UFO files: Federal agents report ‘orbs launching other orbs’ near sensitive US site
The third 2026 Department of War UFO document drop surfaces a narrow but stubborn case from October 2023. Six federal law enforcement special agents reported watching orbs launch smaller orbs near a sensitive western site over two consecutive evenings. The All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office still lists the sighting unresolved as of June 2026, which keeps the file open and the questions alive.
Site location stays classified
The agents worked at a national security facility whose exact coordinates remain redacted. That placement matters because it rules out casual misidentification by civilians or hobby drone pilots. Access controls already limit who can stand on the perimeter at dusk, narrowing the pool of possible witnesses to cleared personnel.
The two-day window also matters. A single-night event invites the usual explanations about weather balloons or distant aircraft. A repeat performance twenty-four hours later forces investigators to consider either coordinated activity or an unknown object that lingered in the area.
Local radar logs and flight schedules were checked immediately, according to the memorandum. Nothing matched the reported behavior or timing, which is why the case moved from routine screening into the unresolved stack.
Witness count and clearance level
The report specifies six federal law enforcement special agents, each holding the clearances needed to work the site. Their training includes aircraft recognition and security protocols, which raises the bar for simple misperception arguments. The group size also reduces the chance that one person’s eyesight or imagination drove the entire account.
Interviews were conducted separately in the days after the sightings. The memorandum notes no major contradictions in the descriptions of size, color, or movement, which AARO treats as a baseline consistency check rather than proof.
Still, the agents carried no issued recording devices on the perimeter that evening. The lack of gear is standard for certain patrol assignments, yet it left investigators without the footage that usually accelerates case closure.
Orb behavior described in detail
Observers described a larger sphere releasing smaller spheres that then moved independently before rejoining or vanishing. The pattern repeated across both nights at roughly the same time after sunset. The memorandum records the phrase “orbs launching other orbs” as direct witness language rather than analyst paraphrase.
Altitude estimates placed the objects between a few hundred feet and several thousand feet, with no audible engine noise. Wind data from the site ruled out lightweight balloons drifting in formation, according to the attached meteorological notes.
AARO analysts flagged the rejoining behavior as the element least consistent with known drone swarms or commercial light shows. The case file therefore carries an explicit note that conventional explanations remain incomplete.
Technical data never collected
No photographs, thermal images, or radar returns were captured during the event. The memorandum states this limitation plainly and lists it as the primary reason the case stays open. Without sensor data, investigators rely solely on trained eyewitness accounts.
Subsequent sweeps of the area turned up no debris, landing marks, or electronic interference reports from nearby equipment. The absence of physical traces is common in UAP files but still removes one more avenue for verification.
Internal AARO review in early 2024 confirmed the gap and moved the incident into the unresolved category. The June 2026 update simply records that no new evidence has surfaced since that determination.
AARO investigation timeline
The office received the initial report within forty-eight hours of the second sighting. Standard procedure routed it through the multi-agency intake process that includes defense, intelligence, and aviation safety offices. The file received its first formal assessment in November 2023.
By spring 2024 the analysts had exhausted local records, weather archives, and commercial flight data. The case then entered the queue for deeper review against historical UAP databases, a step that produced no matches.
The June 2026 memorandum serves as a status checkpoint rather than a conclusion. It notes the case remains unresolved and flags it for any future sensor upgrades at the site that might catch similar activity.
Why this case stands out
Most public UAP reports come from commercial pilots or civilians with limited clearances. This incident involves six federal law enforcement special agents operating inside a restricted perimeter, which shifts the conversation from speculation to documented internal reporting. The Department of War release treats the file as one data point among many, not as headline material.
The repeated two-night pattern also separates it from one-off misidentifications that usually close quickly. AARO’s own language keeps the description neutral while preserving the original wording about orbs launching other orbs.
Because the location sits near sensitive infrastructure, the file carries an extra layer of handling restrictions. That classification protects operational details but also slows any wider scientific review until the appropriate channels approve release.
Comparison to earlier sightings
Previous western-site reports in the broader corpus described single orbs or distant lights without the launch-and-rejoin detail. This event adds a behavioral element that investigators had not catalogued at the same facility before. The difference keeps the case from being folded into older, lower-resolution files.
AARO cross-checked against Navy and Air Force UAP databases from the same period. No overlapping sensor tracks emerged, which again left the agents’ account standing alone. The memorandum records that outcome without assigning blame or speculation.
The absence of matching data does not disprove the sighting. It simply underscores the office’s current limit: eyewitness testimony without corroborating instruments.
Next steps for the file
The June 2026 note recommends continued monitoring with upgraded optical systems already slated for the site perimeter. Those upgrades could close the technical gap if similar objects appear again. Until then the case sits in the unresolved ledger.
Any new witness coming forward with footage or instrumentation would trigger an immediate re-review. The memorandum leaves that door open without promising quick answers.
Public release of this single file does not signal a broader policy shift. It reflects the steady drip of declassified material promised under the current document-drop schedule rather than an admission of unexplained craft.
Where the record stands
The third 2026 Department of War UFO document drop places this western-site event on the permanent record as an unresolved, multi-witness report from six federal law enforcement special agents. The file now serves as a baseline for future sensor placement and case triage at similar facilities. Until fresh data arrives, the description of orbs launching other orbs remains an open data point rather than a solved anecdote.

