UAP AnalysisIndependent · the declassified record
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FBIUnresolved

Silver top-shaped object encountered by hiker — California mountains

~Aug 1947Mountains near Los Angeles, California (approx.)
⟳ Deeper read pending. This record is from the FBI 62-HQ-83894 flying-disc file, whose cursive, clippings and faint scans are under-read by automated OCR. It is flagged for a vision-transcription pass and likely undercounts what the source contains — see the documents collection note.
Analysis — our summary

A letter forwarded to the FBI via Walter Winchell described a 1947 encounter by Peter Camerlon Jones, who reported observing a large silver metallic object shaped like a child's top approximately one-half block away while hiking in the California mountains. Jones reported the object appeared to contain life, departed silently at high speed within one second of his standing, and knocked him to the ground. FBI Los Angeles field office was directed to locate Jones for interview but could not identify him at the address given.

As reported — verbatim from the document
"a large silver metal, greenish in color, shaped like a child's top and about the size of the balloons used at County Fairs"; "this so-called flying saucer was off the ground in a second, knocking Jones to the ground"
Analyst notes — caveats & confidence

Letter originally sent to Walter Winchell; identity of Jones could not be verified by FBI Los Angeles. No physical evidence; single unverified witness. Possibility raised internally that the original letter 'may have been a prank.' OCR quality is moderate; document is 1949 FBI correspondence, noisy but legible for key passages.

Provenance
Source document65_HS1-834228961_62-HQ-83894_Section_5.pdf
Document typecorrespondence collection
Reporting agencyFBI
Source pages209
Redaction markers in doc6
DeclassifiedFirst public at this release (2026)
Held classified~79 years (≥, to this release)
Extraction confidence LowHow cleanly this record could be parsed from the source — driven by legibility & redaction. It is not a measure of how credible or anomalous the sighting is.