CLASSIFIED
CF-CIA-C05515811 CLASSIFIED
CIA Memorandum: UFO Inquiry Forwarded to Air Force
CASE FILE — CF-CIA-C05515811 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Date Date when the incident was reported or occurred
1958-06-01
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 CIA document from June 1958 represents an inter-agency communication regarding a UFO inquiry. Major Lawrence E. Tacker of the Office of the Secretary of the Air Force, Information Services, wrote to the CIA's Office of Scientific Intelligence (OSI) confirming receipt of a letter from a Mr. Lee Davies. The letter indicates that Davies had inquired about 'flying saucers' or similar phenomena. The CIA's response directed Davies to contact the Air Force, as UFO investigations fell under their purview through Project Blue Book. The memo demonstrates the established bureaucratic protocol during the late 1950s for handling civilian UFO inquiries.
The document is heavily redacted and degraded, making full context difficult to establish. However, the visible text confirms active inter-agency coordination on UFO matters during the height of Cold War tensions. The memo references a 'telephone discussion' between Major Tacker and Mr. Margot (possibly Deputy Director of OSI), suggesting informal channels existed alongside formal documentation. The distribution list indicates circulation to the Deputy Director of Scientific Intelligence and other CIA officials, revealing that even routine UFO inquiries reached relatively senior personnel.
This document provides insight into the administrative machinery behind UFO reporting during the 1950s. While it does not describe a specific sighting, it illustrates how the CIA deflected UFO inquiries to the Air Force while maintaining internal tracking and documentation of such matters. The preservation and classification of what appears to be routine correspondence suggests institutional interest in monitoring public UFO inquiries, even those ultimately referred elsewhere.
02 Timeline of Events
Prior to June 1958
Initial Inquiry Submitted
Lee Davies submits a letter to the CIA inquiring about UFOs or 'flying saucers'
June 1958
Telephone Discussion
Major Tacker and CIA official (possibly Mr. Margot) discuss the inquiry via telephone, establishing protocol for response
June 1958
CIA Response Drafted
CIA Office of Scientific Intelligence prepares response indicating inquiry should be directed to Air Force
June 1958
Formal Memorandum
Major Lawrence E. Tacker sends memorandum to CIA confirming receipt of Davies letter and acknowledging CIA's referral to Air Force
June 1958
Internal Distribution
Memorandum distributed to Deputy Director of Scientific Intelligence and other CIA officials for record
03 Key Witnesses
Lee Davies
Civilian inquirer
unknown
Individual who submitted an inquiry to the CIA regarding UFOs or 'flying saucers' in 1958. No further biographical information available in the document.
04 Source Documents 1
CIA: C05515811
CIA FOIA 2 pages 389.8 KB EXTRACTED
05 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
The significance of this document lies not in a specific sighting but in the bureaucratic infrastructure surrounding UFO phenomena during the 1950s. The CIA's Office of Scientific Intelligence maintained files on UFO inquiries despite officially deferring to Air Force jurisdiction. The fact that a civilian inquiry from Lee Davies warranted documentation, inter-agency communication, and distribution to multiple CIA officials indicates systematic tracking of public interest in the subject. The memo's preservation in declassified CIA files decades later suggests it was part of a larger institutional archive on UFO-related matters.
The document's poor quality and heavy degradation make complete analysis challenging. Key details about Davies's specific inquiry are lost, as are potentially important contextual elements. The June 1958 timeframe is notable—this falls between the 1952 Washington D.C. UFO flap and the 1965-1969 University of Colorado UFO study (Condon Report). During this period, Project Blue Book was the primary Air Force investigation program, and official policy emphasized mundane explanations. The CIA's apparent step-back posture, referring inquiries to the Air Force, aligns with the Robertson Panel's 1953 recommendations to reduce CIA involvement in UFO matters while maintaining awareness of the issue's potential intelligence implications.
06 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Hidden Context in Redacted Material
The poor quality of the declassified document may not be accidental degradation but could reflect selective preservation. The visible text confirms inter-agency UFO communication at senior levels, but the lost or redacted portions may contain more significant details about Davies's inquiry or the CIA's internal assessment. The fact that this routine-appearing correspondence was classified and preserved in CIA files for decades suggests it may have been part of a larger, more significant case file. Davies may have reported something substantial enough to trigger formal inter-agency protocols beyond what the visible text reveals.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Excessive Documentation of Routine Matter
The level of documentation and distribution of what appears to be a simple civilian inquiry raises questions about why such routine correspondence warranted formal memoranda, multiple recipients at senior levels, and long-term classification. If Davies's inquiry was truly routine, the administrative response seems disproportionate. This could indicate either bureaucratic inefficiency or that the inquiry contained elements deemed sensitive enough to warrant careful handling and documentation. The heavy redaction and degradation of the document prevents verification of whether Davies reported something specific or simply asked general questions.
07 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This document serves as administrative evidence of Cold War-era UFO inquiry protocols rather than documentation of a specific incident. The most likely explanation for its classification and preservation is institutional record-keeping regarding public inquiries on sensitive or unusual topics. The CIA's documented practice of maintaining awareness while officially deferring to the Air Force reflects the post-Robertson Panel approach to UFO phenomena—minimize direct involvement while monitoring for potential intelligence relevance. The document's significance is moderate: it confirms inter-agency UFO communication channels existed and that even routine civilian inquiries were formally documented and distributed to senior intelligence personnel. However, without access to Davies's original inquiry or the CIA's complete response, we cannot assess whether this case involved anything genuinely anomalous or simply routine public curiosity about a popular topic of the era.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
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