Full SCU data from 165-page peer-reviewed Aguadilla report: object size 3-5 feet (not larger — calibrated against known ground objects). Speed: 40-120 mph in air, median 80 mph. Water entry at 109.7 mph with virtually zero deceleration — impossibility for any known unpowered object. Average underwater speed: 82.8 mph. The object ACCELERATED while underwater. Before splitting, the thermal image momentarily GREW IN SIZE — indicating energy release, not mechanical separation. Both resulting objects moved at same speed as original. Object was TUMBLING visibly as it flew — a completely non-aerodynamic motion that stopped precisely before water entry. Critically: the object’s pinkish/reddish light was visible over the ocean approaching shore, then went DARK exactly as it reached the coastline — selective concealment consistent with deliberate awareness of observation. US Air Force 84th RADES radar confirmed the tracking aircraft and detected unknown non-transponder targets over the ocean. Military radar FOIA denied. Conclusion: “No bird, no balloon, no aircraft, and no known drones have that capability.”
