HNMO) – A series of images recording a strange disc believed to have been taken by George Stock of Passaic, New Jersey, USA, on July 29, 1952 has just been revealed.
Express news site said that currently the US Intelligence Agency (CIA) is using one of these photos and a series of other images of unidentified flying objects (UFOs) seen in history to clarify the situation. shows the top secret investigations that this agency conducted in the years from 1940 to 1950.
The US intelligence agency, which is often accused of conspiring to cover up the existence of UFOs to hide evidence of alien life to the public, there is now some reason to post a number of UFO-related cases that were previously considered top secret to the agency’s website.
Among these incidents was one involving what George Stock recorded.
The photo was taken by Stock
Mr. Stock was allegedly sitting in his yard with a friend when they saw an object appear in the sky around 4:30 p.m.
The story goes that he ran into the house to get a camera and took 5 pictures of the UFO. This object flew at an altitude of about 60m, then flew away at high speed.
The flying saucer was then described as being made of metal, solid and having a transparent dome-shaped top. Stock and his friend said the disc was blue or green, made no noise and was about 10 meters across.
According to theparanormalguide.com, a site specializing in UFO sightings, despite the evidence being so clear, Stock’s photos did not attract much attention at the time, because Government agencies were too quick to control the incident, demanding silence from the media and police.
No solid conclusions have been drawn about Stock’s images, other than speculation that it was an elaborate prank, using a saucer and a teacup for visual effect.
The photo was taken in 1962
One of the other photos also posted by the CIA is a photo of many UFOs taken in Sheffield, northern England, in 1962. This photo has confused investigators and the media throughout. 10 years because it recorded an entire fleet of small, dark flying saucers.
It was not until October 1972 that the Daily Express reported that Alex Birch, then a 24-year-old salesman, admitted that, when he was a 14-year-old schoolboy, he and two friends pulled the prank. This. He said they drew five flying saucers on the glass, then took pictures, creating the illusion of a UFO flying in the air.
A photo of a strange light source in 1960 |
Another image released by the CIA is a strange, large, glowing disc, said to be taken on October 20, 1960 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. This image has never been confirmed to show anything, but it is believed to be one of the first examples of so-called “stealth UFOs”, a term referring to flying saucer pilots who sometimes hide Hide flying saucers in the clouds to avoid detection.
But another website specializing in UFOs – ufocasebook.com – believes that this theory is really uncertain. Because the image seems to show a large oval light source but no objects are actually visible, but then again… there’s smoke, there’s fire.