CLASSIFIED
CF-CIA-C05515973 CLASSIFIED PRIORITY: HIGH

CIA Internal Meeting on 'Flying Saucer' Matter - April 1953

CASE FILE — CF-CIA-C05515973 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Date Date when the incident was reported or occurred
1953-04-23
Location Reported location of the sighting or event
Washington D.C., United States
Duration Estimated duration of the observed phenomenon
Unknown - administrative meeting
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 dated April 23, 1953, reveals internal coordination for a high-level meeting regarding what the document refers to as 'the flying saucer matter' scheduled for April 30th. The memo indicates communication between CIA officials about arranging a meeting that would involve Governor Paterson's office and Dr. I.P. Menion, who is identified as 'Chairman of the Panel.' The administrative nature of the document suggests this was part of ongoing institutional management of the UFO topic at the highest levels of U.S. intelligence. The memo writer proposes that if Governor Paterson himself was to attend, the meeting should be held in his office, but suggests that departmental representatives might be more appropriate, allowing the meeting to be held in 'our air-conditioned laboratory' instead. The casual reference to 'the flying saucer matter' as an established subject of discussion, combined with the involvement of a formal panel chairman and state-level officials, indicates this was part of a structured, ongoing intelligence assessment program rather than an isolated inquiry. The document's significance lies not in describing a specific sighting, but in documenting the bureaucratic infrastructure surrounding UFO investigations within the CIA during the early Cold War period. The mention of a 'Panel' with a chairman suggests this may be related to the Robertson Panel, a CIA-convened scientific panel that met in January 1953 to assess UFO reports, though the April date and reference to Dr. Menion (possibly 'Menzion' or a similar name) require further clarification.
02 Timeline of Events
1953-04-23
Internal CIA Memo Drafted
CIA official drafts memorandum coordinating logistics for upcoming meeting on 'the flying saucer matter' with Governor Paterson's office and Panel Chairman Dr. I.P. Menion
1953-04-23 to 1953-04-30
Meeting Coordination Period
Internal deliberations about appropriate venue (Governor's office vs. CIA laboratory) and attendee list for the scheduled meeting
1953-04-30
Scheduled Meeting Date
Proposed date for formal meeting regarding flying saucer matter involving panel chairman and government officials. Outcome of meeting unknown from available documentation.
03 Source Documents 1
CIA: C05515973
CIA FOIA 2 pages 384.9 KB EXTRACTED
04 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
This document provides rare insight into the administrative machinery of CIA UFO investigation during a critical period. The April 1953 date places this roughly three months after the famous Robertson Panel concluded its meetings in January 1953. The reference to a 'Panel' chairman suggests either follow-up activities to that panel or a separate investigative body. The casual bureaucratic tone—discussing meeting locations and attendance protocols—indicates UFO matters were sufficiently routine within CIA operations to warrant standard administrative procedures. The involvement of 'Governor Paterson' is intriguing but ambiguous. Without additional context, it's unclear whether this refers to a state governor, a CIA position title, or a British official (given UK spelling conventions). The offer to meet in 'our air-conditioned laboratory' suggests the CIA maintained dedicated facilities for UFO-related work, possibly involving technical analysis of evidence. The document's sparse nature and heavy redaction history (note the classification markings and approval stamps) suggest sensitive content that remains partially withheld even after declassification. Cross-referencing with other CIA documents from this period, particularly Robertson Panel follow-up materials, would be essential to understanding the full context of this meeting and its outcomes.
05 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Evidence of Ongoing Secret Investigation Program
The casual reference to dedicated facilities ('our air-conditioned laboratory') and the involvement of a panel chairman suggests the CIA maintained a more substantial, ongoing UFO investigation program than publicly acknowledged. The coordination with state-level officials (Governor Paterson) might indicate specific incidents requiring high-level review. The document's continued classification and redaction decades later could suggest the meeting involved sensitive evidence or conclusions deemed too significant for full public disclosure.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Routine Intelligence Assessment of Public Phenomenon
The bureaucratic tone and administrative focus suggest this was standard intelligence community due diligence regarding a topic of public interest and potential Cold War implications. The 'flying saucer matter' would have warranted CIA attention not because of belief in extraterrestrial craft, but due to concerns about Soviet technology, psychological warfare, or public panic. The meeting may have been purely procedural—reviewing reports to ensure no genuine security threats were being masked by UFO reports.
06 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This document represents authenticated evidence of formal CIA institutional engagement with the UFO phenomenon at a senior level during the critical 1953 period. While it doesn't describe specific sightings or evidence, it confirms that 'the flying saucer matter' was treated as a legitimate subject for panel review and inter-departmental coordination. The most likely context is post-Robertson Panel administrative work, though the identity of Dr. Menion's panel and the specific agenda remain unclear. The document's significance lies in demonstrating that UFO investigation was sufficiently established within CIA operations to have dedicated panels, formal meetings with state-level officials, and specialized facilities—contradicting later official narratives that minimized intelligence community interest in the subject.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
07 Community Discussion
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