A witness to a non -Effective air phenomenon (UAP) that is recorded on camera on board an American warship for South California, now talks about his meeting with a vessel that appeared from the ocean.
The video, recorded by Marine Zeilers, witnessed newspaper heads and one witness, senior chief operations specialist Alexandro Wiggins, has ties with Las Vegas.
The incident reflects the famous UAP case of 2004, investigated for the first time by a secret Pentagon program in Las Vegas. This new meeting took place in February 2023 near the same waters, documented by the USS Jackson Crew.
During a recent hearing from Congressional UAP, retired ADM. Timothy Gallaudet witnesses to come forward. Wiggins, a 23-year-old navy veteran, shared his account after he learned that the video was distributed. He joined filmmaker Jeremy Corbell, who first released the images on the podcast -armed.
Wiggins grew up in Las Vegas and went to Cheyenne High School. “I grew up in Las Vegas … Looking at 8 news now Chief Investigative Reporter George Knapp’s report because my hair was as dark as that of Wiggins,” he said. His father worked security in Area 51.
In 2023, Wiggins served as a radar specialist on the USS Jackson. He and others did not see -experienced objects on their scenes. “To my surprise … was a light that I noticed on the horizon, it seemed that it turned out from the water and went up,” Wiggins recalled.
With the help of the Safire thermal sensor of the ship, they detected two TIC-TAC-shaped objects without visible exhaust or propulsion. “We only saw one, and then we see the second … When we zoom out, we realize, holy junk, there are two more here, a total of four.” The objects then moved to the northeast at an incredible speed – Wiggins called it “two steps behind immediately”.
Former defense analyst Marik von Rennenkampff found no air traffic data in which the objects were explained. Wiggins clarified that he is not a whistleblower, but a witness. No formal report was submitted because the objects showed no hostility. However, skepticism remains in the direction of the UAP office of the Pentagon, Aaro.
Wiggins previously served on the USS Omaha, who encountered dozens of UAPs in 2019. Radar and thermal images showed large circular objects, with one disappeared in the sea.
“I am skeptical about what I saw that day,” Wiggins admitted. “Perhaps one day I will know … and it will be normalized if … the stealth -hunter or area 51. At a certain point it will be public, but then I will be old.”