operating the reported aircraft. [The War Zone]twz.comfaa documents offer unprecedented look into colorado drone mysteryfaa documents offer unprecedented look into colorado drone mystery
KUNC later reported that Colorado homeland-security officials said there was no evidence supporting sightings of large drones travelling in patterns, and that some sightings were attributed to aircraft, planets, and stars. That does not prove every witness was wrong, but it does show how a flap can grow from mixed inputs: some real aircraft or drones, some astronomical misidentifications, some expectation-driven sightings, and some reports that remain too vague to resolve. [KUNC]kunc.orgDocuments Indicate How Little Officials Knew AboutDocuments Indicate How Little Officials Knew About
For Colorado UFO history, the drone wave is a warning against jumping too quickly to either extreme. It was not a cleanly solved hoax, but neither was it evidence of extraterrestrial visitation. It was a modern unidentified-aerial-event cluster in which technology, law, rural geography, and public uncertainty collided.
What the report pattern says, and what it does not
Colorado has a high volume of public UFO reports. NUFORC’s location index lists more than 3,500 Colorado reports, and its state page includes entries from many decades and locations, including Denver, Colorado Springs, Pueblo, Crestone, Longmont, and smaller rural communities. Stacker’s 2025 analysis of NUFORC data ranked Colorado cities by report totals, showing how the state’s sightings cluster around population centres as well as areas with strong skywatching or UFO-culture associations. [NUFORC]nuforc.orgReports by Location NUFORC Reports by Location; USAReports by Location NUFORC Reports by Location; USA [NUFORC]nuforc.orgOpen source on nuforc.org.
The pattern is not surprising. Colorado has dark rural skies, busy aviation corridors, mountain weather, military installations, satellites crossing clear high-altitude nights, and a public culture that is unusually receptive to sky stories. Those conditions produce many sincere reports without requiring one single exotic explanation.
A practical way to read Colorado cases is to separate them into three groups:
- Plausibly explained cases: reports that match aircraft, drones, planets, satellites, meteors, balloons, flares, reflections, or camera artefacts.
- Weak but unresolved cases: reports that cannot be identified because too little evidence was collected, not because the object demonstrated extraordinary capability.
- Higher-interest unresolved cases: reports with multiple independent witnesses, reliable timing, physical or sensor evidence, aviation involvement, or official documentation.
Most Colorado material falls into the first two categories. The third category exists, but it is much smaller than the folklore suggests. That is consistent with the broader federal record: both Project Blue Book and modern AARO work acknowledge unresolved cases while declining to treat “unresolved” as proof of extraterrestrial origin. [Air Force]af.milSource details in endnotes.
How sceptical explanations usually work in Colorado cases
The most common sceptical explanations in Colorado are not dismissive one-liners; they are practical matches between witness conditions and ordinary sky phenomena. Mountain horizons can make distant lights appear to hover. Aircraft approaching or turning can seem stationary, then accelerate or vanish. Satellites and Starlink trains can appear uncanny to observers who have not seen them before. Meteors can be reported as green, blue, or silent fireballs. Drones add a newer category: objects that are genuinely artificial and unidentified to the witness, but not extraordinary.
The eastern plains drone wave shows how hard this can be in practice. Even when officials and journalists treat “drones” as the likely category, identifying an operator, flight path, and legal status can remain difficult. The result is a public mystery that is real at the level of civic uncertainty but not necessarily anomalous at the level of physics. [The War Zone]twz.comfaa documents offer unprecedented look into colorado drone mysteryfaa documents offer unprecedented look into colorado drone mystery
The Snippy case shows a different sceptical problem: once an event is wrapped in a compelling story, later evidence struggles to catch up. A dead animal, rumours of lights, and sensational headlines became more memorable than the cautious conclusion that no abnormal cause had been demonstrated. Red Rocks shows the modern version: vivid witness language spreads rapidly, but without images, sensor data, or traceable interviews, the evidential ceiling remains low. [Denver Public Library]history.denverlibrary.orgufos and horse called snippyufos and horse called snippy
Colorado’s place in the wider UAP era
The modern term “UAP”, usually expanded as unidentified anomalous phenomena, has shifted official language away from flying saucers and towards airspace safety, sensor data, and national security. Colorado fits that shift naturally because of its military and aerospace infrastructure, but no public official record establishes Colorado as a uniquely confirmed UAP hotspot. AARO’s public materials show that some contemporary cases remain unresolved, while others have been resolved as balloons, birds, or non-anomalous objects. [AARO]aaro.milOpen source on aaro.mil.
This is the best balanced position for a Colorado page: the state is historically important, culturally rich, and repeatedly active in public reporting, but the available evidence does not support treating Colorado sightings as confirmed alien events. Its strongest claim to UFO significance remains the Colorado Project itself, followed by the San Luis Valley’s folklore, the Snippy case’s role in mutilation mythology, the continuing stream of NUFORC reports, and modern unidentified-drone or witness-report episodes such as the eastern plains wave and Red Rocks.
What to take from Colorado’s UFO record
Colorado’s UFO history is less about one decisive mystery than about the tension between experience and evidence. People in Colorado have reported strange lights, structured craft, animal-mutilation mysteries, drone-like formations, and dramatic objects near famous places. Some witnesses are sincere, some reports are detailed, and a few cases deserve careful archival treatment. But sincerity is not the same as identification, and “unexplained” is not the same as “extraordinary”.
The state’s most important lesson is methodological. Colorado gave the UFO world both one of its most influential official sceptical reports and some of its most persistent local folklore. The Condon Report shows how institutions try to close a question; Snippy and the San Luis Valley show how communities keep a mystery alive; the drone wave shows how new technology can revive old anxieties; and Red Rocks shows how a single vivid report can travel faster than verification. Taken together, Colorado is a strong case study in how UFO history is made: through sightings, records, rumours, investigations, disputed conclusions, and the long afterlife of stories that remain just uncertain enough to endure.
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Endnotes
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Source: files.ncas.org
Title: Files Condon Report, Section II
Link: https://files.ncas.org/condon/text/sec-ii.htm -
Source: colorado.edu
Title: condon report cu boulders historic ufo study
Link: https://www.colorado.edu/coloradan/2021/11/05/condon-report-cu-boulders-historic-ufo-study -
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Condon Committee
Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Condon_Committee -
Source: aaro.mil
Link: https://www.aaro.mil/Portals/136/PDFs/AARO_Historical_Record_Report_Vol_1_2024.pdf -
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Link: https://www.reuters.com/technology/space/pentagon-ufo-report-says-most-sightings-ordinary-objects-phenomena-2024-03-08/ -
Source: norad.mil
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Title: Commons The Project Blue Book Archive
Link: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/54/Project_Blue_Book%2C_BBA-PBSR10-300.pdf -
Source: alamosa.org
Link: https://www.alamosa.org/listing/ufo-watchtower/ -
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Mutilation of “Snippy” the horse
Link: [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutilation_of_%22Snippy%22the_horse](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutilation_of%22Snippy%22_the_horse) -
Source: westword.com
Title: Denver Westword Red Rocks Employees Report UFO Sighting at the Venue
Link: https://www.westword.com/music/red-rocks-employees-report-ufo-sighting-21205147/ -
Source: nuforc.org
Link: https://nuforc.org/subndx/?id=lCO -
Source: nuforc.org
Title: Reports by Location NUFORC Reports by Location; USA
Link: https://nuforc.org/ndx/?id=loc -
Source: reuters.com
Title: FAA probes clusters of mysterious drones flying over
Link: https://www.reuters.com/article/world/faa-probes-clusters-of-mysterious-drones-flying-over-colorado-idUSKBN1YZ1FZ/ -
Source: kunc.org
Title: Documents Indicate How Little Officials Knew About
Link: https://www.kunc.org/news/2021-07-25/documents-indicate-how-little-officials-knew-about-mysterious-drones-last-year -
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Title: Cities With the Most UFO Sightings in Colorado | Stacker
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Title: Edward J Ruppelt The Report on Unidentified Flying Objects
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Title: David Jacobs The UFO Controversy In America
Link: https://ia803206.us.archive.org/26/items/DavidJacobsTheUFOControversyInAmerica/David%20Jacobs%20-%20The%20UFO%20Controversy%20In%20America.pdf -
Source: archive.org
Title: Brad Sparks Comprehensive Catalog of 1,600 Project Blue Book UFO Unknowns
Link: https://archive.org/download/BernardSieglerTechnicsAndTime1TheFaultOfEpimetheus/Brad%20Sparks%20-%20Comprehensive%20Catalog%20of%201%2C600%20Project%20Blue%20Book%20UFO%20Unknowns.pdf -
Source: archive.org
Link: https://archive.org/stream/ufos-an-air-force-dilemma/quintanilla_djvu.txt -
Source: ia600600.us.archive.org
Title: 492780987 The UFO Book Encyclopedia of the Extraterrestrial PDFDrive
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Title: Blue Planet Project UFO TECHNOLOGY text
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Title: 1958 08 8866543 Denver Colorado
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Title: Passport to Magonia—UFOs, Folklore, and Parallel Worlds, Jacques Vallée (1993)
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Title: Bad UFOs critical thinking about UFO claims
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Title: Adams,Thomas,Choppers and the Choppers 1 text
Link: https://ia801409.us.archive.org/33/items/adams-thomas-choppers-and-the-choppers-1/Adams%2CThomas%2CChoppers%20and%20the%20Choppers-1_text.pdf -
Source: archive.org
Link: https://archive.org/download/aliensinskies00unit/aliensinskies00unit.pdf -
Source: nuforc.org
Link: https://nuforc.org/sighting/?id=173310 -
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Link: https://nuforc.org/subndx/?id=sChevron -
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Link: https://nuforc.org/sighting/?id=60503 -
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Title: Data Bank | NUFORC
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Title: Cheyenne Mountain Complex
Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheyenne_Mountain_Complex -
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Title: List of reported UFO sightings
Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_reported_UFO_sightings -
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Cattle mutilation
Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cattle_mutilation -
Source: Wikipedia
Title: UFO Watchtower
Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UFO_Watchtower -
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Title: 2019–20 Colorado drone sightings
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Source: history.com
Title: cattle mutilation 1970s skinwalker ranch ufos
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Title: department of defense releases the annual report on unidentified anomalous phen
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Title: schriever space force base
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Title: The Condon Report | NASA’s Unexplained Files
Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_W7SqS6UhE4Source snippet
FBI investigating mysterious drones over Colorado...
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Title: Defense Logistics Agency IMMEDIATE RELEASE
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Link: https://www.globalsecurity.org/intell/ops/condon.htm -
Source: sentientorbs.com
Title: NUFORC 5868
Link: https://sentientorbs.com/explore/sightings/NUFORC-5868
Additional References
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Source: youtube.com
Title: Colorado drone sightings: Multiple agencies to search for source of drone swarms
Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kz9tE7vE9uYSource snippet
Decades of UFO sightings documented in Condon Report at CU Boulder archives...
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Source: archives.gov
Link: https://www.archives.gov/research/catalog/catalog-bulk-downloads/uap-bulk-download -
Source: archives.gov
Link: https://www.archives.gov/research/topics/uaps/presidential-libraries -
Source: youtube.com
Title: UFOs and Science (English subtitles)
Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=56fGzcp6bIUSource snippet
Colorado drone sightings: Multiple agencies to search for source of drone swarms...
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Source: time.com
Link: https://time.com/5757819/drones-colorado-nebraska/ -
Source: facebook.com
Link: https://www.facebook.com/thefencepost/posts/update-rachel-spoke-to-the-phillips-county-sheriff-and-will-have-coverage-shortl/10156886771198366/ -
Source: facebook.com
Link: https://www.facebook.com/FOX35Orlando/posts/a-ufo-sighting-at-red-rocks-was-reported-to-the-national-ufo-reporting-center-wi/1045600633592338/ -
Source: facebook.com
Link: https://www.facebook.com/fox6news/posts/a-ufo-sighting-at-red-rocks-was-reported-to-the-national-ufo-reporting-center-wi/1036137688099721/ -
Source: facebook.com
Link: https://www.facebook.com/WorldNewsTonight/posts/mystery-drone-danger-mysterious-drones-have-been-spotted-flying-over-several-cou/10157495547584818/ -
Source: facebook.com
Link: https://www.facebook.com/newschannelnebraska/posts/authorities-have-confirmed-reports-of-drone-sightings-in-three-more-counties-in-/2660597867309673/
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