CORROBORATED
CF-GEI-20081201930 CORROBORATED
The Saint-Pierre Thai Lantern Incident
CASE FILE — CF-GEI-20081201930 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Date Date when the incident was reported or occurred
2008-12-14
Location Reported location of the sighting or event
Saint-Pierre, La Réunion, France
Duration Estimated duration of the observed phenomenon
20 seconds
Object Type Classification of the observed object based on witness descriptions
sphere
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%
On December 14, 2008, at approximately 21:00 (9:00 PM), multiple witnesses in Saint-Pierre, La Réunion observed a silent, spherical orange object traveling across the night sky. The object moved in a straight trajectory from east to northwest without leaving any trail. The observation lasted approximately 20 seconds before the object disappeared following a flickering of its luminosity. One witness reported that similar orange spheres had been observed in the area during the previous week.
The case was reported to GEIPAN (France's official UFO investigation service) and assigned classification 'A' — indicating a completely explained phenomenon with certainty. The investigation contacted the Makes Observatory, which identified the objects as "wish lanterns" (lanternes à vœux), similar to Thai lanterns. These are paper lanterns with a fuel cell that float on heated air, commonly released during celebrations.
The explanation was definitively confirmed when the primary witness observed identical objects again on Christmas Eve (December 24, 2008), providing corroborating evidence that the sightings were indeed sky lanterns released during the holiday season. This case represents a textbook example of how cultural celebration practices can create UFO reports that are ultimately resolved through investigative follow-up.
02 Timeline of Events
Week of December 7, 2008
Prior Sightings Reported
Similar orange spherical objects observed in the Saint-Pierre area during the previous week, indicating multiple sky lantern releases
21:00
Object Appears
Multiple witnesses observe a silent, spherical orange object appear in the eastern sky, beginning its trajectory toward the northwest
21:00:20
Luminosity Flickers and Object Disappears
After 20 seconds of observation, the object's luminosity begins to flicker and the object disappears from view, consistent with sky lantern fuel depletion
December 2008
Makes Observatory Consulted
GEIPAN investigation contacts the Makes Observatory, which identifies the objects as wish lanterns (lanternes à vœux) similar to Thai lanterns
December 24, 2008 evening
Confirmation Observation
Primary witness observes identical objects again on Christmas Eve, confirming the sky lantern explanation and leading to GEIPAN 'A' classification
03 Key Witnesses
Primary Witness
Civilian resident
high
Saint-Pierre resident who made the initial report and provided crucial follow-up observation on Christmas Eve that confirmed the sky lantern explanation
"Similar orange spheres were seen the previous week"
Additional Witnesses
Civilians
medium
Multiple other observers who witnessed the same December 14 event
04 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
This case demonstrates the value of thorough investigative follow-up and witness re-contact. The GEIPAN classification 'A' indicates complete certainty in the identification — their highest level of explanation confidence. The key identifying characteristics align perfectly with sky lantern behavior: orange/amber glow from flame, silent flight, slow horizontal drift, spherical appearance, flickering before disappearing (as fuel runs out), and straight-line trajectory consistent with wind patterns.
The credibility of the explanation is significantly strengthened by the primary witness's subsequent observation on Christmas Eve, where they presumably recognized the same phenomenon. The timing (holiday season in December) is consistent with sky lantern releases for celebrations. The Makes Observatory consultation shows proper scientific methodology in the investigation. The report of similar sightings the previous week suggests multiple lantern releases in the area, possibly from the same celebration or vendor. The absence of any unusual flight characteristics (extreme speed, sudden direction changes, impossible maneuvers) supports the mundane explanation.
05 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
06 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This case is definitively explained as sky lanterns (Thai lanterns/lanternes à vœux) with extremely high confidence. The GEIPAN 'A' classification represents certainty in identification, and the explanation is supported by multiple corroborating factors: visual characteristics matching sky lanterns exactly, confirmation from astronomical experts at Makes Observatory, witness re-observation with apparent recognition on Christmas Eve, appropriate timing during holiday season, and complete absence of anomalous behavior. This case holds minimal significance as a UFO incident but serves as an excellent reference example for identifying sky lantern reports — a common source of UFO sightings globally, particularly during festival seasons. It demonstrates the importance of cultural context in UFO investigations and the value of witness follow-up in confirming identifications.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
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