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Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP81R00560R000100010001-0
Washington, D.C.
The first of several well-publicized nights of radar-visual
sightings in the Washington, D.C., area began about 11:40 p.m.,
July 19, at National Airport. Ground observers and military and
Civilian pilots observed unidentified lights while as many as ten
strange blips were on radar scopes. Radar indicated hovering,
sudden accelerations and great speeds until near dawn. Objects
followed and passed incoming airliners, often seen by pilots and
crews. USAF F-94 interceptors arrivedat 3a.m., after reportedly
being delayed to check on UFOs over New Jersey, but the objects
had left the scene (confirmed by radar), returning when the jets
departed.
About 1:00 a.m., July 20, Capt. S.C. (Casey) Pierman, piloting
Capital Airlines Flight #807 had just taken off from Washington
National Airport and was swinging around to head south. At the
airport, radar controllers had been noticing unidentified targets
on the sets for some time. They had recalibrated the sets and
were now convinced the targets were legitimate. Chief Con-
troller Harry Barnes called Capt. Pierman and asked him to
check for objects. Pierman, in the vicinity of Martinsburg,
W. Va., agreed and quickly called back: ‘‘There’s one, and there
it goes!’’
In a detailed interview published later, Barnes stated: ‘‘His
{Pierman’s] subsequent descriptions of the movements of the
objects coincided with the position of our pips [radar targets]
at all times while in our range.”’
In the next fourteen minutes, Capt. Pierman reported six
such lights, ‘‘like falling stars without tails’? which ‘‘moved
rapidly up, down, and horizontally. Also hovered.” [C.A.A.
Report. See Section VII; Radar.]
Two hours later, Capt. Howard Dermott on incoming Capital
Flight #610 reported that a light followed his aircraft from the
vicinity of Herndon, Va., to 4 miles west of the airport. Radar
sets both in the control center and the tower at National Airport
showed the object.
Again the following weekend, radar targets and maneuvering
lights appeared. On the night of July 26/27, from 4 to 12 objects
were tracked at various times between 8:00 p.m. and 1:20 a.m.
on radar sets at the CAA control center, Washington National
Airport tower, and Andrews AFB, Md. Lights were seen indi-
vidually and in groups, both from the air and the ground.
Air Force interceptors were called in, and criss-crossed
the area from 10:25 p.m. to 1:20 a.m. The pilots observed
fast-moving lights where radar told them to look. One, Lt.
William Patterson, was badly frightened when a group of glowing
objects surrounded his interceptor. As the CAA radar operators
watched the blips on the scope cluster around his plane, the
pilot asked them in a scared voice what he should do. There was
a stunned silence; no one answered. After a tense moment, the
UFOs pulled away and left the scene. (Incident confirmed by
Al Chop, then Air Force spokesman on UFOs. Taped statement
on file at NICAP).
The dramatic visual sightings of unexplained lights inthe same
places that radar showed unexplained objects were later attributed
to unusual weather conditions. Ground lights refracted by in-
verted layers of cool andheated air (temperature inversions) were
said to account for the visual sightings. The same conditions
were said to cause refraction of the radar beams causing simul-
taneous false radar targets. Unfortunately for this theory, the
stable air conditions required to produce persistent light (re-
fracted from a ground source) are inconsistent with the reported
rapid motions of the observed lights across the sky and large
angular displacements. [See Radar analyses, Section VIII.]
At the time of the Washington radar-visual sightings, the
NICAP Director consulted both a civilian scientist and an Air
Force radar expert about the degree of temperature inversion
necessary to produce false radar targets. The scientist stated
the inversion would have to be 10 degrees Fahrenheit (about
6 degrees Centigrade), and much larger to produce strong radar
effects. The Air Force expert, who had made a special study
of temperature inversions, stated it would take an inversion of
5-10 degrees Centigrade.
The following weather information was obtained from the Na-
tional Weather Records Center by the New York City NICAP Af-
filiate (photo-copy on file at NICAP).
‘“‘For the dates of interest to you, upper air observations were
made at Silver Hill Observatory, Maryland rather than at Wash-
ington National Airport, but these locations are sufficiently near
each other for Silver Hill to be representative of the general area
of interest.
‘In the data which follow, local time is given, temperature
difference is given in degrees Centigrade and altitude is given as
altitude above mean sea level. To convert to altitude above
station level, 88 meters would be subtracted from the metric
altitudes given below.
“July 18, 1952, 10 P.M. observation: An inversion from
the surface to 210 meters. Temperature at top of inversion
was 1.7 degrees warmer than at base of inversion. No
other significant inversion below 20,000 feet..
“July 19, 1952, 10 A.M. observation: No significant inversion
below 20,000 feet.
“July 19, 1952, 10 P.M. observation: An inversion from the
surface to 340 meters. Temperature at top of inversion was
1.7 degrees warmer than at base of inversion, There was an
isothermal condition (no temperature change) between 2,780
and 3,100 meters.
“July 25, 1952, 10 P.M. observation: An inversion from the
surface to 320 meters. Temperature at top of inversion was
4 degrees warmer than at base of inversion. There was
another inversion between 1,700 and 1,940 meters and in this
case the temperature at top of inversion was 8 degrees warmer
than at base of inversion.
“July 26, 1952, 10 A.M. observation: Two minor inversions.
One between 1,060 and 1,230 meters, temperature at top
0.8 degree warmer than at base. One between 2,370 and 2,530
meters, temperature at top 0.9 degree warmer than at base.
“July 26, 1952, 10 P.M. observation; An inversion from the
surface to 360 meters. Temperature at top of inversion was
1.1 degrees warmer than at base of inversion. There was
another inversion between 1,310 and 1,370 meters where the
temperature at top was 0.7 degree warmer than at base of
inversion... ”’
/s/ Roy L. Fox
Director ”’
The unusual concentration of UFO activity in the Washington,
D.C. area continued on July 29, as radar tracked unidentified
targets for almost six hours. Unlike the first two nights, there
were few visual sightings of these objects.
During the afternoon of July 29, the Air Force attempted to
quiet the national concern which by now had grown to unprece-
dented proportions. In the heaviest attended Washington press
conference since World War II, USAF Intelligence Chief Maj.
Gen. John A. Samford explained that the UFOs tracked and seen
in the Washington area were the result of the refraction of light
and radar waves by atmospheric temperature inversions. (Trans-
cript on file at NICAP.) Weeks later, after scientists had made
it clear that the inversions on the nights of the Washington sightings
had been grossly insufficient to cause highly qualified radar ob-
servers to err so drastically, the Air Force re-classified these
objects as ‘‘unknown.”’
Although they received less publicity after the Air Force press
conference, UFO sightings continued at a high rate throughout
August.
As the flood of reports was beginning to wane, late in the
month, an Air Force Colonel, flying an F-84 between Hermanas,
N. Mex., and El Paso, Tex., on the morning of August 24, saw
two round, silvery objects flying abreast. One made a right turn
in front of the jet, then both disappeared over Hermanas. They
reappeared over El Paso. One was seen to climb straight up
for several thousand feet.
The Colonel stated, ‘‘From their maneuvers and their ter-
rific speed, I am certain their flight performance was greater
than any aircraft known today.’’ (Statement from Air Force In-
telligence Report.)
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