How did the Tic-Tac Know the Combat Air Patrol (CAP) Point? Was there Jamming? How did Chad Lock it?

L
Lehto Files
·
February 4, 2022
232.9K views
Tier 2Research and IntelligenceResearch & Analysis
Experiencer: David Fravor, Chad Underwood

Analysis Summary

Program Intel Profile
interviewTopic: military encountersIntel Value: 8/10

Summary

The encounter involves retired Commander David Fravor discussing his experience with a UAP, specifically the tic tac incident, during a military training mission off the coast of San Diego. Fravor and his wingman were conducting air combat training when they received reports of an object at their designated cap point. Fravor noted that the tic tac seemed to know their location without being informed. After their engagement, another pilot, Chad Underwood, was sent to capture video of the tic tac. Underwood's radar indicated jamming when he attempted to lock onto the object. The encounter led to increased interest in UAPs and further investigation into military radar technology and its vulnerabilities.

✦ AI Generated

Program Intelligence Analysis

Executive Summary

The video discusses the encounter between Commander David Fravor and the tic tac UAP, focusing on the capabilities of military radar and the implications of the tic tac's knowledge of the cap point. It highlights the jamming experienced during the engagement and the operational context of the training area involved.

Primary Revelation

The tic tac knew the cap point without being told or broadcasted.

D
David Fravor
military officialpro disclosure
United States Navy
Military serviceSworn testimonyPublic engagement on UAP

It obviously knew but you never saw it there.

C
Chad Underwood
military officialpro disclosure
United States Navy
Military servicePublic engagement on UAP

I'm gonna go and he was he he was determined he was gonna find this thing.

C
Chris Lato
investigatorpro disclosure
Independent UAP Researcher
Former military pilotPublic engagement on UAP

Thanks to Chad Underwood, thanks Dave Fravor.

Whiskey 291modern (unknown to unknown)confirmed

Managed by: United States Navy

Aviation training and research

non human intelligencespecific

The tic tac knew the cap point without being told or broadcasted.

Source: David Fravor
technologyspecific

The radar was being jammed during the engagement with the tic tac.

Source: David Fravor
historical eventspecific

The engagement took place in a designated training area known as Whiskey 291.

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

Analysis Summary

Program Intel Profile
interviewTopic: military encountersIntel Value: 8/10
1

David Fravor

Retold Account

This is a retold account. Triad scoring requires direct experiencer testimony.