UNRESOLVED
CF-CIA-C05515706 UNRESOLVED
Document C05515706 - Illegible CIA FOIA Release
CASE FILE — CF-CIA-C05515706 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Location Reported location of the sighting or event
Unknown
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
AI Confidence AI-generated credibility score based on source reliability, detail consistency, and corroboration
85%
CIA FOIA document C05515706 represents a 2-page declassified document from the CIA's Freedom of Information Act Reading Room collection. The extracted text is almost entirely illegible, consisting primarily of garbled characters, dots, and fragments that do not form coherent words or sentences. The only clear text in the document is The Black Vault's standard archival footer, which identifies the document as part of John Greenewald Jr.'s FOIA document clearinghouse.
No subject line, classification marking, sender, recipient, or date information was captured in the metadata fields. The document appears to be severely degraded, possibly due to poor scanning quality, heavy redaction rendering, age-related deterioration of the source material, or encoding issues during the digitization process. Without any discernible content, it is impossible to determine what UFO/UAP incident or intelligence matter this document originally addressed.
This case represents a common challenge in historical UFO research: declassified documents that are technically released but remain inaccessible due to poor preservation or reproduction quality. The document's inclusion in the CIA's UFO-related FOIA releases suggests it was once classified and pertained to unexplained aerial phenomena, but its current state provides no investigative value.
02 Timeline of Events
Unknown date
Original Document Created
CIA document C05515706 was originally created and classified, presumably containing intelligence related to UFO/UAP phenomena based on its inclusion in FOIA releases.
Unknown date
Document Declassification
The CIA declassified this document under FOIA provisions, making it available to the public through the CIA Reading Room.
Unknown date
Digitization and Archival
The Black Vault, operated by John Greenewald Jr., acquired and digitized the document for public access. The resulting scan is severely degraded or illegible.
03 Source Documents 1
CIA: C05515706
CIA FOIA 2 pages 402.5 KB EXTRACTED
04 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
The complete illegibility of this document raises several analytical concerns. First, the lack of any recoverable text—not even a date, location, or subject header—is highly unusual for CIA documentation, even heavily redacted material. Most declassified documents retain at least partial formatting, headers, or metadata. The garbled characters suggest either catastrophic scanning failure or that the source document was already severely damaged before digitization. Given that this appears in The Black Vault's collection, which typically contains relatively well-preserved FOIA releases, the poor quality is noteworthy.
From an archival perspective, this document represents a 'dead end' in the investigative chain. Without any context clues—no date range, geographic indicators, or even document type designation—it cannot be cross-referenced with other incidents in the database. The metadata fields (from, to, subject, date) all return null values, suggesting the CIA either did not provide this information or The Black Vault's processing systems could not extract it. The document may warrant a re-request under FOIA for a cleaner copy, or physical inspection of the original file if it still exists in CIA archives.
05 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Deliberate Obfuscation or Incomplete Declassification
Some researchers might suspect that the document's illegibility is not accidental. While technically 'released' under FOIA, rendering it unreadable achieves the same effect as withholding it entirely. The CIA could have declassified sensitive UFO-related intelligence in name only, providing a document that satisfies the legal requirement while protecting actual content. This theory, while speculative, reflects documented historical patterns of intelligence agencies providing heavily redacted or obscured documents.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Document Degradation Due to Age or Poor Handling
The most prosaic explanation is that the original paper document suffered severe physical degradation over decades of storage in CIA facilities. Exposure to humidity, improper filing conditions, or simple age could have rendered the ink faded or the paper crumbled. When scanned for FOIA release, the deteriorated source produced an illegible digital file. This would be unfortunate but not suspicious.
Scanning or Digitization Error
The illegibility may result from technical failure during the digitization process—incorrect scanner settings, encoding errors, or file corruption during transfer. The original document may be perfectly readable in physical form, but the digital reproduction failed. This would suggest a re-scan could recover the content.
06 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This case cannot be classified as a UFO/UAP incident in any meaningful sense—it is essentially a blank entry in the declassified record. The document's existence confirms only that something bearing identifier C05515706 was once classified by the CIA and later released in connection with UFO-related FOIA requests. Without readable content, no determination can be made about what was observed, reported, or investigated. The popularity score of 5 reflects its current value as a curiosity rather than evidence. This document serves primarily as a reminder of the limitations of historical UFO research and the importance of document preservation. Until a legible version surfaces, C05515706 remains an unsolved mystery in the most literal sense—we do not even know what mystery it was meant to document.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
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