CORROBORATED
CF-GEI-19950201384 CORROBORATED
The Saint-Martin Atmospheric Reentry Event
CASE FILE — CF-GEI-19950201384 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Date Date when the incident was reported or occurred
1995-02-06
Location Reported location of the sighting or event
Saint-Martin, Guadeloupe, France
Duration Estimated duration of the observed phenomenon
approximately 2-3 minutes
Object Type Classification of the observed object based on witness descriptions
light
Source Origin database or archive this case was sourced from
geipan
Witnesses Number of known witnesses who reported the event
1
Country Country where the incident took place
FR
AI Confidence AI-generated credibility score based on source reliability, detail consistency, and corroboration
85%
On February 6, 1995, at 19:20 local time, a single pedestrian witness in Saint-Martin (French Caribbean territory, department 971) observed a luminous point traveling across the sky. The witness described the object becoming progressively more incandescent during its trajectory before ultimately disappearing. In its final moments, the object separated into two distinct red points before vanishing completely.
The sighting was investigated by GEIPAN (Groupe d'études et d'informations sur les phénomènes aérospatiaux non identifiés), France's official UFO investigation service under CNES (Centre National d'Études Spatiales). The case was assigned classification 'B' in GEIPAN's system, indicating a phenomenon that is likely explained with good probability. The official investigation concluded that the witness most probably observed an atmospheric reentry event.
The observation's characteristics—increasing luminosity, fragmentation into multiple glowing pieces, and the relatively brief duration—are consistent with space debris or a meteor entering Earth's atmosphere at high velocity. The 19:20 evening timeframe would have provided good visibility conditions for observing such phenomena against a darkening sky in the Caribbean.
02 Timeline of Events
19:20
Initial Observation
Witness on foot notices a luminous point traveling across the sky over Saint-Martin
19:20-19:22
Increasing Luminosity
The object becomes progressively more incandescent during its trajectory, growing brighter as it moves
19:22-19:23
Fragmentation Event
The object separates into two distinct red points during its final phase
19:23
Disappearance
Both red points vanish from view, ending the observation
1995-02-06 (post-event)
GEIPAN Investigation
Official investigation by French space agency CNES/GEIPAN concludes probable atmospheric reentry
03 Key Witnesses
Anonymous Witness 1
Civilian pedestrian
medium
Single witness observing on foot in Saint-Martin during evening hours
"A luminous point became increasingly incandescent before disappearing by separating into two red points"
04 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
This case presents textbook characteristics of atmospheric reentry: a luminous object increasing in brightness (due to friction heating), followed by fragmentation into multiple pieces (structural breakup under aerodynamic stress), and the red coloration typical of superheated materials. The GEIPAN 'B' classification indicates investigators had sufficient data to make a confident probable identification without absolute certainty.
The single-witness nature and lack of corroborating reports somewhat limits the evidential value, though this is not unusual for atmospheric events over remote or sparsely populated areas like Saint-Martin. The witness's position as a pedestrian suggests unhurried observation conditions with unobstructed sky view. GEIPAN's conclusion appears sound based on the observed phenomena matching known reentry characteristics. No anomalous features requiring exotic explanations are present in the report.
05 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Observation Reliability Consideration
With only a single witness and no photographic evidence, corroborating data, or additional reports from Saint-Martin or neighboring islands, the exact nature remains technically unconfirmed. However, the witness description is internally consistent and matches known phenomena so precisely that misidentification of something else seems unlikely. The lack of anomalous features or extraordinary claims supports the mundane explanation.
06 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This case is almost certainly a natural or man-made atmospheric reentry event, most likely space debris or possibly a meteor. The progression from single luminous point to increasing incandescence to fragmentation into two red points follows the exact pattern expected when objects encounter Earth's atmosphere at orbital velocities. GEIPAN's assessment appears entirely appropriate. While the case holds minimal mystery value, it serves as a useful example of proper investigation methodology—documenting observations, comparing them against known phenomena, and arriving at logical conclusions. The case significance lies primarily in demonstrating that most UFO reports have prosaic explanations when properly analyzed.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
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