An official report brought to light an unusual case recorded in October 2023, when federal agents reported silent lights, red objects, and movements still not fully explained near a strategic area of the United States.
A bright orange sphere seen near a secret United States facility has become the center of a new discussion about aerial phenomena still unanswered.
The case involves six federal agents, a two-day encounter in October 2023, and a sequence of smaller red lights that, according to reports, seemed to emerge from a larger orb.
The most intriguing part is the initial analysis result. Even after reviewing radar, flight records, and other available data, 40 percent of the reported activity remained without a clear explanation.
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Six agents reported a two-day encounter in October 2023
The episode is said to have occurred over two days in October 2023, when federal agents observed luminous objects with behavior considered unusual.
The main sphere was described as a bright orange light that appeared for one or two seconds. Then, it seemed to release groups of two to four smaller red lights before disappearing.
The smaller objects reportedly moved horizontally, changed altitude, and, in at least one case, remained over a ridge for several hours.
Orange orb reportedly released red lights in sequence

The repetition of the pattern caught the investigators’ attention. The orange sphere appeared, released smaller red lights, and disappeared, in a sequence observed several times over hours.
According to the Daily Mail, a British general news and entertainment newspaper, the memorandum was signed by Jon T. Kosloski, director of the Pentagon’s All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office.
In the document, he stated that the most striking feature of the phenomenon was precisely the repetitive pattern, in which a luminous mother sphere seemed to produce other smaller spheres.
Cheyenne Mountain appears as a likely location of the incident
The exact location was not detailed in the new report, but subsequent FBI interviews indicated that the case occurred at Cheyenne Mountain, near Colorado Springs, Colorado.
The complex is a fortified underground bunker, buried under about 610 meters of granite. The facility plays a strategic role in the defense of the United States.
Cheyenne Mountain serves as an alternate command center for NORAD and USNORTHCOM, structures linked to the protection of the continental United States, as well as Alaska, Canada, Mexico, and the Bahamas.
Investigators ruled out aircraft gases as a complete explanation
The phenomenon was described by agents as silent, and the testimonies were considered coherent to characterize the experience.
The analysis indicated that the reported characteristics did not match common exhaust gases from military aircraft. There were military planes in the area, but the altitude of the objects made this explanation difficult.
Even so, part of the episode may be related to military infrared flares, used as countermeasures during standard exercises.
Military flares may explain about 60 percent of the activity
The assessment indicated that approximately 60 percent of the reported activity can be plausibly attributed to military aircraft.
The planes present in the region were equipped with infrared countermeasure flares and would have used them during a normal exercise.
Still, the hypothesis does not close the entire case. The preliminary assessment left open the possibility that unrecognized technology explains part of the phenomena associated with the incident.

Weather, planets, and meteors were considered unlikely
The researchers analyzed natural explanations, including weather, thermal inversions, refraction, and other atmospheric effects.
The records indicated generally clear skies, temperatures consistent with the season, and common levels of light pollution for the area. These conditions were considered insufficient to explain the described behavior.
Stars, planets, meteors, satellite reflections, and rocket launches were also evaluated. The presence of at least one red orb for several hours weighed against these hypotheses.
The case remains open because a significant portion of the reports has yet to find a definitive explanation. For the investigators, the described characteristics are anomalous enough to justify further analysis.
The combination of strategic base, federal witnesses, persistent lights, and inconclusive data keeps Cheyenne Mountain at the center of a discussion that pressures the reading on air safety in the United States.
