The mystery of 'Phoenix light' for 20 years has yet to be solved

Twenty years ago on March 13, 1997, thousands of Arizona residents looked up at the sky to follow a strange beam of light flying in the air.

The strange phenomenon, named "Light Phoenix" , has become a topic of discussion for a long time. Millions of photos and videos of the incident 20 years ago have been compiled by some Hollywood filmmakers into a horror movie called "Phoenix forgotten" , scheduled to open next month.

According to Sputnik, witnesses claimed they had seen a V-shaped, large-sized spaceship pooled in the night sky with five bright streaks between 7:30 am and 9:30 pm on March 13, 1997. . These lights flew from Tucson to Phoenix, where they stopped moving and began to flicker before disappearing completely.

Picture 1 of The mystery of 'Phoenix light' for 20 years has yet to be solved
The giant object and the beam of light that appeared in Arizona night sky 20 years ago still had no logical solution.

After thousands of people lived on an area stretching nearly 500 km to report on the strange phenomenon, the US Air Force acknowledged it as the "author" of this light, and said it was in fact is a group of squadrons flying in a training program.

However, many people expressed disagreement with the explanation of the US military, including former city council member Phoenix Frances Barwood. In a recent interview with FOX, she said that the majority of Arizona's response that night was ignored by the government.

Or like Fife Symington, the Arizona governor in 1991-1997 was a man who often mocked theories about extraterrestrial organisms. However, after seeing this phenomenon with his own eyes, he had to utter on the local television channel: "Huge giant object. It comes from another world".

A resident of Prescott City named JR claims to have seen an object nearly 2 km long, a boomerang-like shape and works completely silent. He insisted on Earth could not have such a large object.

The Arizona area, especially in the city of Phoenix, regularly records reports of seeing strange lights in the sky. According to a 2014 Washington Post article, Arizona had the highest number of unidentified flying objects per capita in the United States.