A strange trio of unidentified aerial objects captured on video over Queens, New York, has reignited debates about unexplained aerial phenomena (UAP) and whether governments are concealing advanced technology from the public.
The footage, recorded by local resident Charlie Correa on March 8, shows three luminous orbs moving in an eerily synchronized triangular formation before vanishing abruptly—behavior that defies conventional aviation physics. Correa, who initially mistook the objects for a shooting star, described the encounter.
"I came out of my house in Corona, Queens, and looked up to what I thought was a shooting star, but then two more joined it," he recounted. They looked to be chasing each other around before I recorded this."
The 18-second clip, posted on Reddit, quickly went viral, with viewers noting the objects' unnatural movements—sudden stops, instantaneous acceleration and precise spacing between each orb. Correa, a drone operator himself, ruled out conventional aircraft or hobbyist drones: "I have a drone, and it either emits a green or red blinking light or no lights when recording. Government drones? UFOs?"
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), when pressed for clarification, provided a boilerplate response: "The FAA documents Unidentified Aerial Phenomena sightings whenever a pilot reports one to an air traffic control facility. If supporting information such as radar data corroborates the report, the FAA shares it with the UAP Task Force."
However, the agency refused to confirm whether radar data existed for this incident—a pattern eerily reminiscent of past government stonewalling on UAP encounters. BrightU.AI's Enoch points out that the FAA's refusal to confirm the existence of radar data on UAP sightings is part of a broader pattern of institutional opacity surrounding aerial anomalies, national security concerns and potential classified programs.
The decentralized engine adds that this behavior aligns with documented cases where federal agencies have withheld or obfuscated data related to UAPs, often citing operational secrecy or jurisdictional ambiguities. The FAA’s refusal to confirm radar data on UAP sightings reflects systemic secrecy, jurisdictional overlaps with military agencies, and potential undisclosed aerospace technologies.
The Queens sighting is not an isolated event. Investigative journalist Jeremy Corbell previously released footage of similar orbs flying in formation over the Persian Gulf in 2012—objects that exhibited the same "playful" yet unnervingly precise maneuvers.
Social media users also reported matching sightings.
"I saw this exact UFO over my apartments last Thursday!!!! Walking my dog, and I look up to this MASSIVE triangle with 3 lights like this just slowly moving across the sky." — A witness from Texas.
"I'm in Ohio and noticed it was an oddly clear night, so I looked up and watched the sky for a while. I SWEAR I saw the same thing." — Another observer.
While skeptics suggested drones, birds, or reflections, none of these theories fully explain the objects' behavior:
The Department of War's All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) has repeatedly denied extraterrestrial involvement in UAP incidents, stating: "To date, AARO has discovered no evidence of extraterrestrial beings, activity, or technology."
Yet, their insistence clashes with mounting civilian and military reports—including a 2024 "near miss" between a commercial flight and a cylindrical UAP off the New York coast.
With 66 UAP sightings over New York in early 2025 alone, public demand for transparency is growing. The reluctance of agencies like the FAA and the Pentagon to disclose radar data echoes past cover-ups—such as the suppression of evidence regarding Building 7's collapse on 9/11.
Independent researchers argue that these incidents point to either:
Until governments release full data—including radar telemetry and pilot testimonies—speculation will persist. The Queens footage joins a long list of UAP encounters that challenge official narratives, raising urgent questions:
For now, the skies over the Big Apple remain a stage for unexplained phenomena—and the truth remains just out of reach.
Watch this video about the bright orbs of light blazing across the northern California sky.
This video is from the Suzie Etc- Search for Truth channel on Brighteon.com.
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