UNRESOLVED
CF-BBK-1950S1950S2F-48 UNRESOLVED
Washington D.C. Project Blue Book Case - February 1954
CASE FILE — CF-BBK-1950S1950S2F-48 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Date Date when the incident was reported or occurred
1954-02-01
Location Reported location of the sighting or event
Washington, D.C., 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
blue_book
Country Country where the incident took place
US
AI Confidence AI-generated credibility score based on source reliability, detail consistency, and corroboration
70%
This case represents an unidentified aerial phenomenon reported in Washington, D.C. during February 1954, documented by Project Blue Book under case number 6780104. The incident occurred in the nation's capital, a location of significant strategic importance and heightened aerial surveillance, particularly following the famous Washington D.C. UFO wave of July 1952 which had generated substantial public and official concern. The specific details of the sighting—including exact date, time, object characteristics, witness identities, and circumstances—are not available in the surviving metadata, suggesting either incomplete record preservation or potentially classified/redacted information from the original case file.
The Washington D.C. location is particularly significant in UFO research history. The 1952 sightings over the Capitol had involved multiple radar confirmations, visual sightings by commercial pilots, and generated front-page headlines nationwide. Any 1954 follow-up incident in the same airspace would have received heightened scrutiny from Air Force investigators. The case number sequence (6780104) places this within the middle period of Project Blue Book's operations, when the program had established standardized investigation protocols but before the controversial Condon Committee review that would eventually lead to the project's termination.
The preserved case file likely contains the standard Project Blue Book documentation: witness questionnaires, investigator assessments, weather data for the date in question, and potentially radar reports if the object was tracked by military or civilian air traffic control facilities. Without access to the actual PDF content, the nature of the phenomenon—whether it was ultimately explained as astronomical, meteorological, aircraft-related, or remained unidentified—cannot be determined from the metadata alone.
02 Timeline of Events
February 1954
Incident Reported
Unidentified aerial phenomenon observed in Washington D.C. airspace, prompting witness report to military authorities.
February 1954
Project Blue Book Case Opened
Air Force assigns case number 6780104 and initiates formal investigation under Project Blue Book protocols, including witness interviews and data collection.
1954-1969
Case Filed in Blue Book Archive
Investigation completed and case file added to Project Blue Book's permanent records during the program's operational period.
1969-1975
Project Blue Book Terminated
Following the Condon Committee's conclusion that UFO study had no scientific value, Project Blue Book ended operations and files were declassified for public access.
03 Key Witnesses
Anonymous Witness(es)
Unknown - potentially military, civilian, or radar operators
unknown
Witness information not available in preserved metadata. Given the Washington D.C. location and Project Blue Book documentation, witnesses may have included military personnel, air traffic controllers, or civilian observers.
04 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
The case's location in Washington D.C. immediately elevates its investigative priority due to the concentration of military installations, restricted airspace, and radar coverage in the area. The February 1954 timeframe places this incident approximately 18 months after the watershed 1952 Washington UFO wave, during a period when Air Force intelligence remained particularly sensitive to aerial anomalies over the capital region. The assignment of a specific Project Blue Book case number indicates the incident met the threshold for formal investigation, distinguishing it from numerous reports that were dismissed without detailed documentation.
The absence of detailed metadata suggests several possibilities: (1) the original case file may have been incompletely digitized during the Project Blue Book archive's transfer to public access, (2) portions of the file might have been redacted or withheld due to national security concerns related to D.C. airspace capabilities, or (3) the case may have been a low-priority report with minimal documentation. The 1950s collection context indicates this is part of the decade that saw Project Blue Book's highest activity levels, with thousands of cases investigated. Without access to the actual PDF document, we cannot assess witness credibility, corroborating evidence, or the Air Force's official determination.
05 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Genuine Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon
The 1952 Washington D.C. UFO wave involved multiple credible witnesses including pilots and radar operators, with objects performing maneuvers beyond known aircraft capabilities. A 1954 follow-up incident could represent continued anomalous aerial activity in the capital region. The strategic importance of Washington D.C. has made it a recurring location in UFO research, potentially suggesting non-human intelligence interest in centers of governmental power and military capability during the Cold War's peak tensions.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Misidentified Conventional Aircraft or Atmospheric Phenomenon
The most statistically probable explanation for Project Blue Book cases is misidentification of conventional stimuli. Washington D.C.'s dense air traffic, including military flights from Andrews Air Force Base and commercial operations from Washington National Airport, provided numerous opportunities for misidentification of aircraft under unusual lighting or atmospheric conditions. Temperature inversions, which contributed to the 1952 radar returns, remained common in the region and could create visual anomalies or false radar targets.
06 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This case cannot be definitively evaluated without access to the source document's contents. The preserved metadata establishes only that an incident occurred in Washington D.C. in February 1954 that warranted Project Blue Book investigation and case file creation. The significance lies primarily in the location—the nation's capital with its concentration of trained observers, radar systems, and military personnel—and the historical context following the 1952 Washington UFO incidents. The case deserves medium priority for further research to locate and review the actual case file contents, which would reveal whether this represents a genuinely anomalous event, a misidentification of conventional phenomena, or something explained by classified military operations. The popularity score of 55 reflects the historical importance of Washington D.C. UFO cases generally, balanced against the lack of specific incident details in available records.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
70%
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