View Full Version : flying humanoid???
mojo
5th September 2017, 17:25
This is interesting. Around 4 seconds the image is fairly clear but wish she filmed it better. Doesnt act like balloons and the screen shot shows flat surfaces but still not 100% definitive because of the detail but the witness claims it was a human shape and smooth movement of the object are clues to the possibility.
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uzn
5th September 2017, 17:34
This is on display at the U. S. Air Force Museum, in Dayton Ohio
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bOVh-vlUius
Maybe they didn´t stop developing ...
mojo
5th September 2017, 17:36
or perhaps a more modern touch...:)
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uzn
5th September 2017, 17:37
yeah, very possible. Maybe just a tech kid.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rNKRxsNyOho
Joe from the Carolinas
5th September 2017, 20:15
Is there any way it could be a kite? The video is frustrating, hence the problem with cell phone cameras. Really not enough good shots to tell.
DeDukshyn
6th September 2017, 00:50
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Ernie Nemeth
6th September 2017, 09:07
The pics are bad. The kid saying it's scary lends it more credibility, being an innocent... of course hoaxers could think of that...
Johnnycomelately
13th June 2025, 07:25
Hey Mojo, and DeDukshyn and Earnie. I think I’ve found another humanoid flyer.
“Florida Man” has gotten quite a reputation* as not quite human, these recent social media years. This story breaks the usual mold.
Guy is actually smart and resourceful, tho he is looking at up to 30 years in the clink for his fun. At least he’ll have lots of travel memories to ponder.
* Reputation is mostly due to Florida’s policy of being more open with info about miscreants, but yeah now it has become a meme so medias chase and highlight that.
Florida man guilty of fraud after 120 free flights posing as flight attendant
https://globalnews.ca/news/11237815/florida-man-fraud-posing-flight-attendant-free-flights/
By Katie Scott Global News
Posted June 12, 2025 11:06 am
2 min read
They say fake it til you make it, but one Florida man took the phrase very seriously after posing as a flight attendant to book more than 120 free flights over the course of six years.
On Tuesday, the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Florida announced that a federal judge found Tiron Alexander, 35, guilty of wire fraud and unlawfully entering a secure airport area at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport under false pretences.
According to court documents and evidence presented at trial, Alexander booked free flights from 2018 to 2024 on an airline carrier’s website that were only available to pilots and flight attendants who worked for other airlines.
Alexander flew on 34 flights with the airline carrier “without paying for any of them by posing as a flight attendant who worked for other airlines,” according to the press release.
“Over the 34 flights, Alexander claimed through the airline carrier’s website application process—a process that required an applicant to select whether they were a pilot or flight attendant and provide their employer, date of hire, and badge number information—that he worked for seven different airlines and had approximately 30 different badge numbers and dates of hire,” the press release explained.
Evidence at the trial also showed that Alexander impersonated a flight attendant on three other airline carriers and booked more than 120 free flights by falsely claiming to be a flight attendant.
The carriers named in the court documents include American Airlines, Spirit Airlines, United Airlines, Delta Air Lines and Southwest Airlines.
According to Alexander’s indictment, he stated that he had worked for an airline headquartered in Dallas since November 2015 but never held a position as a pilot or a flight attendant, which meant he was never eligible for the free flights.
The maximum sentence for wire fraud is 20 years in prison and 10 years for entering the secure airport areas under false pretences, according to the indictment.
The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) is currently investigating the case and U.S. District Judge Jacqueline Becerra is scheduled to sentence Alexander on Aug. 25.
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