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Charlie Red Star — Carman UFO Wave

May 1975 – Fall 1976

Carman, Manitoba, Canada

Credibility Assessment

Moderate
Law EnforcementMultiple WitnessesOfficial ReportPilot Witness

Event Description

Observed Shape
Orb

Craft morphology

Non-Human Intelligence (NHI)
Reported Entities

No NHI encounter documented for this event.

On April 10, 1975, private pilot Bob Diemert and his wife Elaine first observed a large red domed light approach their farm near Carman, Manitoba, pulsing rhythmically as it moved across the night sky. The encounter marked the beginning of a sustained two-year phenomenon that would accumulate thousands of witnesses and become one of the most extensively documented regional UAP waves in Canadian history. Starting May 7, 1975, the phenomenon appeared nightly at the Diemert property, drawing hundreds of spectators to what became known locally as 'UFO-watching parties.' The object — quickly dubbed 'Charlie Red Star' by locals — manifested as an inverted bowl or luminous red orb that moved erratically and appeared at times to respond to the presence of observers below. RCMP Constable Ian Nicholson, who observed and formally reported the object through official law enforcement channels, described it as 'an oval red light surrounded by an x-shaped white halo.' Multiple private pilots operating in the region during the same period also filed sighting reports consistent with Nicholson's description. The institutional documentation of the Charlie Red Star wave is unusually robust for a regional UAP event of its era. RCMP correspondence formally recorded sightings on April 26 and May 5, 1975. The National Research Council Meteor Centre in Ottawa logged independent reports dated May 5, 1975. These parallel documentation streams — law enforcement and scientific institution — provide cross-institutional corroboration rarely achieved in civilian UAP events. The wave continued through fall 1976, accumulating thousands of Manitoba witnesses. Future UAP researcher Grant Cameron, who personally witnessed the phenomenon multiple times in 1975, documented the case extensively over subsequent decades, building one of the most detailed records of any Canadian UAP wave. Despite the two-year duration, the thousands of witnesses, and the formal RCMP and NRC documentation, no dedicated federal investigation was launched — a bureaucratic non-response that itself became a noted feature of the case.

5 Observables Detected

Instantaneous Acceleration
Hypersonic Velocity
Low Observability
Trans-Medium Travel
Anti-Gravity Lift

Suspicious Activity

Intelligence Agency
Cover-up Actions
Men in Black
Disinformation
Witness Suppression

Sources

governmentRCMP correspondence, April–May 1975 — formal documentation of sightings
governmentNational Research Council Meteor Centre Ottawa — reports logged May 5, 1975
witnessRCMP Constable Ian Nicholson — oval red light, x-shaped white halo description

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