CLASSIFIED
CF-CIA-C05516032 CLASSIFIED PRIORITY: HIGH

The Mayher 16mm Film Analysis: Orange Rotating Spheroid

CASE FILE — CF-CIA-C05516032 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Location Reported location of the sighting or event
Location Unknown
Duration Estimated duration of the observed phenomenon
3 minutes
Object Type Classification of the observed object based on witness descriptions
sphere
Source Origin database or archive this case was sourced from
cia_foia
Witnesses Number of known witnesses who reported the event
2
Country Country where the incident took place
Unknown
AI Confidence AI-generated credibility score based on source reliability, detail consistency, and corroboration
85%
This case involves photographic analysis of a UFO filmed on 16mm movie film by an individual identified as 'Mr. Mayher' (or 'Ray VII' per telephone contact). The object was captured on film and subsequently underwent extensive photographic processing for intelligence analysis. The witness filmed a bright orange object described as having the shape of a saucer - specifically a 'rotating oblate spheroid which seemed to flatten out as speed increased.' Multiple observers were present during the sighting, which lasted approximately three minutes at an estimated altitude of 2,000 feet. The CIA document details the sophisticated photographic enhancement process used to analyze the footage. The original 16mm film was processed through multiple stages: prints were made from the original film, then 4x5 negatives were created from those prints, followed by 8x10 negatives, and finally contact prints and enlargements. The technical specifications are precisely documented: the camera was a 16mm Cine-Kodak with focal length of 1 inch, f/2.8, filming at 63 frames per second. At the time of filming, the lens aperture was set to f/2.1 using fast panchromatic film stock. The elapsed time between the first and sixth frame on the film strip was approximately 0.25 seconds. The document reveals this was an official intelligence case with formal photographic analysis protocols. The analyst notes that the size of the UFO could be gauged in relation to the perforations on the film, which are of known standard size. The source indicated willingness to make the original negatives available on a two-week loan if they would serve a useful purpose, suggesting ongoing investigation and inter-agency cooperation on the case.
02 Timeline of Events
00:00
UFO First Observed
Bright orange object appears at estimated altitude of 2,000 feet. Multiple observers notice the object and Mr. Mayher begins filming with 16mm Cine-Kodak camera at 63 frames per second.
00:00.25
Film Sequence Captured
Six frames of film captured over approximately 0.25 seconds showing the object's movement and rotation. Camera set to f/2.1 aperture using fast panchromatic film.
00:00 - 03:00
Object Displays Dynamic Behavior
UFO remains visible for approximately three minutes. Witnesses observe it as a rotating oblate spheroid that appears to flatten as its speed increases. Object maintains bright orange coloration throughout observation.
Post-incident
Film Submitted for Analysis
Original 16mm film provided to intelligence analysts. Multi-stage photographic enhancement process initiated: prints made from original film, 4x5 negatives created, then 8x10 negatives, followed by contact prints and enlargements.
Analysis phase
CIA Photographic Laboratory Processing
Extensive enhancement and analysis conducted. Print marked 'A' shows enlargement of 16mm film strip with perforations visible for size comparison. Print marked 'B' is enlarged from one of the 8x10 negatives showing greatest detail of the object.
Documentation
Intelligence Memo Generated
Detailed case file created documenting camera specifications, film processing methodology, witness estimates, and object characteristics. Source offers to provide original negatives on two-week loan basis for further study.
03 Key Witnesses
Mr. Mayher (Ray VII)
Civilian photographer
medium
Individual who filmed the UFO on 16mm movie film and provided it for intelligence analysis. Had access to professional-grade Cine-Kodak camera equipment and demonstrated technical knowledge of photography. Maintained contact with intelligence agencies and offered to loan original negatives for further study.
"The UFO appeared to have the shape of a saucer, i.e., a rotating oblate spheroid which seemed to flatten out as speed increased."
Anonymous Witness 2
Observer
unknown
Referenced as 'other observers' in the document. Identity and number of additional witnesses not disclosed in the declassified material.
04 Source Documents 1
CIA: C05516032
CIA FOIA 2 pages 406.4 KB EXTRACTED
05 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
This case demonstrates several significant credibility factors that elevate it beyond typical civilian UFO reports. First, the existence of motion picture film evidence subjected to professional intelligence analysis indicates the U.S. government took this sighting seriously enough to dedicate substantial photographic laboratory resources to its examination. The multi-stage enhancement process (from 16mm film to 8x10 enlargements) represents sophisticated 1950s-era analytical methodology, suggesting official concern about the nature of the object. The technical documentation is unusually precise and detailed. The witness used professional-grade equipment (Cine-Kodak camera at 63 fps) with documented camera settings (f/2.1 aperture, 1-inch focal length), altitude estimates (2,000 feet), viewing angle (45 degrees maximum), and precise timing data (0.25 seconds between frames). This level of technical specificity allows for potential photogrammetric analysis and indicates the witness had some technical sophistication. The description of the object as a 'rotating oblate spheroid' that flattened with increased speed is consistent with other classic disc-shaped UFO reports and suggests dynamic behavior inconsistent with conventional aircraft or balloons. The bright orange color and three-minute duration provided ample opportunity for observation and filming. The presence of multiple observers ('other observers' mentioned in the document) provides corroboration, though their identities are not disclosed in this heavily redacted intelligence memo.
06 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Structured Craft with Advanced Propulsion
The description of a 'rotating oblate spheroid that flattened as speed increased' is consistent with numerous other disc-shaped UFO reports from the 1950s and suggests a physical craft utilizing some form of rotational or electromagnetic propulsion system. The bright orange color could indicate plasma or ionization effects associated with advanced propulsion. The ability to hover at 2,000 feet for three minutes then accelerate demonstrates flight characteristics beyond 1950s conventional aviation technology. Multiple witnesses and film documentation provide strong evidentiary support for a genuine anomalous craft.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Photographic Artifact or Processing Defect
The object could represent a film processing artifact, lens flare, or defect that appeared during the multiple stages of photographic enhancement. The extensive processing (from 16mm film through multiple generations of negatives and enlargements) could have introduced or enhanced anomalies not present in the original footage. The 'rotation' and 'flattening' effect might be attributable to motion blur at 63 fps or optical aberrations in the Cine-Kodak lens at f/2.1 aperture.
Misidentified Conventional Object
The bright orange color and spherical appearance could indicate a weather balloon, particularly at sunset or sunrise when solar illumination creates orange hues. The apparent 'rotation' might be the balloon spinning as it ascends, and the 'flattening with speed' could be perceptual distortion or the balloon's actual deformation as it rises through varying atmospheric pressure. The three-minute duration and 2,000-foot altitude are consistent with balloon observation scenarios.
07 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This case represents a credible photographic UFO incident that received official intelligence community analysis, likely dating from the 1950s based on the photographic technology and document format. The combination of motion picture evidence, multiple witnesses, technical documentation, and formal CIA analytical processing places this in the category of well-documented unresolved cases. However, without access to the actual photographs, original negatives, witness identities, specific location, or date information - all of which appear to have been redacted or withheld - definitive conclusions remain impossible. The object's described behavior (rotating, flattening at speed, hovering for three minutes at low altitude) does not match conventional aircraft of any era. The document's existence in CIA files and the offer to loan original negatives suggests this was part of a broader intelligence collection effort on aerial phenomena. The case significance lies not in reaching a definitive explanation, but in documenting that professional intelligence analysis of UFO film evidence was occurring at the classified level, with sophisticated photographic enhancement techniques applied to civilian-obtained footage.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
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