In a series of posts on social media platform
According to @jcutillo, the sighting occurred on the night of December 25, 2024. The phenomenon consisted of pulsating lights that did not resemble standard aircraft beacons or navigation lights.
The user noticed the presence of a Starlink satellite transit in the same general direction that evening around 6 p.m. However, they clarified that the observed object could not be a Starlink satellite because its motion through the sky was not consistent with Starlink’s typical fast trajectory.
NH UAP thread: Last night 12/25/24 starting at 7:45 PM I captured a brightly lit photo #UAP in the SW sky, pulsating from orange to red. It descended slowly for ~15 minutes. Here is the most compelling video, taken by my Meade StarNavigator 102mm telescope from my deck. #UFO #Ufotwitter pic.twitter.com/qq77HCtYbb
— jcutillo (@jcutillo) December 26, 2024
“Last night, 12/25/24, starting at 7:45 PM, I captured a brightly lit #UAP in the SW sky, pulsing from orange to red. It descended slowly for ~15 minutes. Here is the most compelling video taken by my Meade StarNavigator 102mm telescope from my deck,” he wrote.
To support their claims, @jcutillo shared the following images and metadata. This visual evidence forms a substantial part of the report.
Here is the metadata (time, date, location) of the previous photo. #UAP #UFO #Ufotwitter pic.twitter.com/UxXtqQdjeI
— jcutillo (@jcutillo) December 26, 2024
Other prominent figures in the UAP community, such as Ross Coulthart and James Fox, were tagged in the hope of drawing wider attention to the sighting.
These pulsating lights do not correspond to standard aircraft beacons or navigation lights.
Drones are generally limited by battery life, range and predictable movement patterns – characteristics that often clash with reports of UAPs exhibiting rapid maneuvers, hovering capabilities and unidentifiable light patterns.
If these objects are indeed just advanced drones, why do they consistently evade classification or detection by advanced radar systems? Why do they appear in restricted airspace without interception or clear recognition from officials?
Such observations naturally raise questions about the official narrative that UAPs are just typical drones. Many observations, including this one, describe behavior and characteristics that do not match standard drone technology.