Attending the Senate AARO Hearing - Nick Gold
Analysis Summary
Summary
The encounter involves Nick Gold, who serves as a correspondent for a disclosure team. He attended a Senate hearing on UAPs led by Senator Kirsten Gillibrand. During the hearing, he discussed a report from the Arrow office, which detailed 1,652 UAP cases dating back to 1996. The report indicated that 757 cases were reviewed, with 49 identified as mundane objects. The report also acknowledged 21 cases as genuine anomalies. Nick noted that the report's presentation seemed to downplay significant findings and lacked detailed descriptions of the anomalies. After the encounter, Nick expressed concerns about the government's handling of UAP information and the need for better public engagement.
Program Intelligence Analysis
The discussion revolves around the recent Senate hearing on UAPs, highlighting the Arrow report's findings and the acknowledgment of true anomalies. There is concern about the government's handling of UAP information and the potential disconnect between public hearings and classified discussions.
The Arrow report acknowledges 21 cases as true anomalies, marking a shift in how such cases are reported.
Nick Gold
“It's great to be kind of the local correspondent here from the DC area for Disclosure Team.”
John Kazlowski
“We have 21 that they fully came to the kind of resolution or conclusion are mundane objects.”
Senator Kirsten Gillibrand
“I don't see my job as running that kind of UFO hearing.”
Managed by: Arrow
To investigate and report on UAP sightings
The total Arrow case count has now been reported as 1,652 total cases that they've gotten a hold of, going back as far as 1996.
Out of the new 757 total from this 2021 through mid 2024 window, 49 were fully resolved as mundane objects.
444 of the 757 cases have been categorized as active archive, which represents a shift in reporting.
There are 21 cases that represent true anomalies, which are being acknowledged more directly than in previous reports.
The Arrow report seems to be a counterpoint to the serious allegations made in the house UAP hearing.
The classified version of the Arrow report may contain more interesting data than the public version.