CLASSIFIED
CF-CIA-C05516046 CLASSIFIED PRIORITY: HIGH

The Major Tucker UFO Authority Memo

CASE FILE — CF-CIA-C05516046 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Date Date when the incident was reported or occurred
1953-05-22
Location Reported location of the sighting or event
United States (Location Unspecified)
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%
This case represents a significant administrative document from May 22, 1953, revealing internal CIA coordination regarding UFO investigation authority. The memo, exchanged between CIA officers, discusses correspondence with 'Major Tucker' (likely Major Dewey J. Fournet Jr. or another Air Force liaison) regarding UFO matters. The Chief of the Applied Science Division, SI (Scientific Intelligence) was involved in establishing official protocols for handling UFO-related correspondence and inquiries. The document indicates that Major Tucker was given access to a letter and agreed to notify 'Mr. Neasham' (possibly a CIA officer or Air Force liaison) that he was the official authority on UFO matters. The memo reveals coordination between the CIA's Applied Science Division and military personnel, with an understanding that any UFO correspondence directed to Major Tucker's office would automatically be forwarded to him. The reference to 'Mr. Ruppelt' in the final line is particularly significant—this almost certainly refers to Captain Edward J. Ruppelt, who headed the U.S. Air Force's Project Blue Book from 1951-1953. The administrative nature of this document suggests it was part of the CIA's effort to establish clear chains of command and information flow regarding UFO investigations during the early 1950s, a critical period following the 1952 Washington D.C. UFO wave and the Robertson Panel of January 1953. The memo's existence demonstrates active CIA involvement in UFO matters and coordination with Air Force personnel responsible for official UFO investigations.
02 Timeline of Events
1953-05-22
CIA Memo Drafted
Office memorandum created documenting coordination with Major Tucker regarding UFO investigation authority and correspondence protocols.
1953-05-22
Major Tucker Given Letter Access
Major Tucker provided access to correspondence and agrees to notify appropriate parties about official UFO authority designation.
1953-05-22
Coordination Protocol Established
Agreement reached that UFO correspondence directed to Major Tucker's office would automatically be forwarded to him, establishing clear information flow.
1953-05-22
Ruppelt Reference
Memo references information from 'Mr. Ruppelt' who has written letters to the Air Force, likely Captain Edward J. Ruppelt of Project Blue Book.
03 Key Witnesses
Major Tucker
Military officer, UFO investigation liaison
high
Military officer designated as official authority on UFO matters, coordinating between Air Force and CIA. Likely involved in Project Blue Book or related intelligence activities.
Captain Edward J. Ruppelt (referenced)
Head of Project Blue Book (1951-1953)
high
Director of the U.S. Air Force's Project Blue Book, the official UFO investigation program. Later wrote 'The Report on Unidentified Flying Objects' (1956), considered one of the most credible accounts of government UFO investigations.
04 Source Documents 1
CIA: C05516046
CIA FOIA 2 pages 397.3 KB EXTRACTED
05 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
This document provides rare insight into the bureaucratic machinery behind 1950s UFO investigations. The timing—May 1953—places it just months after the CIA-sponsored Robertson Panel concluded in January 1953, which recommended debunking UFO reports and reducing public interest. The mention of Captain Ruppelt (who wrote the influential book 'The Report on Unidentified Flying Objects' in 1956) and the establishment of 'official authority' protocols suggest the CIA was actively managing information flow and maintaining oversight of Air Force UFO investigations. The document's significance lies not in describing a specific sighting, but in revealing the organizational structure and inter-agency coordination surrounding UFO investigations. The fact that the CIA's Applied Science Division was routing correspondence and establishing official channels indicates UFO matters were being taken seriously at a policy level, even as public statements often downplayed the phenomenon. The fragmentary nature of the declassified memo—with portions difficult to read and names partially obscured—raises questions about what other coordination and policy decisions were being made during this period that remain classified or lost to history.
06 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
CIA Oversight and Control
The memo reveals active CIA management of UFO investigations beyond their publicly acknowledged role. The establishment of 'official authority' channels and coordination with Project Blue Book leadership suggests the CIA was exercising oversight and possibly control over what information was released or investigated. This occurred just months after the Robertson Panel recommended UFO debunking, indicating a deliberate strategy to manage the UFO narrative.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Administrative Artifact of Cold War Paranoia
This document reflects the Cold War era's tendency to classify mundane administrative matters. The CIA's involvement likely stemmed from concerns about Soviet aircraft or psychological warfare operations rather than genuine interest in extraterrestrial phenomena. The memo simply shows interagency coordination during a period when any unusual aerial activity could have national security implications.
07 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This is an authentic historical document demonstrating CIA involvement in UFO investigation protocols during the early 1950s. The memo confirms what researchers have long suspected: the CIA maintained active interest and oversight of military UFO investigations beyond their publicly acknowledged role. The reference to Captain Ruppelt, Project Blue Book's most respected director, and the establishment of official communication channels suggests a more coordinated intelligence community approach to the UFO question than was publicly admitted. While this document doesn't describe a specific UFO incident, it is significant for understanding the institutional response to the UFO phenomenon during a peak period of sightings and public concern. The document's classification and subsequent declassification underscore that UFO matters were considered sensitive enough to warrant controlled information protocols at the highest levels of U.S. intelligence agencies.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
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