CLASSIFIED
CF-CIA-C05515928 CLASSIFIED PRIORITY: HIGH
CIA Intelligence Liaison on Unidentified Aerial Vehicle Report
CASE FILE — CF-CIA-C05515928 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Location Reported location of the sighting or event
Washington, D.C., United States
Duration Estimated duration of the observed phenomenon
Unknown
Object Type Classification of the observed object based on witness descriptions
unknown
Source Origin database or archive this case was sourced from
cia_foia
Country Country where the incident took place
US
AI Confidence AI-generated credibility score based on source reliability, detail consistency, and corroboration
85%
This declassified CIA memorandum, designated C05515928, appears to be an internal intelligence communication regarding the classification and handling of a report concerning unidentified aerial vehicles. The document, heavily redacted and partially illegible due to poor reproduction quality, was addressed to Colonel Gerald J. Jorgenson of the Congressional Relations Division at the Department of the Air Force in Washington, D.C. The memo discusses concerns about the dissemination of information regarding what appears to be an incident involving unidentified aerial phenomena and references intelligence community protocols for handling such reports.
The document indicates that certain intelligence organizations were involved in the original search and investigation of the aerial vehicle report. The memo explicitly addresses concerns about public disclosure, stating that 'further publicity not be given to the investigation that the patrol was sponsored by the Central Intelligence Agency.' This suggests the CIA had direct involvement in investigating or sponsoring surveillance activities related to the UAP incident. The memo references coordination with other agencies and mentions D.C. Strause in connection with classified information procedures.
The poor quality of the source document and extensive redactions limit the available details about the specific incident, date, location of the sighting, or nature of the aerial vehicles observed. However, the CIA's concern about attribution and the involvement of multiple intelligence agencies suggests this was a significant case requiring inter-agency coordination and classification protocols typical of sensitive Cold War-era aerial surveillance operations.
02 Timeline of Events
Unknown date
Original UAP Incident Occurs
An unidentified aerial vehicle incident takes place, observed during what the CIA later refers to as a 'patrol' operation. Details of the sighting remain classified.
Unknown date
Intelligence Organizations Conduct Search
Multiple intelligence organizations participate in the investigation and search related to the aerial vehicle report. The CIA is directly involved in sponsoring these activities.
Unknown date
Classification Concerns Emerge
Intelligence officials become concerned about the proper classification and dissemination of the UAP report, particularly regarding CIA involvement.
Unknown date
CIA Memo to Air Force
Colonel Jorgenson at Air Force Congressional Relations Division receives CIA memorandum requesting that CIA sponsorship of the patrol not be publicized.
Declassification date unknown
Document Released via FOIA
Document C05515928 is declassified and released through the Freedom of Information Act, though heavily redacted and in poor condition.
03 Source Documents 1
CIA: C05515928
CIA FOIA 2 pages 409.2 KB EXTRACTED
04 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
This document represents a fascinating example of CIA involvement in UFO/UAP investigations during an unspecified period (likely Cold War era based on document style and classification protocols). The most significant aspect is the explicit instruction to avoid publicizing CIA sponsorship of the 'patrol' that investigated or encountered the unidentified aerial vehicles. This suggests the agency had operational assets actively engaged in UAP surveillance or response, rather than merely receiving reports secondhand.
The inter-agency nature of the communication—involving the CIA, Air Force Congressional Relations Division, and references to other intelligence organizations—indicates this was not a routine sighting report but rather a case requiring high-level coordination. The concern about public disclosure and the need to maintain operational security around CIA involvement suggests either: (1) the incident occurred during a classified intelligence operation that happened to encounter UAPs, or (2) the CIA was running dedicated UAP investigation programs that were not to be publicly acknowledged. The reference to 'classification' and 'dissemination' procedures indicates the report contained sensitive information that could reveal intelligence sources, methods, or capabilities.
05 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Active CIA UAP Investigation Program
The document suggests the CIA was running dedicated 'patrol' operations specifically to investigate or monitor UAP activity, contrary to public statements. The phrase 'patrol was sponsored by the Central Intelligence Agency' implies proactive surveillance rather than accidental encounter. The involvement of multiple intelligence agencies and the concern about public disclosure suggests a coordinated program to investigate aerial phenomena while maintaining plausible deniability. This would align with allegations of secret government UAP research programs.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Misidentified Classified Aircraft
The 'unidentified aerial vehicles' may have been classified U.S. or foreign military aircraft observed during intelligence operations. The CIA's concern about publicity could stem from not wanting to reveal that their surveillance assets had been detected or that they were monitoring specific areas. The inter-agency coordination might involve preventing disclosure of secret aircraft programs (U-2, SR-71 predecessors, or experimental craft) rather than genuine unknown phenomena. The 'UAP' could have been completely conventional but observed under circumstances that would compromise intelligence operations if disclosed.
06 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This case is classified as HIGH PRIORITY due to confirmed CIA operational involvement and inter-agency coordination, though the poor document quality prevents definitive conclusions about the specific incident. The most significant aspect is not necessarily the UAP sighting itself, but the documented proof that the CIA was actively sponsoring field operations ('patrols') related to aerial phenomena investigations while simultaneously working to conceal that involvement from public knowledge. This contradicts historical CIA statements minimizing their role in UFO investigations. Without access to the underlying incident report referenced in this memo, we cannot assess the nature of the aerial vehicles or the credibility of observations. However, the bureaucratic response—involving Congressional Relations and multiple intelligence agencies—suggests the original incident was substantial enough to warrant high-level attention. This document serves as important historical evidence of CIA UAP investigation programs, even if the specific case details remain obscured by classification and poor document preservation.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
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