CORROBORATED
CF-GEI-19790100595 CORROBORATED

The Finistère Dual Phenomena: Cigar Object and Cargo Ship Lights

CASE FILE — CF-GEI-19790100595 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Date Date when the incident was reported or occurred
1979-01-24
Location Reported location of the sighting or event
Finistère, Brittany, France
Duration Estimated duration of the observed phenomenon
15 minutes (Jan 24); unknown duration (Jan 28)
Object Type Classification of the observed object based on witness descriptions
cigar
Source Origin database or archive this case was sourced from
geipan
Witnesses Number of known witnesses who reported the event
3
Country Country where the incident took place
FR
AI Confidence AI-generated credibility score based on source reliability, detail consistency, and corroboration
85%
Between January 24-28, 1979, three witnesses reported distinct phenomena in Finistère, Brittany. The first incident occurred on January 24 between 7:00-7:15 AM when a single witness observed an orange cigar-shaped object moving slowly on a North-South trajectory. The object then suddenly ascended vertically and disappeared at very high speed while changing color. A gendarmerie investigation confirmed no naval-aeronautical military maneuvers were scheduled during this period, and no additional witnesses came forward for this sighting. Four days later on January 28 at approximately 10:15 PM, two other witnesses observed luminous phenomena consisting of blue and white lights with a red point (according to one witness) appearing at regular intervals. The gendarmerie investigation conclusively identified these lights as navigation signals atop the masts of a German cargo ship anchored in a nearby bay. GEIPAN classified this case as 'A' (identified and explained). While the January 28 lights were definitively resolved as a mundane maritime source, the January 24 cigar-shaped object remains unexplained due to insufficient information and lack of corroborating witnesses, though it is grouped under the same classification.
02 Timeline of Events
1979-01-24 07:00-07:15
Cigar-Shaped Object Sighting
Single witness observes orange cigar-shaped object moving slowly on North-South trajectory in Finistère coastal area.
1979-01-24 07:15
Rapid Vertical Ascent
Object suddenly ascends vertically, changes color, and disappears at very high speed.
1979-01-24 - 1979-01-28
Gendarmerie Investigation Period
Police investigate and confirm no military naval-aeronautical maneuvers were scheduled. No additional witnesses located for January 24 incident.
1979-01-28 22:15
Luminous Phenomena Observed
Two witnesses observe blue and white lights with red point appearing at regular intervals in the same general area.
1979-01-28 (after 22:15)
Source Identified
Gendarmerie investigation conclusively identifies lights as navigation signals from masts of German cargo ship anchored in bay.
Unknown date
GEIPAN Classification A
Case officially classified as 'A' (identified and explained) by GEIPAN, primarily based on resolution of January 28 sighting.
03 Key Witnesses
Anonymous Witness 1
Civilian
unknown
Single witness to the January 24 cigar-shaped object. Observed phenomenon during early morning hours.
"Un engin orangé en forme de cigare... se déplace lentement selon une trajectoire Nord-Sud et s'élève soudain verticalement pour disparaître à très grande vitesse en changeant de couleur."
Anonymous Witnesses 2 & 3
Civilian
medium
Two witnesses who observed blue and white lights with red point on January 28. Their sighting was explained as cargo ship navigation lights.
"Des lueurs bleues et blanches avec un point rouge apparaissent à intervalles réguliers."
04 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
This case presents an interesting juxtaposition of explained and unexplained phenomena occurring in the same geographic area within four days. The January 28 sighting demonstrates the value of thorough investigation - what appeared to be anomalous lights were conclusively identified through police work as cargo ship navigation lights, a reminder that not all unusual aerial phenomena are mysterious. However, the January 24 cigar-shaped object sighting remains problematic from an analytical standpoint. The witness describes specific behavior (slow movement, sudden vertical ascent, high-speed departure, color change) that suggests either an advanced craft or a misidentified conventional object. The timing (early morning, 7:00-7:15 AM) and the gendarmerie's confirmation of no military exercises add credibility, yet the lack of additional witnesses or physical evidence limits investigative conclusions. The GEIPAN 'A' classification appears to apply primarily to the January 28 incident, with the January 24 sighting grouped administratively despite remaining technically unresolved. The description of color change during rapid acceleration is consistent with some atmospheric optical effects or rocket launches, though none were reported. The North-South trajectory and coastal location raise the possibility of maritime or aviation-related misidentification, but without additional data, definitive conclusions cannot be drawn. The case highlights the challenge of single-witness reports in remote or coastal areas where conventional explanations may exist but cannot be verified retroactively.
05 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Genuine Anomalous Craft (Jan 24)
The specific behavior described - slow movement, sudden vertical ascent, very high speed departure, and color change - is consistent with accounts of structured craft exhibiting capabilities beyond conventional aviation. The gendarmerie confirmation of no military exercises eliminates routine explanations. The witness observed these characteristics during daylight hours (7:00-7:15 AM), reducing likelihood of misidentification. The coastal Brittany location has a history of unusual aerial phenomena reports.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Atmospheric or Aviation Misidentification (Jan 24)
The January 24 cigar-shaped object could be explained by conventional aircraft seen from an unusual angle during sunrise hours, possibly military despite the denial of scheduled exercises. The apparent color change and rapid acceleration might result from atmospheric distortion, clouds, or the witness losing visual contact. The North-South trajectory is consistent with common flight paths. The vertical ascent could be a perspective effect as the object moved away at an angle.
06 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This case represents two distinct events with different evidentiary outcomes. The January 28 lights are definitively explained as navigation signals from a German cargo ship - a textbook example of proper investigative work resolving apparent anomalies. The January 24 cigar-shaped object, however, remains unexplained but not necessarily anomalous. With only one witness, no physical evidence, and insufficient detail to rule out conventional explanations (aircraft, weather phenomena, astronomical objects), this sighting falls into the category of 'insufficient data.' The lack of corroborating witnesses despite the early morning timing in a populated region suggests either a very localized phenomenon or a brief misidentification. While the described behavior (vertical ascent, rapid acceleration, color change) is intriguing, the evidentiary threshold for considering this genuinely anomalous is not met. The case's significance lies primarily in its demonstration of investigative methodology rather than unexplained phenomena.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
07 Community Discussion
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