CLASSIFIED
CF-CIA-C05515722 CLASSIFIED PRIORITY: HIGH

The Dulles-Smith UFO Correspondence: Mexico, Maine Report

CASE FILE — CF-CIA-C05515722 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Date Date when the incident was reported or occurred
1957-01-02
Location Reported location of the sighting or event
Mexico, Maine, 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
Witnesses Number of known witnesses who reported the event
1
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 2, 1957, Mrs. Vincent J. Perry of Mexico, Maine submitted a letter regarding an unspecified UFO-related matter to Senator Margaret Chase Smith. The content was deemed significant enough that Senator Smith forwarded it to CIA Director Allen W. Dulles on the same day. In a response dated January 8, 1957, Director Dulles acknowledged receipt and confirmed the letter would be forwarded to 'proper authorities for action,' suggesting the report contained information requiring official investigation beyond standard congressional constituent correspondence. This case is notable not for the details of the sighting itself—which remain classified or redacted—but for the chain of custody and official response it triggered. The involvement of both a U.S. Senator and the Director of Central Intelligence in what appears to be a civilian UFO report indicates the matter was treated with unusual seriousness during the height of 1950s UFO interest. The period coincides with intense public concern about aerial phenomena and ongoing military investigations including Project Blue Book. The document's preservation in CIA archives and subsequent FOIA release reveals institutional interest in UFO reports from civilian sources during this era, even when routed through political channels. The lack of detail in the available documentation—with no description of the actual incident, witness testimony, or investigative outcomes—leaves this case frustratingly incomplete while simultaneously suggesting the original report may have contained compelling enough information to warrant Director-level attention.
02 Timeline of Events
1957-01-02
Initial Report to Senator
Mrs. Vincent J. Perry of Mexico, Maine sends a letter to U.S. Senator Margaret Chase Smith regarding an unspecified UFO-related matter.
1957-01-02
Congressional Escalation
Senator Margaret Chase Smith forwards Mrs. Perry's letter to CIA Director Allen W. Dulles, indicating the matter required intelligence community attention.
1957-01-08
CIA Director Response
Director Dulles sends formal acknowledgment to Senator Smith, confirming the letter will be forwarded to 'proper authorities for action.'
1957-01-08 onwards
Referral to Unknown Authorities
CIA forwards the case to unspecified proper authorities for investigation. No record of subsequent action available in declassified materials.
03 Key Witnesses
Mrs. Vincent J. Perry
Civilian resident
unknown
Resident of Mexico, Maine who reported an unspecified UFO-related incident to Senator Margaret Chase Smith in January 1957. No further biographical information available in declassified records.
"Original testimony remains classified or unavailable"
04 Source Documents 1
CIA: C05515722
CIA FOIA 2 pages 377.9 KB EXTRACTED
05 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
This case presents significant analytical challenges due to the minimal information available in the declassified document. What makes this correspondence noteworthy is the bureaucratic response pattern: a civilian witness writes to their Senator, who immediately forwards it to CIA leadership, who then commits to forwarding it to unspecified 'proper authorities.' This chain suggests either: (1) the original letter contained details that Senator Smith's office deemed beyond their purview, possibly involving national security implications, or (2) there was an established protocol in 1957 for routing UFO reports through intelligence channels. The credibility assessment is complicated by the absence of the primary source material—Mrs. Perry's original letter. However, Senator Margaret Chase Smith was a respected legislator known for her integrity, and her decision to forward this to the CIA Director rather than the Air Force (which officially handled UFO investigations) is intriguing. Director Dulles's response is formal but noncommittal, offering no indication of skepticism or dismissal. The timing—early January 1957—places this within a period of heightened UFO activity reporting nationwide. Mexico, Maine is a small town, making this an unlikely location for hoax or publicity-seeking behavior. The fact that this correspondence was retained in CIA files and eventually declassified suggests it was deemed significant enough for institutional record-keeping.
06 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Significant Sighting Requiring Classification
The involvement of both a U.S. Senator and CIA Director suggests Mrs. Perry's report contained details sufficiently compelling or sensitive to warrant high-level intelligence attention. The complete absence of incident details in declassified records may indicate the core information remains classified due to national security implications, possibly involving military installations, advanced technology, or corroborating evidence that elevated this above typical UFO reports.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Political Courtesy Without Substance
Senator Smith may have forwarded the letter simply to satisfy a constituent while deflecting responsibility. Dulles's noncommittal response and promise to forward to 'proper authorities' (likely the Air Force's Project Blue Book) was a polite way to close the matter without CIA involvement. The lack of follow-up documentation suggests the case was quickly dismissed as misidentification or insufficient evidence.
07 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This case remains fundamentally unresolved due to insufficient available information. The most significant aspect is not the UFO incident itself—about which we know nothing—but rather the institutional response it generated. The fact that CIA leadership acknowledged receiving and acting upon a UFO report from a civilian via congressional channels demonstrates that such reports were taken seriously at the highest levels of U.S. intelligence during the 1950s. Without access to Mrs. Perry's original letter or any subsequent investigation reports, we cannot assess the nature of the sighting or its explanation. The case's true value lies in what it reveals about Cold War-era government protocols for handling UFO reports and the willingness of intelligence agencies to engage with civilian sightings. The original witness testimony and investigative follow-up likely remain classified or were destroyed, making this a permanently incomplete historical record that raises more questions than it answers.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
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