Alien sightings Part 5: The Disappearnce of Felix Moncla and Fire in the Sky over New Mexico

The Disappearance of Felix Moncla

In 1953, an Air Defense Command Ground Intercept radar controller at Truax AFB in Madison, Wisconsin picked up a blip on the radar. Felix Moncla, a United States Air Force pilot, chased after this unknown object in an F-89-C Scorpion jet from the Kincross Air Force Base. He was in the process of pursuing a UFO, flying over Lake Superior, when he vanished in thin air. According to ground control officials, they had sighted both Moncla’s jet and the UFO on a radar screen. When Moncla reached the exact spot that they had found the UFO, both objects on the radar screen became a single blip, and then they both vanished. An expansive search was formed and neither the jet or the UFO was ever found. Air force experts believed that his jet was chasing after a Canadian jet, a claim denied by the Canadian Air Force. There was no explanation of the lack of a crash site.

Fire in the Sky over New Mexico

In 1949, respected astronomer Clyde Tombaugh, the man who discovered the dwarf planet, Pluto, reported seeing eight rectangular lights over Las Cruces, New Mexico. On a separate occasion, he claimed to see green fireballs in the sky. Because of Tombaugh’s credibility, these gave credence to UFO sighting claims and put down in the minds of many the government’s claims about the Roswell, New Mexico incident.
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Published on February 21, 2014 18:28
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