5 October 2019
(The Joe Rogan Experience, Los Angeles, California)
Source: PowerfulJRE (YouTube channel)
David Fravor talks about the 14 November 2004 USS
Nimitz UFO incident.
The November 2004 USS Nimitz Carrier Strike Group 11
UFO incidents occurred about a hundred miles south west of San Diego, California.
The main UFO incident occurred on 14 November 2004 (Fravor and Slaight).
To my knowledge, eight U.S. Navy personnel, Sean
Cahill, Kevin M. Day, David Fravor, Patrick J. Hughes, Omar Lara, Jim Slaight,
Jason Turner and Gary Voorhis, have talked about the UFO incidents on the
Internet.
Sean Cahill was the Chief Master-at-Arms aboard the
USS Princeton.
Kevin M. Day was a radar operator aboard the USS
Princeton.
David Fravor, who chased the UFO (resembled a white
Tic Tac), was flying his F/A-18F
Super Hornet jet fighter.
It was not Fravor who filmed the Tic Tac UFO. The UFO
was filmed a while after Fravor’s incident.
At the time of the UFO incident, Fravor was the
commanding officer of the VFA-41 Black Aces, a U.S. Navy strike fighter
squadron.
P. J. Hughes was an aviation technician aboard the USS
Nimitz.
Omar Lara was a Flight Decker in Air Ops aboard the
USS Nimitz.
Lieutenant Commander (later Commander) Jim Slaight was
the pilot of the second F/A-18F
Super Hornet jet fighter.
Jason Turner was a Petty Officer Third Class (in
Supply) aboard the USS Princeton.
Gary Voorhis was a Fire Controlman Petty Officer Third
Class aboard the USS Princeton.
A large number of UFOs were recorded on radar on and
off for several days during the November 2004 U.S. Navy exercise, according to
USS Princeton radar operator Kevin M. Day.
Gary Voorhis experienced that the unknown objects
“zoomed around at ridiculous speeds and angles and trajectories,” and that “it
(the UFOs) was moving faster than our radar could register.”
Related posts:
realtvufos.blogspot.com/search?q=New+2019+U.S.+Navy+UFO+Guidelines
Commander David Fravor, U.S. Navy
(Ret.)
(theufochronicles.com photo)
Freeze-frame of the Tic Tac UFO (filmed from a U.S. Navy
F/A-18F Super
Hornet jet fighter on 14 November 2004)
(U.S. Department of
Defense/disclose.tv/gstatic.com image)
F/A-18F Super
Hornet (wikimedia.org)
(wikimedia.org photo)