UFO Update: Congressional Push for CIA Records on the Varginha Case, NASA Archives, and Moon Anomalies
To the point
Congressman Eric Burlison and Aldo Rebelo press CIA and NASA to search and preserve records on 1996 Brazilian UAP encounters linked to Varginha, while Mike Gold and Beatrice Villaruel push broader archive reviews and AI analysis of potential non‑Earth artifacts.
On a UFO news update, Congressman Eric Burlison of Missouri demands the CIA search for records of US flights and material transfers with Brazilian authorities around Campinas and Sao Paulo in 1996, tying it to the Varginha case where witnesses spoke of a crashed craft and possible custody of beings. He requests a 30‑day search result, a 10‑day briefing, and a full accounting of every agency involved, as private researchers and labs like Mitre and MIT Lincoln Laboratory are urged to preserve legacy records, while Aldo Rebelo has publicly affirmed the Varginha event. The discussion recalls the 1952 Robertson Panel, established by the CIA to discourage public engagement with the topic, a history highlighted by Mike Gold as he cautions against premature conclusions. Gold, a former NASA official, now leads a Disclosure Foundation Committee that will comb NASA’s public archives for anomalies and seeks to add UAP reporting to the Aviation Safety Reporting System, following a study team’s recommendation to apply AI to decades of imagery. Beatrice Villaruel and colleagues have published peer‑reviewed findings of bright reflective objects in pre‑1957 photographic plates, suggesting a non‑Earth civilization may have placed artificial objects in geostationary orbit before the first satellite, a finding the review will consider. Skeptics question whether the government already holds this data, but Gold emphasizes the inquiry is not built on a conclusion and that stigma has hindered disclosure. With NASA planning monthly lunar robotic missions and more cameras on the Moon, the update notes live ISS downlinks showing egg‑shaped objects and recalls a moment questioning whether they were Starlink, a story illustrating how anomalous footage can spark debate. Elizondo, speaking in a Japanese interview, asserts knowledge of non‑human intelligence on the Moon, pointing to NASA images he says show shapes that don’t look natural and describing patterns of interest in military and nuclear sites, while recounting red glowing orbs that chased helicopters and other luminous orbs observed at sites such as Utah; the overarching question remains which path—CIA file releases, NASA archival discoveries, or his interpretations—will bring these issues into the open first.
Source: youtube.com