Briefing

After the Department of Defense released photos and videos and other files of unidentified anomalous phenomena on Friday, the Colorado state director for a large UFO research group says there wasn’t much to see. “I don’t think we got a lot of real stuff,” said Seth Feinstein, the Colorado State director and the Northwest Regional […]

UAP Radar tracks this because it adds scientific, technical, historical, or evidentiary context to the UAP information environment.

The full article remains with Colorado Springs Gazette; UAP Radar links to that source for the complete text, documents, and publisher context.

What Is Confirmed

  • The item is categorized as research or analysis material and should be weighed against its methods, data, and source context.
  • A source link is preserved so readers can inspect the original publisher article, public record, or source material.
  • UAP Radar records this item under NASA / Science with the source label Research.

What Remains Unclear

  • UAP Radar does not independently determine the origin, nature, or explanation of the reported object or claim.
  • The source label identifies where the information came from; it does not convert a claim into a verified finding.
  • Reporting and analysis should be compared with primary records, methodology, and follow-up sourcing where available.

Why This Matters

Research and analysis can clarify methods, sensors, data quality, and historical context around UAP reporting. It also connects to UAP Radar watchlists for NASA / Science, Declassified Files, Military Sightings.

NASA / ScienceDeclassified FilesMilitary Sightings
This item is labeled Research because it focuses on analysis, methods, datasets, scientific context, or expert review.