The Kinross Incident occurred on November 23, 1953, when Sergeant Felix Moncla and Second Lieutenant Robert Wilson were tasked with intercepting an unidentified flying object (UFO) over Lake Superior near the Kinross Air Force Base in Michigan.
According to reports, the radar operators tracked the UFO on their screens and Moncla and Wilson were sent in a jet to investigate. However, as they approached the object, it suddenly disappeared from the radar screens and contact was lost with the jet.
Search and rescue teams were dispatched to find the missing jet and its crew, but no wreckage or any trace of the aircraft was ever found. The official explanation given by the Air Force was that the jet had likely crashed into the lake, but conspiracy theories have persisted, suggesting that the jet may have been abducted by the UFO.
The Kinross Incident remains a mystery to this day, with no definitive explanation for the disappearance of Moncla and Wilson.
According to reports, the radar operators tracked the UFO on their screens and Moncla and Wilson were sent in a jet to investigate. However, as they approached the object, it suddenly disappeared from the radar screens and contact was lost with the jet.
Search and rescue teams were dispatched to find the missing jet and its crew, but no wreckage or any trace of the aircraft was ever found. The official explanation given by the Air Force was that the jet had likely crashed into the lake, but conspiracy theories have persisted, suggesting that the jet may have been abducted by the UFO.
The Kinross Incident remains a mystery to this day, with no definitive explanation for the disappearance of Moncla and Wilson.