About This Resource
A free, open reference site that makes the public record on non-human intelligence disclosure navigable for everyone.
What This Site Does
We collect, organise, and summarise material that already exists in the public record: congressional hearings and legislation, official government reports, declassified documents, named on-the-record statements, and verified case files. Every entry links back to its primary source wherever possible. We do not generate original investigative reporting or break news; we make the existing record accessible.
While the core of the archive focuses on historical primary sources, we also monitor and catalogue ongoing governmental, scientific, and legislative developments as they enter the public record. The timeline, articles, and legislative tracker are updated continuously so the historical record and present-day developments sit side by side.
Content spans six areas: government disclosure actions, congressional legislation and oversight, whistleblower testimonies, scientific analysis, historical declassified programmes, and international UAP transparency.
The Archive
Holdings range from 1839 to 2026 and include complete runs of key publications such as the APRO Bulletin (258 issues), Cosmic Awareness (631 issues), MUFON UFO Journal (200 issues), and the peer-reviewed Cryptozoology journal (12 volumes). Articles are catalogued and indexed across hundreds of publication titles. The archive also holds the complete 16-part FBI UFO investigation files released under FOIA, sighting reports spanning nine decades and drawn from every inhabited continent, reference works including Isaac Koi’s UFO Chronology and Jerome Clark’s UFO Encyclopedia, and Welsh newspaper clippings on UFO sightings.
Every document is catalogued with metadata including date, country, source organisation, document type, and content tags. Browse the holdings by country, search the newsletter archive, explore case files, or read declassified government documents.
How We Work
Congressional records, declassified files, NARA archives, court filings, and named public testimonies.
We distinguish between official statements, named testimony, and established journalism. Every claim is traceable.
No affiliation with any government agency, military branch, political party, or advocacy group.
We present what is documented, not what might be true. When covering allegations or conflicting accounts, we present them neutrally with context and note the current state of corroboration from official sources. We do not publish anonymous tips without corroboration or amplify unverified social media claims.
A significant portion of ongoing updates comes from automated aggregation of trusted RSS feeds, public APIs such as congress.gov, and official government sources. All content undergoes final human review for accuracy and proper attribution before publication.
Sourcing Standards
Our preferred sources are Tier 1 official records: congress.gov, aaro.mil, defense.gov, and NARA declassified archives. We supplement these with reporting from reputable outlets with established track records on the topic, and named on-the-record statements from military, intelligence, and government officials.
Wikipedia Policy
We do not use or cite Wikipedia as a source. As an open-editing platform, it is vulnerable to coordinated editorial influence. In the UAP/NHI domain, persistent and documented concerns exist regarding manipulation of articles on UAP topics, whistleblowers, and related individuals. We prioritize direct primary sources instead.
AARO (All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office)
Editorial Note
AARO is the congressionally mandated office for UAP investigation and historical review. Its reports, case resolutions, and statements are included as part of the official public record. However, AARO’s assessments have faced documented criticism in congressional hearings.
The Historical Record Report Volume 1 (March 2024) drew concerns including alleged omissions, factual errors involving incorrect dates, names, and programme details, lack of external expert input, and insufficient engagement with certain whistleblower claims. Former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense Christopher Mellon described the report as one of the most error-ridden he encountered in decades of government service. Additional concerns were raised during the House Oversight Task Force hearing on UAP transparency in September 2025.
AARO findings are presented alongside relevant congressional records and public testimonies, noting where official disagreement exists.
In Dedication honours the independent researchers who built this field. Mindset & Approach offers guidance on staying grounded while exploring challenging material.
NHI Archive is not affiliated with any government entity or official disclosure programme. The presence of UAP does not automatically imply non-human intelligence origins; we present the data and statements as they exist in the public record.
Contact
For corrections, suggestions, or general inquiries: contact@nhinewsnetwork.com