Primary Sources

The actual documents behind the reporting. Hosted in full, with honest context on what each proves — and what it doesn't.

PURSUE Release 02 — Department of War / ODNI (2025)

The Pentagon's second PURSUE disclosure release. We host the files in full; several were released as image-only scans, which limits their searchability — a limitation we note where it applies.

ODNI · first-person narrative · 2025

ODNI — Senior Intelligence Officer Narrative (USPER)

The centerpiece of Release 02: a first-person account from a senior U.S. intelligence officer describing a multi-hour UAP encounter at a restricted test range in 2025. What it proves: the government documented a credible insider's account. What it doesn't: independent corroboration — it's one narrator's testimony, released without supporting sensor data.

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CIA · intelligence information report · 1973

CIA — Intelligence Information Report, USSR (1973)

A Cold War-era CIA intelligence report on a 1973 Soviet UAP-related incident. The primary-source value is the institutional fact that the CIA was collecting on this in 1973; the report's substance is brief and uncorroborated by other released material.

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DOE · sensor imagery · PANTEX facility

DOE — PANTEX Imagery

Sensor imagery associated with the PANTEX facility, the U.S. nuclear weapons assembly plant. An image is not an explanation — released without the analysis that would tell you what was actually captured.

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DOE · correspondence · Los Alamos

DOE — James Tuck Correspondence

Correspondence involving physicist James Tuck, tied to early atomic-era anomalous observations at Los Alamos. A historical-context document — valuable for the paper trail, not a smoking gun.

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DOE · observation records · Pajarito / Los Alamos

DOE — Pajarito Astronomers

Records relating to astronomer observations in the Pajarito/Los Alamos area. Establishes that trained observers logged anomalies near nuclear sites; the documents are fragmentary.

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Dept. of War · correspondence scan · Sandia, 1948–1950

DOW — General Correspondence of Sandia (1948–1950)

116 pages of Department of War / Sandia National Laboratories correspondence, released as a single large image scan. The volume is the story and the limitation: a 68 MB unsearchable scan technically satisfies "disclosure" while making analysis deliberately hard.

Cited in our briefings