On January 13, 1981, on United States Air Force letterhead, a deputy base commander typed two words at the top of a one-page memorandum and sent it to the British Ministry of Defence. Unexplained Lights. The memorandum was unclassified. It described a pulsing red light that maneuvered, broke into five separate white objects, and was seen by three patrols across two nights at Royal Air Force Bentwaters and Royal Air Force Woodbridge in Suffolk, England. Near the end of the first paragraph, in dry military prose, the deputy commander wrote a sentence that did not behave like military prose. The animals on a nearby farm went into a frenzy. This is Episode 10 of Unresolved Signals. It picks up where the Project Blue Book triptych ended: with Brigadier General Carroll H. Bolender's October 1969 memorandum stating, in writing, on Air Force letterhead, that UFO reports of national security significance were processed through JANAP 146 and Air Force Manual 55-11, not Project Blue Book. Episode 9 read the sentence. Episode 10 follows what the channel actually carried after Project Blue Book closed. It runs the September 1976 Iran encounter, where two Imperial Iranian Air Force F-4 Phantoms were vectored toward an unidentified object south of Tehran, both aircraft experienced electromagnetic effects, and the second F-4's weapons control panel failed when the pilot attempted to fire on a smaller object that had detached from the primary. The October 12, 1976 DIA Defense Information Report Evaluation called the report, in its own words, an outstanding report, and distributed the package to the Joint Chiefs, NSA, CIA, and the White House. Then Rendlesham. Lieutenant Colonel Charles I. Halt's December 1980 patrol with a radiation survey meter and a micro-cassette recorder. Eighteen minutes of live tape. The unclassified memorandum to the Ministry of Defence. Then the centerpiece. From late 1979 through 1988, the United States Air Force Office of Special Investigations, with Special Agent Richard C. Doty as the named operational lead, ran a sustained psychological operation against Paul Frederic Bennewitz Jr., a physicist and Coast Guard veteran whose company sat directly adjacent to Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerque. Bennewitz had picked up emanations from a classified program. AFOSI's response was not to ask him to stop. It was to feed him forged United States government documents, hand-delivered, until his picture of reality was unrecoverable. He was committed to a psychiatric hospital in September 1988. Doty has since acknowledged the operation on camera, in Mark Pilkington's 2013 documentary Mirage Men and George Knapp's 2019 Mystery Wire interview. Then the ending. From 2001 to 2004, Major General William Neil McCasland served as commander of the Phillips Research Site at Kirtland Air Force Base. On the morning of February 27, 2026, McCasland was last seen at his residence on Quail Run Court Northeast in Albuquerque. As of recording, he remains missing. Of the eight individuals currently tracked in the open-source corpus on the missing-and-deceased scientists pattern, four have direct institutional links to Kirtland, Sandia, Los Alamos, or the Air Force Research Laboratory. An intelligence analysis paper attached to the present-day investigation explicitly cites the AFOSI Bennewitz operation of 1980 as the documentary precedent for the risk environment it is describing. Forty-five years. The same city. The same kind of ground. The channel Brigadier General Bolender named in 1969 is still operational. We do not know what it carries today. Every claim is sourced to an original document. Full bibliography: unresolvedsignals.com/episodes/ep10-what-got-classified Sponsored by What's Near Me Now: nearmenow.us