A working archive of the last century’s most famous mysteries and conspiracy theories — the claims, the cover stories, and what the evidence actually shows. Filed, stamped, and cross-referenced by field investigator Geoffrey Baysinger.
By day, a mid-level associate climbing the Pepsi corporate ladder one carefully self-credited rung at a time. By night — and most lunch breaks — the Bureau’s most caffeinated field investigator, powered by roughly twelve Rockstars and a flat refusal to take the official story at face value.
Geoffrey has chased these files from desert airfields to Atlantic shipping lanes without once missing a ballet recital or a soccer game. He doesn’t sell you the saucer — he hands you the file and lets you decide. Every case here has been pulled, read twice, and stamped with where the evidence actually lands. He answers to exactly one authority higher than the Bureau: his wife, who controls the budget, the schedule, and the final word. Rival investigator Joe Gimmarro disputes all of the above. He did not do the work.
G. BaysingerEach file opens to a full investigation — timeline, the claim, the evidence locker, the record, and what’s still open. Tap any case to read the dossier.
A rancher finds strange debris, the Army calls it a flying disc — and then takes the words back within a day.
Open full file →The base that officially didn't exist for half a century — until the government finally admitted it did.
Open full file →The flag seems to wave, the shadows look wrong, and there are no stars — or so the theory goes.
Open full file →Three shots, a grassy knoll, and a question the United States has never fully put down.
Open full file →The case where the conspiracy theory turned out to be real — and worse than the rumors.
Open full file →The government really did run a UFO desk for seventeen years. Here's what was in the drawer.
Open full file →Ships and planes are said to vanish without a trace in a stretch of ocean between Miami, Bermuda, and Puerto Rico.
Open full file →Thousands of people — including the state's own governor — watched lights move across the desert sky.
Open full file →Navy fighter pilots chase a white, wingless oval with no exhaust and no explanation.
Open full file →Nine experienced hikers cut their way out of their tent into a sub-zero night — and died.
Open full file →A plan to stage attacks on Americans to justify a war — drafted on official letterhead.
Open full file →Once a year, a few hundred of the powerful meet behind closed doors. No press. No minutes.
Open full file →A warship supposedly turned invisible — then teleported — with horrifying results for the crew.
Open full file →Overnight, vast geometric patterns appear pressed flawlessly into fields of wheat.
Open full file →A 72-second burst from deep space so striking the astronomer scrawled one word in the margin: Wow!
Open full file →A winged figure with glowing red eyes, seen for thirteen months — then a bridge collapsed.
Open full file →An apocalyptic mural, a demon-eyed horse, and tunnels that nobody seems eager to fully explain.
Open full file →The most famous aviator of her age flew toward a speck of an island and was never seen again.
Open full file →A long-necked shape in a cold, deep loch — immortalized by the century's most famous fake photograph.
Open full file →Weeks after Pearl Harbor, the city's guns fired 1,400 rounds into the night sky — at something no one could name.
Open full file →A man in a business suit hijacked a jetliner, took $200,000, and parachuted into a storm — never to be identified.
Open full file →Page-turning field manuals that go deeper than a card allows. Flip through with the arrows or your keyboard.
A century in the sky — Arnold’s saucers, Roswell, Blue Book, the Phoenix Lights and the Navy Tic-Tac, plus a field guide to telling a craft from a balloon.
Open the flipbook →What really fell on a New Mexico ranch in 1947 — the “flying disc” headline, the overnight reversal, and Project Mogul.
Open the flipbook →The base that officially didn’t exist — spy planes, Bob Lazar, the real “Area 52,” and the day the government finally admitted it.
Open the flipbook →