UFO FilesUFO FILES
Menu
Cover of Western US Event
Unknown Investigation UNCLASSIFIED

Western US Event

Unknown Investigation — Declassified UFO document from UFO Files Archive.

Archive ID: Western Us Event | Release 01 | N/A
Document Details
Agency
Unknown
Type
Investigation
Classification
UNCLASSIFIED
Pages
1
Date
N/A
Download PDF
Original Document
Cover of Western US Event
Original Document
Investigation · 1 pages · Official Source
AI Briefing

⚠️ AI-Generated Summary: This summary is generated from publicly released government documents for informational purposes only. Always refer to the original document linked above for the complete unredacted record.

Page 1 --- “Orbs Launching Orbs” • Location: Western U.S. • Time of Day: Dusk (on two separate days) • Three teams of two federal law enforcement special agents each (USPER1 through USPER6) indepe…’ aiBriefing: ’## Document Overview

This unclassified document, of unknown agency and date, compiles three separate UAP incident reports from federal law enforcement special agents in the Western U.S. The document appears to be a concise internal summary or briefing note, possibly associated with the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) based on later measurement references.

Source: Document metadata; OCR text page 2 reference to AARO measurements.

What This Document Contains

  • Summaries of three distinct UAP sightings by multiple federal law enforcement agents over two days, including descriptions of “orbs,” a large hovering fiery object, and an anomalous ground-based “car” that moved laterally off-road.

  • No analysis, conclusions, or sensor data beyond witness testimony and AARO retrospective distance/size estimates for one incident.

  • The document is marked UNCLASSIFIED and contains no dissemination restrictions noted.

Source: OCR text pages 1–3.

Key Observations

  • “Three teams of two federal law enforcement special agents each (USPER1 through USPER6) independently describe seeing orange ”orbs” in the sky emit/launch smaller red ”orbs” in groups of two to four… at least five times. Each time, the orange orb would appear, launch red orbs, then disappear.”

Source: Page 1.

  • “Two federal law enforcement special agents (USPER5 and USPER6) witness a glowing orange orb… perched close to a rock pinnacle… described as being ”similar to the Eye or [sic] Sauron from Lord of the Rings, except without the pupil, or maybe an orange Storm Electrify bowling ball.” … USPER6 noted that the object ”did almost appear it might have had a small spindle or something connecting it from underneath to the rock formation.””

Source: Page 2.

  • “Two federal law enforcement special agents (USPER5 and USPER6) observed what is initially thought to be a car… The ”car” had two lights… Agents pursued… the object suddenly moved off the road over the desert without changing its orientation… at an estimated speed of 15-20mph.”

Source: Page 3.

Context & Significance

The repeated mention of AARO’s later measurements for the “Large, Fiery Orb” suggests this document was created or reviewed by AARO, the U.S. government’s primary UAP analysis entity. It contributes to a growing body of multi-witness UAP reports involving law enforcement or military personnel, lending credibility to the observations. The “Orbs Launching Orbs” incident describes a recurring, structured pattern of smaller objects deploying from a larger one, which has been reported in other UAP accounts but remains unexplained.

Source: Page 2 (AARO measurements); page 1 (witness descriptions).

Evidence Assessment

What this document shows:

  • Multiple trained federal agents across different vantage points reported visually similar anomalous phenomena, including object separation and unconventional flight characteristics.

  • AARO conducted follow-up site measurements for at least one incident, indicating the report was taken seriously enough to attempt independent verification.

What this document does NOT show:

  • No confirmation of extraterrestrial origin or technology.

  • No photographic, radar, or other sensor data to corroborate visual observations.

  • No definitive identification; the “Dark Kite” incident suggests a mundane ground vehicle misinterpretation could not be ruled out for all sightings.

[WARN] Assessment: The document provides moderately strong witness testimony due to the number and professional background of observers, but it relies entirely on human perception without physical evidence. The phenomena remain unidentified, and independent analysis should refer to the original document for full context.’ keyFindings: [] tags:

  • Unknown
  • Investigation
  • N/A relatedFiles: [] featured: false heroImage: /pdf-covers/western-us-event.png documentType: Investigation region: N/A decade: N/A releaseBatch: Release 01 coverImage: /pdf-covers/western-us-event.png archiveId: Western_US_Event warGovUrl: https://www.war.gov/ufo/#western us event officialDescription: ’--- Page 1 --- “Orbs Launching Orbs” • Location: Western U.S. • Time of Day: Dusk (on two separate days) • Three teams of two federal law enforcement special agents each (USPER1 through USPER6) independently describe seeing orange “orbs” in the sky emit/launch smaller red “orbs” in groups of two to four, with three being the general consensus. This is stated to have occurred at least five times.’ evidenceLevel: Historical Record hasUAPObservation: true mentionsPhysicalEvidence: false mentionsBiological: false ocrQuality: high

[WARN] AI-Generated Summary: This summary is generated from publicly released government documents for informational purposes only. Always refer to the original document linked below for the complete unredacted record.

Document Overview

This unclassified document, of unknown agency and date, compiles three separate UAP incident reports from federal law enforcement special agents in the Western U.S. The document appears to be a concise internal summary or briefing note, possibly associated with the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) based on later measurement references.

Source: Document metadata; OCR text page 2 reference to AARO measurements.

What This Document Contains

  • Summaries of three distinct UAP sightings by multiple federal law enforcement agents over two days, including descriptions of “orbs,” a large hovering fiery object, and an anomalous ground-based “car” that moved laterally off-road.
  • No analysis, conclusions, or sensor data beyond witness testimony and AARO retrospective distance/size estimates for one incident.
  • The document is marked UNCLASSIFIED and contains no dissemination restrictions noted.

Source: OCR text pages 1–3.

Key Observations

  • “Three teams of two federal law enforcement special agents each (USPER1 through USPER6) independently describe seeing orange ‘orbs’ in the sky emit/launch smaller red ‘orbs’ in groups of two to four… at least five times. Each time, the orange orb would appear, launch red orbs, then disappear.”

Source: Page 1.

  • “Two federal law enforcement special agents (USPER5 and USPER6) witness a glowing orange orb… perched close to a rock pinnacle… described as being ‘similar to the Eye or [sic] Sauron from Lord of the Rings, except without the pupil, or maybe an orange Storm Electrify bowling ball.’ … USPER6 noted that the object ‘did almost appear it might have had a small spindle or something connecting it from underneath to the rock formation.’”

Source: Page 2.

  • “Two federal law enforcement special agents (USPER5 and USPER6) observed what is initially thought to be a car… The ‘car’ had two lights… Agents pursued… the object suddenly moved off the road over the desert without changing its orientation… at an estimated speed of 15-20mph.”

Source: Page 3.

Context & Significance

The repeated mention of AARO’s later measurements for the “Large, Fiery Orb” suggests this document was created or reviewed by AARO, the U.S. government’s primary UAP analysis entity. It contributes to a growing body of multi-witness UAP reports involving law enforcement or military personnel, lending credibility to the observations. The “Orbs Launching Orbs” incident describes a recurring, structured pattern of smaller objects deploying from a larger one, which has been reported in other UAP accounts but remains unexplained.

Source: Page 2 (AARO measurements); page 1 (witness descriptions).

Evidence Assessment

What this document shows:

  • Multiple trained federal agents across different vantage points reported visually similar anomalous phenomena, including object separation and unconventional flight characteristics.
  • AARO conducted follow-up site measurements for at least one incident, indicating the report was taken seriously enough to attempt independent verification.

What this document does NOT show:

  • No confirmation of extraterrestrial origin or technology.
  • No photographic, radar, or other sensor data to corroborate visual observations.
  • No definitive identification; the “Dark Kite” incident suggests a mundane ground vehicle misinterpretation could not be ruled out for all sightings.

[WARN] Assessment: The document provides moderately strong witness testimony due to the number and professional background of observers, but it relies entirely on human perception without physical evidence. The phenomena remain unidentified, and independent analysis should refer to the original document for full context.

Related Files