WIRED reported “Mexican Air Force films UFOs” in connection with the public record around Mexican Air Force UFO affair, a 2004 UFO/UAP dossier centered on Campeche, Mexico. The source is useful because it fixes a checkable part of the record: who published the material, what topic it addressed, and how it connects to the timeline, witness layer, official response or later research around the case.
The accessible source text states: A videotape made widely available to the news media on Tuesday shows the bright objects, some sharp points of light and others like large headlights, moving rapidly in what appears to be a late-evening sky. In the archive context, that material is treated as a primary or secondary record to be compared with the case chronology rather than as a standalone proof of an extraordinary origin.
Additional context from the source adds: The lights were filmed on March 5 by pilots using infrared equipment. They appeared to be flying at an altitude of about 11,500 feet, and reportedly surrounded the jet as it conducted routine anti-drug trafficking vigilance in Campeche. Those details matter only when they can be aligned with the case's date, location, named institutions, reported evidence types and possible conventional explanations.
The evidence boundary remains important. A source page can document that a report, document, video or database entry exists, but it does not by itself establish that the object or event was anomalous. This local record preserves the source's role in the case while keeping unresolved claims separate from confirmed facts. Original source URL: https://www.wired.com/2004/05/mexican-air-force-films-ufos/
