Your Out There editor just saw this one, and I’m intrigued. Contrary to a couple of the comments from other viewers, this isn’t an insect or a bat. No animal moves like that. And I am fairly sure that it’s not a CGI effect, although I can’t be certain of that. I’d grade this as an interesting possible unknown.
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The National UFO Center reports that professional photographer Jim Montanus of Montanus Photpgraphy photographed an unusual object while taking shots of an incoming storm over Braddock Bay in Greece, New York. He did not see the objects with the naked eye, but they were visible through the camera’s preview window on his digital SLR.

It’s not clear what the images show. Probably not lens effects, given Mr. Montanus’s knowledge of cameras. If a meteor, it would appear to be moving very slowly as these are long-exposure shots. At this time, we’re calling this a probable unknown.

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Another among the thousands of UFO observations by credible witnesses. It’s hard to understand why we ignore the UFO phenomenon. There is no question that it’s real. The US government bears a heavy weight of responsibility for the fact that mankind is not gaining the knowledge that would come from proper scientific study of the phenomenon. Were it not for the resistance of the US Air Force, such study would have begun at least fifty years ago. It’s just a damn shame–and they should be damned ashamed, too, and the media, and the scientific community, and the idiot skeptics.
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This is typical of ‘slow fall’ UFOs. It appears to be a meteor, but it’s moving far too slowly. It could be a jet with its contrail foreshortened by the angle at which it is being observed. It could also be something unknown.
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