Aguadilla UFO splits in two underwater?

L
Lehto Files
·
July 3, 2021
43.7K views
Tier 2Research and IntelligenceResearch & Analysis

Analysis Summary

Program Intel Profile
interviewTopic: historical caseIntel Value: 8/10

Summary

Chris Lado is a former F-16 pilot who now researches unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP). He discusses the Aguadilla incident from 2013, where a thermal camera captured an object over the ocean. The pilot and crew of a CBP aircraft saw a pinkish-red light moving towards the airport. They tracked it with thermal imaging, which showed the object changing speed and direction. Lado argues against the idea that it was a Chinese lantern, citing detailed reports and radar data that support the object's unusual characteristics. He believes the Aguadilla incident is significant and calls for more serious investigation into UAPs, as he feels debunkers often control the narrative without proper evidence.

✦ AI Generated

Program Intelligence Analysis

Executive Summary

Chris Lado discusses the Aguadilla incident from 2013, asserting it is not a Chinese lantern as claimed by some. He highlights the corroborating evidence from radar data and witness testimony, emphasizing the object's unusual characteristics and behavior.

Primary Revelation

The Aguadilla incident is supported by scientific analysis and is not a Chinese lantern.

C
Chris Lado
investigatorpro disclosure
18 years as an F-16 pilotExtensive research on UAP incidents

The Aguadilla incident man is so super legit; look through that report, they explain everything.

Aguadilla Incidentmodern (2013-04-25)confirmed

Managed by: Scientific Coalition for Ufology

investigation of unidentified aerial phenomena

coverupspecific

The Aguadilla incident from 2013 is not a Chinese lantern, as commonly claimed.

Source: Chris Lado
historical eventspecific
+2 Corroborators

The Aguadilla UAP was tracked by radar and confirmed by witness testimony.

Source: Chris Lado
non human intelligencehighly specific

The object in the Aguadilla incident was capable of splitting into two independent parts.

Source: Chris Lado
technologyspecific
+1 Corroborators

The Aguadilla UAP exhibited speeds varying from 70 to 120 miles per hour.

Source: Chris Lado
✦ AI-extracted program intelligence — verify against source testimony

Analysis Summary

Program Intel Profile
interviewTopic: historical caseIntel Value: 8/10