Daily Press

Company touts app for UFO sightings

Enigma visits Norfolk to discuss data on reporting the phenomena locally

- By Gavin Stone Staff Writer

If you’ve ever seen a UFO — or UAP, for unidentifi­ed anomalous phenomena — in Hampton Roads, a new app wants to show you’re not alone.

At least 4,000 sightings have been reported in Norfolk and Virginia Beach over the last 50 years, according to data collected by Enigma Labs, a UAP tracking company that describes itself as a neutral aggregator of unexplaine­d events aiming to support research into the topic. With Enigma’s Apple iOS app, users can report their own sightings. They are then vetted, scrubbed of personal identifyin­g informatio­n and added to an interactiv­e map within days, according to Alejandro Rojas, head of research and content for Enigma.

“There is no really official data set that anybody is putting up. We’re hoping to be that,” Rojas said to an audience of about 30 at an event in downtown Norfolk this week.

Rojas summarized the history of UAP sightings, the various federal investigat­ions that have been conducted, and recently declassifi­ed informatio­n that’s raising more and more questions about what these sightings are. Rojas said part of the challenge is that it’s extremely difficult to determine exactly what a UAP is, but by collecting anecdotes you begin to see trends in the shapes, sizes and types of UAPs, as well as where they’re being seen.

“Anecdotal informatio­n doesn’t prove anything, it points us in the right direction, it shows us where to look, but we need data,” Rojas said.

Enigma uses artificial intelligen­ce to vet UAP sightings, according to Rojas, employing research parameters to filter out fake reports and ones that have reasonable explanatio­ns.

Enigma hosted a pop-up at last month’s Something in the Water festival, which was organized by noted UAP enthusiast Pharrell Williams. Williams told W Magazine in 2019 that while he’s never seen a UAP himself, he “of course” believes in aliens in part because of how vast outer space is. Enigma even wrote a blog post about water-based UAPs reported throughout history and timed it with the start of the festival. Since then, the company has spent weeks in the Hampton Roads area to raise awareness and try to build community interest in UAPs. It has also created a Virginia-focused Facebook group.

Rojas said Hampton Roads is a good place to connect with people because of the large military presence — many sightings happen around military installati­ons, and military aircraft are some of the best at documentin­g them. The region also boasts many anglers and outdoors enthusiast­s, who are often the types to see something unusual in the skies or over the water.

Sightings off the coast of Virginia Beach have played a big role in the huge shift in the conversati­on around UAPs in recent years — from looney conspiracy theories to the subject of serious government hearings. Lts. Ryan Graves and Danny Accoin, who were F/A-18 Super Hornet pilots based out of Naval Air Station Oceana, said they saw UAPs almost daily from the summer of 2014 to March 2015 while training off the USS Theodore Roosevelt.

Though the pilots don’t make any claim of knowing what they saw or where the phenomena came from, their close encounters were enough to make them doubt earthly explanatio­ns. The objects could be in the air all day, moving at speeds that wouldn’t be possible with known technology, they said, and the pilots nearly collided with one — giving them a close enough look that they described it as a “sphere encasing a cube.”

The Pentagon first confirmed the existence of its Advanced Aerospace Threat Identifica­tion Program, which investigat­es UFO reports, to the New York Times in 2017. Since then, many elected officials have spoken publicly about UAPs.

NASA will broadcast a public meeting of its team that is studying UAPs at 10:30 a.m. on Wednesday. To tune in, visit https://www.nasa.gov/live.

To download the Enigma app, go to the App Store on your iPhone or Apple computer and search Enigma Labs, LLC. Rojas said an Android app is in the works.

 ?? GAVIN STONE/STAFF ?? Alejandro Rojas with Enigma Labs explains where things stand in the search for answers about unidentifi­ed anomalous phenomena at an event in Norfolk on Tuesday.
GAVIN STONE/STAFF Alejandro Rojas with Enigma Labs explains where things stand in the search for answers about unidentifi­ed anomalous phenomena at an event in Norfolk on Tuesday.

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