UNRESOLVED
CF-CIA-C05516059 UNRESOLVED

The Lake View, South Carolina Sighting - CIA Correspondence Case

CASE FILE — CF-CIA-C05516059 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Date Date when the incident was reported or occurred
1968-04-02
Location Reported location of the sighting or event
Lake View, South Carolina, 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 April 2, 1968, Thomas B. Scott Jr. from Lake View, South Carolina (Box 11) observed an unidentified object in the sky and felt compelled to report it to what appears to be a U.S. intelligence agency. The witness submitted a written report describing the object, prompting an official response dated April 10, 1968. The responding agency acknowledged receipt of Scott's letter and expressed interest in the event, but explicitly deferred investigative responsibility to the United States Air Force, which was the official body tasked with identifying such objects and investigating their nature and activities during this period. The correspondence was routed through internal CIA channels, as evidenced by the memorandum structure showing distribution to multiple departments including 'DAD/C', 'ABCD/SI', and other internal divisions. The case file includes both the original letter from the witness (though the detailed description is not fully legible in the declassified documents) and the official reply. The memorandum header indicates this was processed through CSI (Central Security Index) with multiple copies distributed to various intelligence offices, suggesting the sighting warranted inter-departmental awareness despite the formal deflection to USAF. This case represents a typical example of Cold War-era UFO reporting protocols, where civilian sightings were acknowledged by intelligence agencies but officially channeled to Project Blue Book and USAF investigation. The preservation of this correspondence in CIA files indicates the agency maintained awareness of such reports even while publicly deferring to military investigation.
02 Timeline of Events
1968-04-02
Initial Sighting
Thomas B. Scott Jr. observes unidentified object in the sky near Lake View, South Carolina
1968-04-02 to 1968-04-10
Witness Report Submitted
Scott composes and mails detailed letter to intelligence agency describing the observation
1968-04-10
CIA Internal Routing
Memorandum circulated internally within CIA to multiple departments (DAD/C, ABCD/SI, CSI) with copies of Scott's letter
1968-04-10
Official Response Issued
Agency responds to Scott acknowledging interest but directing him to U.S. Air Force for investigation, stating USAF is responsible for identifying such objects
Post-1968
Document Declassification
Correspondence eventually declassified and released through FOIA to The Black Vault, becoming part of public record
03 Key Witnesses
Thomas B. Scott Jr.
Civilian resident
medium
Resident of Lake View, South Carolina (Box 11). Demonstrated initiative by directly contacting intelligence agencies about the sighting. No additional biographical information available in declassified documents.
"Letter content describing the object not fully legible in declassified documents, but witness provided written testimony regarding an object observed on April 2, 1968."
04 Source Documents 1
CIA: C05516059
CIA FOIA 3 pages 417.9 KB EXTRACTED
05 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
The credibility factors in this case are mixed but noteworthy. The witness took the initiative to contact what appears to be a CIA address directly, suggesting some level of sophistication or prior knowledge of intelligence agency involvement in UFO matters. The fact that the CIA retained this correspondence and routed it through multiple internal departments (as shown by the distribution list) indicates the report was taken seriously enough to warrant documentation and inter-office circulation, even though the official response deflected responsibility to the USAF. The timing of this sighting (April 1968) places it during the active period of Project Blue Book and at a time of heightened Cold War tensions. The response letter's careful language - acknowledging agency interest while redirecting investigatory responsibility - follows standard CIA protocol of the era for handling UFO reports. The wide internal distribution (to DAD/C, ABCD/SI, and other offices) suggests the report may have contained details of interest beyond routine civilian sightings, though the specific nature of the observation remains unclear from the heavily redacted or degraded document text. The case demonstrates the documented gap between official CIA statements about non-involvement in UFO investigation and the reality of their information collection and inter-agency coordination on such matters.
06 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Genuine Unidentified Craft with Intelligence Interest
The wide internal CIA distribution of this case (to at least 5-6 different offices/personnel) suggests the witness report may have contained details of genuine interest beyond routine civilian sightings. If the object were clearly conventional, minimal circulation would be expected. The agency's documented interest ('This Agency is interested in these events') followed by deflection could represent the documented pattern of public denial while maintaining private awareness. The fact that this relatively minor case was retained and eventually declassified suggests it was part of systematic documentation of unexplained aerial phenomena.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Aircraft or Astronomical Misidentification
Without specific details about the object's appearance, behavior, or circumstances, the most probable explanation is misidentification of conventional aircraft, satellite, planet (Venus), or meteor. The South Carolina location in 1968 was near military flight paths and training areas. The witness's decision to contact intelligence agencies rather than local authorities or media might indicate the object appeared unusual, but this could equally reflect Cold War-era public association of 'unusual aerial objects' with government/military matters rather than truly anomalous characteristics.
07 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This case is most significant not for the sighting itself - about which we have minimal specific details - but as documented evidence of CIA information collection procedures regarding UFO reports during the 1960s. While the agency's official response redirects the witness to the Air Force, the internal memorandum distribution and file retention demonstrate active intelligence community awareness and documentation of civilian UFO reports. The actual nature of what Thomas Scott observed remains unresolved due to lack of detailed description in the available documents. The case exemplifies the bureaucratic handling of UFO reports during the Project Blue Book era, revealing the gap between public-facing protocols and internal information management. Confidence level: Medium - we can be certain about the administrative handling and CIA awareness, but cannot assess the underlying sighting itself without the witness's detailed description.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
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