Alien sightings Part 4: UFO Attack of Los Angeles and Carson Sink Incident

Attack of Los Angeles

During World War 2 in 1942, shortly after the Japanese attacked an oil facility in Santa Barbara, California and three months after the Japanese invasion of Pearl Harbor, the US naval anti-aircraft installations detected a swarm of unidentified objects, about 25 all together, to the west of Los Angeles, which were assumed to be Japanese vessels. In addition, shortly after the initial UFOs, there was also a large balloon-like object with flares that trailed it. The anti-aircraft batteries fired upon the objects, but none of the artillery hit the targets, which were flying in speeds in excess of 200 miles per hour. When fighter planes arrived on the scene, the UFOs were gone. Originally, this was thought to be an attack by the Japanes, but Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox called the incident a “false alarm” and later attributed it to a lost weather balloon.

Carson Sink


Two experienced military pilots claimed to have come across three unidentified flying vessels while flying B-25 crafts on a flight from San Francisco to Colorado. As they were flying over Carson Sink, which is east of Reno, Nevada, they spotted the unidentified vessels coming in their direction reportedly flew three times faster than their own jets. After a few seconds, the vessels sped away from them and they lost the UFOs. Sixty years later, this incident is still officially classified as unexplained.
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Published on February 17, 2014 10:09
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