CLASSIFIED
CF-CIA-C05516036 CLASSIFIED PRIORITY: HIGH
The Davidson Pentagon Space Surveillance Inquiry
CASE FILE — CF-CIA-C05516036 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Date Date when the incident was reported or occurred
1958-01-08
Location Reported location of the sighting or event
Pentagon, 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%
On January 8, 1958, Dr. Leon Davidson contacted a Pentagon official (name redacted) regarding access to Air Force records on space surveillance equipment and transmitters. The heavily redacted CIA memorandum documents Davidson's inquiry and the official response denying access to these records. According to the memo, Davidson was informed that records on the matter had been destroyed by the operating agency, though the document notes this explanation had been given to him before. Davidson expressed skepticism about this claim and indicated he had prepared an article for publication concerning 'Air Force handling of space sightings in the hands of the Pentagon security review people.' The memo indicates Davidson planned to revisit the matter at a later date.
The document reveals significant tension between civilian researchers and government agencies regarding UFO/space surveillance data during the 1950s. Dr. Davidson's persistence in seeking information, combined with the agency's admission that multiple officials had given him inconsistent answers ('there have been many cooks in the kitchen on this dish'), suggests institutional confusion or deliberate obfuscation. The memo's author acknowledges the response given to Davidson was 'not likely to be fully accepted by him,' indicating awareness that the explanation lacked credibility.
The classification and heavy redaction of this correspondence, combined with references to destroyed records and security review of Davidson's planned publication, point to official sensitivity around space surveillance capabilities and UFO-related data during the late 1950s—a period coinciding with the dawn of the Space Age and heightened Cold War tensions.
02 Timeline of Events
1958-01-08
Davidson's Telephone Inquiry
Dr. Leon Davidson contacts Pentagon official by telephone requesting information about Air Force space surveillance equipment and transmitter records
1958-01-08
Official Denial of Records
Pentagon official advises Davidson that records cannot be furnished because they have been destroyed by the operating agency
1958-01-08
Davidson Expresses Skepticism
Davidson indicates he has been given this explanation before and mentions his prepared article on Air Force handling of space sightings currently under Pentagon security review
1958-01-08
CIA Memorandum Created
Internal CIA memo documents the exchange and acknowledges the response was inadequate and unlikely to satisfy Davidson
After 1958-01-08
Planned Follow-up
Davidson indicates intention to revisit the matter at a later date regarding the transmitter issue
03 Key Witnesses
Dr. Leon Davidson
UFO researcher, former CIA employee, chemical engineer
high
Dr. Leon Davidson was a chemical engineer who worked for the CIA and later became a prominent UFO researcher. He was known for his technical expertise and persistent efforts to obtain government UFO records through official channels.
"He had been told this before, that he now had a lengthy article for publication concerning Air Force handling of space sightings in the hands of the Pentagon security review people"
Anonymous Pentagon Official
Pentagon security/liaison officer
medium
Unidentified Pentagon official responsible for responding to civilian inquiries about space surveillance records. Identity redacted in declassified document.
"We cannot furnish him the contact; the transmitter because records on the matter have been destroyed by the operating agency"
04 Source Documents 1
CIA: C05516036
CIA FOIA 2 pages 403.6 KB EXTRACTED
05 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
This document is significant not for describing a specific UFO sighting, but for revealing the bureaucratic mechanisms used to control information about aerial/space phenomena during a critical period. Dr. Leon Davidson was a known UFO researcher and former CIA employee who became increasingly critical of government secrecy on the subject. His involvement lends credibility to this case. The memo's admission that 'there have been many cooks in the kitchen' suggests internal disagreement or lack of coordination on how to handle civilian inquiries. The claim that records were 'destroyed by the operating agency' is particularly notable—either records were genuinely destroyed (raising questions about document retention protocols) or this was a convenient excuse to deny access. The reference to Pentagon security review of Davidson's article indicates active monitoring and potential censorship of UFO-related publications. The extensive redaction of names and details in a document from 1958, declassified decades later, suggests ongoing sensitivity about the individuals and specific programs involved.
06 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Active UFO Evidence Suppression
The destroyed records claim and coordinated denial represent deliberate suppression of UFO/UAP evidence collected by military space surveillance systems. Davidson, with his CIA background and technical expertise, was asking questions that threatened to expose genuine anomalous data. The Pentagon security review of his article and the admission that the response wouldn't satisfy him suggest officials knew their explanation was false. The 'destroyed records' claim may have been a standard excuse used to deny FOIA-type requests when the actual data was considered too sensitive to release.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Routine Classification Protocol
The destroyed records claim and information denial represent standard Cold War security protocols protecting legitimate space surveillance capabilities. During 1958, the U.S. was developing satellite tracking and early warning systems; releasing technical details about these capabilities to civilians—even former CIA employees—would have been considered a security risk. The bureaucratic confusion mentioned in the memo simply reflects inter-agency coordination challenges typical of the era.
07 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This case represents documented evidence of institutional information control regarding space surveillance and UFO data during the 1950s. While it does not describe a specific sighting, it provides crucial context for understanding how government agencies managed—and restricted—civilian access to aerial phenomena data during this era. The authenticity is unquestionable (official CIA memorandum), and the content reveals deliberate opacity in responding to legitimate inquiries. Davidson's skepticism appears justified given the agency's own admission that their response was inadequate. This document is most significant as a case study in Cold War-era secrecy protocols and the emerging conflict between government classification and public interest in aerial phenomena. The destroyed records claim, whether true or fabricated, represents either loss of potentially valuable historical data or active suppression—both scenarios being problematic for serious UFO research.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
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