New secret emails cast doubt on the NASA GoFast verdict
In 2015, Navy pilots manning F/A-18 Super Hornets caught an unusually fast object over the sea at the Atlantic coast.
The video, which came to be known as the so-called ‘GoFast’, was believed by some to be the most iconic UFO case.
Later, NASA’s investigation concluded that the object was an ordinary one drifting with the wind.
However, now a jaw-dropping twist has emerged.
Grant Lavac, a UFO researcher, obtained NASA’s 2023 internal emails through the Freedom of Information Act.
In the files, it was revealed that NASA did not interview the pilots who witnessed the object.
Instead, relied only on the publicly released footage.
“No, our panel did not speak with the aviators,” NASA Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP) panelist Josh Semeter, director of Boston University’s Center for Space Physics, wrote.
“The analysis is based purely on information in the publicly released video,” he wrote in an internal email before the agency released its investigation.
That is not all.
No raw sensor data – a key tool in investigating mysterious objects – was ever used. Rather, the agency depends on the naked eye to draw the conclusion.
According to the Daily Mail, the object was not moving at impossible speeds, citing NASA’s calculation model.
However, the very nature of the object remains unclear and falls outside NASA’s analysis scope; read the internal email.
“We cannot determine from the data whether this object is a metallic orb or has any flight surfaces,” Semester penned.
It is possible that UFO enthusiasts will cast doubt on official investigations into mysterious objects after the surfacing of the GoFast internal emails.
