
An eyewitness, only identified as Katie, a volunteer air warden made the following observations, "It was a lovely pale orange and about the most beautiful thing you've ever seen. I could see it perfectly because it was very close. It was big!... They sent fighter planes up (the Army denied any of its fighters were in action) and I watched them in groups approach it and then turn away. There were shooting at it but it didn't seem to matter." The Japanese maintained after the war, they did not fly any aircraft that night over Los Angeles!
Here is a link to a more recent NBC recap of the night, which includes a brief interview with UFO researcher Jose Escamilla. Escamilla points out the obvious, "if they can't bring down a weather balloon with over 1,500 rounds of anti-craft scrapnel, 12 lb weaponry, what are they going to do with a real enemy target?" The incident proved too embarassing, and a possible explanation, why the battle over Los Angeles has gone underreported.
An interesting footnote, on March 5, 1942, General George C Marshall, wrote a top secret memo to the President, "regarding the air raid over Los Angeles it was learned by Army G2 that Rear Admiral Anderson...recovered an unidentified airplane off the coast of California ...with no bearing on conventional explanation...This Headquarters has come to the determination that the mystery airplanes are in fact not earthly and according to top secret intelligence sources they are in all probability of interplanetary origin."
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