A fleet of lights recorded off North Carolina’s Outer Banks has ignited a debate about whether they are honest-to-goodness UFOs or just part of a mysterious military exercise.
William Guy posted a 31-second video Sept. 28 on YouTube, showing what appears to be 14 glowing orbs over the water! UFO debate in NC after odd lights spotted off Outer Banks ...A fleet of lights filmed in the Pamlico Sound near North Carolina's Outer Banks has ignited a UFO debate . William Guy posted the 31-second video on Sept. 28, showing 14 orbs floating over the...!! He refers to it as a “ real UFO sighting .”
“Anybody tell me what that is?” Guy says in the video. “We’re in the middle of the ocean, on a ferry, nothing around. Look. Nothing around. No land, no nothing.”
Guy told the McClatchy news group he’s from Indiana and is among the workers sent to repair damage on Ocracoke Island caused by intense flooding during Hurricane Dorian.
The video was filmed aboard a ferry crossing the Pamlico Sound from Ocracoke Island to Swan Quarter on the mainland, he said. The lights appeared for at least a minute and a half , he posted on YouTube.
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Meteor, UFO over Los Angeles? No, Red Bull skydivers mark supermoon
No, downtown Los Angeles did not experience a meteoric impact or a visit from aliens. It was all a Hollywood stunt by drink-maker Red Bull.
On Wednesday night, Twitter lit up with videos and tweets from people alarmed because of an apparent fireball streaking across the skies of downtown Los Angeles.
"What is this flying item on fire above downtown Los Angeles?" wrote Dennis Hegstad in a post on Twitter featuring the mysterious flying object.
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Wednesday night, the Los Angeles Police Department jumped on Twitter to assure residents that it was not a meteor, or even aliens, but Hollywood.
"PSA: A meteor did not crash into Downtown Los Angeles, and no, it's not an alien invasion...just a film shoot. This is Tinseltown after all," wrote the LAPD.
In a statement , beverage maker Red Bull said its Red Bull Air Force celebrated the third and final supermoon of the year by having skydivers in wingsuits jump from a helicopter 4,000 feet above Los Angeles.
Why pilots are seeing UFOs - CNN
Why Have There Been So Many UFO Sightings Near Nuclear Facilities? - HISTORY
Why are so many UFOs being reported near nuclear facilities—and why isn’t there more urgency on the part of the government to assess their potential national-security threat?
Their investigations are the subject of HISTORY’s limited series “ Unidentified .”
Less known: In the last 75 years, high-ranking U.S. military and intelligence personnel have also reported UAPs near sites associated with nuclear power, weaponry and technology—from the early atomic-bomb development and test sites to active nuclear naval fleets.
“There seems to be a lot of correlation there,” says Lue Elizondo, who from 2007 to 2012 served as director of a covert team of UAP researchers operating inside the Department of Defense. The program, called the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP), received $22 million of the Pentagon’s $600 billion budget in 2012, The New York Times reported. Elizondo now helps lead To the Stars’ investigations.
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These 5 UFO Traits, Seen by Navy Fighters, Defy Explanation - HISTORY
When Luis Elizondo ran a small team at the U.S. Department of Defense investigating military-based reports of unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP), he heard numerous such accounts—by some of the most highly trained aeronautic experts in the military. They describe objects that appeared to be intelligently controlled, possessing aerodynamic capabilities that far surpass any currently known aircraft technology.
Now pursuing his investigations as part of To the Stars Academy of Arts & Sciences, Elizondo is an integral part of the investigative team featured on HISTORY's “ Unidentified: Inside America’s UFO Investigation ," where they have continued to gather eyewitness accounts:
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"It didn't fly like an aircraft. It was so unpredictable—high g, rapid velocity, rapid acceleration."
UFO debate ignited by video captured over Greensboro NC | Raleigh News & Observer
Video of a “random flashing” object in the sky outside Greensboro, North Carolina, has ignited an ongoing debate on social media, including claims others have seen the same mystery object.
In the 5-minute video -- which is magnified and slowed down -- the “pill-shaped” object is seen soaring through the sky and producing a series of flashes.
The video was posted Saturday and has been viewed thousands of times since being picked up by YouTube channels devoted to UFOs and unsolved mysteries, including the Hidden Underbelly 2.0 .
It is credited to Bret Jones, known as SpaceBret on YouTube, who explains in the video that the “weird thing” was spotted Friday, Jan. 25, while he was trying to film birds outside Greensboro.
“I noticed a strange flashing light in the sky near an airplane. It was moving slowly in the sky, a little slower than the planes flying around,” Jones says on YouTube. “I did not think I captured it at all, because the focus would only hunt and not lock on.”
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