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The Cash–Landrum Incident was an unidentified flying object sighting in the United States in 1980, which witnesses claimed was responsible for causing health and property damage. Uncharacteristically for such UFO reports, this resulted in civil court proceedings, though the case ended in a dismissal.
[2] [3] [4] UFOs have been referred to using a range of terms including the more specific "flying saucer" and the more general "unidentified anomalous phenomena" (UAP). The term "UAP" is sometimes used to avoid cultural associations with UFO conspiracy theories. [5] [6] [7] Although often viewed as abnormal, UFO sightings are reported frequently.
Project Blue Book Special Report No. 14 (referred to further below as BBSR) was a massive statistical study the Battelle Memorial Institute did for the USAF of 3,200 UFO cases between 1952 and 1954. Of these, 22% were classified as unidentified ("true UFOs"). Another 69% were deemed identified (IFOs).
How ex-Blink 182 member Tom DeLonge helped shine a light on UFO encounters. Wednesday 26 July 2023 21:30, Oliver O'Connell. With a declassified report due to be handed over to the Senate ...
The Lonnie Zamora incident was an alleged UFO sighting that occurred on April 24, 1964 near Socorro, New Mexico when Socorro police officer Lonnie Zamora claimed he saw two people beside a shiny object that later rose into the air accompanied by a roaring blue and orange flame.
Among his papers was a reanalysis of the statistics and results of the famed Battelle Memorial Institute Project Blue Book Special Report No. 14, a massive analysis of 3200 Air Force cases through the mid-1950s. (See Identification studies of UFOs.) Another was a reanalysis of the results of the Condon Committee UFO study from 1969.
Reinhold O. Schmidt from a 1957 interview, and a sketch based on his description of the alleged UFO. Reinhold Oscar Albert Schmidt (1897–1974) [ 1 ] was a fraudster and convicted embezzler who was one of the more obscure UFO contactees of the 1950s.
In ufology, the Taylor Incident, a.k.a. Livingston Incident or Dechmont Woods Encounter is the name given to claims of sighting an extraterrestrial spacecraft on Dechmont Law in Livingston, West Lothian, Scotland, in 1979 by forester Robert "Bob" Taylor (1919–2007).