Anonymous ID: 2a1daa Dec. 26, 2022, 3:33 p.m. No.18019836   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9928 >>0008 >>0106 >>0130 >>0132 >>0179 >>0237 >>0351 >>0387

Watch: Ex-Nuclear Sub Operator Reveals Physics-Breaking Object That Buzzed Past Them Underwater

 

Robert McGwier has had a very accomplished professional life.

 

Former chief scientist at the Hume Center, founder of HawkEye 360 — a data analytics service for observing constellations and satellites — who holds a Ph.D in applied mathematics from Brown University, he also served as a high-security-clearance intelligence officer.

 

It was on one of these undercover operations that he first had his encounter with an unknown underwater craft.

 

In an interview with Chris Lehto on Lehto’s YouTube channel, Robert explains that the mission started while aboard a nuclear submarine called the USS Hampton.

 

During this particular mission, the submarine needed to leave a dangerous area at high speed to avoid detection.

 

“We were underway, and all of a sudden I hear this sound.” McGwier explained.

 

“It’s really strange, because it’s clear that what is going on is something is whizzing by us — and it’s moving so fast, I just can’t believe it.”

 

The speed of the object, McGwier knew, shouldn’t have been possible.

 

“This submarine is limited in the speed it can go by the incompressibility of the water in front of it, and this thing blew by us like we were standing still.”

 

After the mysterious object rocketed past, a crewmate from the engineering department remarked that it had been moving “faster than the speed of sound, underwater.”

 

Due to the greater compression of particles underwater, sound travels much faster in the ocean than in air.

 

In air, the speed of sound is about 761 miles per hour, or 340 meters per second.

 

In water, the speed of sound is a whopping 1,500 meters per second, or 3,355 miles per hour.

 

Only a handful of aircraft can reach such speeds (such as the X-43), but certainly none would attempt the feat underwater.

 

When asked if there could have been an error with the equipment or the readout, McGwier said, “I don’t believe it. The people saying this were submariner sensor experts.”

 

When McGwier mentioned to the crew that they should report the incident, they quickly dismissed him and said it wasn’t pertinent to the mission and they didn’t want to cause a stir.

 

McGwire later had a mission aboard the USS Blue Ridge, which served as a helicopter carrier.

 

“We went through a typhoon. The typhoon had 90-knot winds and 40-50 foot seas. It was rough,” he said.

 

“I was on the bridge … right underneath the American flag, looking out the windows. That’s when I noticed that, even though we were in the typhoon and it was raining like mad, there was no rain hitting the ship. … I looked out the window and looked up and I could see a glow above us in the sky.”

 

“Whatever it was, was blocking off the rain from the entire ship, stem to stern.”

 

“It suddenly grew brighter and took off, straight up, and the rain returned.”

 

Now retired, Robert said that although he is unable to release the classified elements of his missions, he’s more than happy to share what he encountered with anyone who cares to listen.

 

Sadly, he’s left with more questions than answers.

 

Later, he said, “I told the intelligence staff what I saw and they didn’t want to do anything about it. … We didn’t gather any evidence, nothing happened to the ship, so there’s nothing to report.

 

“If you report an incident at sea … they send an investigative team, and they didn’t want that to happen … because they always find something you don’t … want them to find.

 

“I just know what I saw, McGwier told Lehto. “That, I’ll never forget.”

 

https://www.westernjournal.com/watch-ex-nuclear-sub-operator-reveals-physics-breaking-object-buzzed-past-underwater/

https://youtu.be/VmcHDOz13ec

Anonymous ID: 2a1daa Dec. 26, 2022, 3:39 p.m. No.18019870   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0008 >>0106 >>0130 >>0132 >>0179 >>0237 >>0351 >>0387

Small Plane Crashes Into Water In Maryland, Kayakers Rescue Injured Pilot

 

EDGEWATER, MD – Maryland State Police are on the scene of a single engine plane crash in Anne Arundel County.

 

The pilot and sole occupant is identified as Steve Couchman, 71, of Frederick, Maryland. He was transported by ambulance to Anne Arundel Medical Center where he is receiving medical treatment for injuries sustained in the crash. The plane involved is a Piper Cherokee single engine plane.

 

Shortly before 10:30 a.m. this morning, Maryland State Police from the Glen Burnie and Annapolis Barracks were dispatched to the report of a plane crash near Lee Airport in Edgewater, Maryland. The preliminary investigation indicates that moments after the pilot took off from Lee Airport, the engine of his plane began sputtering. Witnesses told police they heard the sputter and shortly thereafter, they heard the plane crash into Beards Creek.

 

Two nearby civilians and an on-duty police officer from the Anne Arundel County Police Department who heard the call, used three kayaks to skim across the iced creek to provide assistance to the pilot. While the plane was sinking, the pilot exited his plane and stood on the wing. Once the kayakers were close enough, the pilot was able to hang on to one of them to stay afloat.

 

Moments later officers from the Maryland Department of Natural Resources Police responded to the scene by boat. Upon their arrival, an officer cut through the ice and pulled the pilot safely into the boat and transported him to the Annapolis Landing Marina nearby where the pilot was subsequently transported by ambulance to the hospital.

 

Maryland State Police from the Annapolis and Glen Burnie Barracks remain on the scene. Officers from the Maryland Department of Natural Resources Police and Anne Arundel County Police Department responded to assist along with emergency medical service personnel from the Anne Arundel County Fire Department. None of the kayakers were injured during the rescue operation. The investigation continues.

 

https://breaking911.com/small-plane-crashes-into-water-in-maryland-kayakers-rescue-injured-pilot/

https://twitter.com/AACoFD/status/1607415490544275457