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Newly-released files now reveal that law enforcement authorities in Canada did, in fact, collect wreckage after a UFO was shot down by a United States F-16 fighter jet over Lake Huron in Canada in 2023.
Last February, the United States Air Force shot down four different UFOs that were either identified as a Chinese spy balloon or not given any real explanation by the U.S. Department of Defense.
What was unique about the UFO that was shot down over Lake Huron was that, one, the first Sidewinder missile that was shot at the UFO somehow missed, and two, government officials said they couldn’t find the UFO wreckage after the F-16 shot it down. [Audio of the UFO being “decommissioned” can be heard here.]
Now, however, police in Canada say they did indeed recover debris from the UFO that was shot down over Lake Huron in 2023. At least that’s what documents obtained through a freedom of information request to Canada’s Department of National Defence by CTV News now reveal.
According to those documents, “wreckage” was located on “the shoreline of Lake Huron” in the weeks after search efforts were officially suspended by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP). They just never bothered to tell the public.
According to partially redacted emails obtained by CTVNews.ca through the information request, the RCMP collected “both material and a module” when debris was discovered “along the shores of Lake Huron” in early March 2023, approximately three weeks after the object was shot down.
“The RCMP confirms that debris was recovered from the shores of Lake Huron; and we continue to work in close collaboration with our domestic and international partners in furthering the investigation,” an RCMP spokesperson said in a new statement on Friday. “As the investigation is ongoing, additional details cannot be provided at this time.”
Why would no one, not the Canadian government or the United States government not let the public know that the UFO wreckage had been found?
“To have expended significant military time and resources to shoot down benign objects does not look good, even though there may have been many factors we are still unaware of,” Iain Boyd, professor of aerospace engineering and director of the Center for National Security Initiatives at the University of Colorado Boulder, speculated to CTV News. “I am not surprised that the Canadian government did not share more information about the Lake Huron debris.”
That, or the respective governments just don’t want the public to truly know exactly what was shot down.
“Following reports of unidentified aerial objects observed in the Great Lakes area and elsewhere in North America, multiple searches were conducted by the RCMP with the support of the Canadian Armed Forces,” an RCMP spokesperson said in a brief statement to CTVNews.ca. “Debris has been recovered from the shores of Lake Huron but after careful analysis, it was determined not to be of national security concern.”