The signs say cattle ranch. No livestock are visible. A government van enters on shift at 7 AM, 3 PM, and 11 PM. The facility is rumored to extend 42 levels underground.
In the early 1990s, a field investigator conducted aerial overflights and ground-level surveillance of three defense contractor installations in Southern California’s Antelope Valley and documented what he found: diamond-shaped openings on decommissioned runways, rotating elliptical objects on 100-foot pylons, underground doors that opened like flower petals, and a pylon-mounted object that rose from beneath the surface of the Lockheed Helendale facility while he watched from the perimeter fence with researcher Bill Hamilton. Each of the three facilities — operated by Northrop, McDonnell-Douglas, and Lockheed — is officially described as a radar cross-section test range or electromagnetic research site. None is under restricted airspace. All three produce anomalous aerial phenomena that the investigator personally observed and photographed.
What makes this report significant is not the secondhand testimony but the firsthand observation: the investigator flew over the Lockheed facility and saw an elliptical object slowly rotating atop a 100-foot pylon. He personally watched a glowing object on the McDonnell-Douglas pylon cycle through intensity from dim white to brilliant red-orange. He documented the diamond-shaped openings, the sliding underground doors, and the flower-petal surface hatch at Helendale. Small autonomous glowing spheres were reported approaching curious onlookers at night with maneuvering abilities that “defy explanation.” This is not rumor. This is field documentation from a researcher who went to the locations, looked through the fences, flew over the sites, and wrote down what he saw.
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