Atlanta, Georgia
Atlanta, Georgia is documented in the Denb Report as the final domestic destination of the 16-foot 5-inch silver disc recovered by a CIA covert recovery team following the 1974 Coyame, Mexico UFO Crash. The transport of the Coyame disc to Atlanta represents one of the few alleged crash retrieval cases in which a specific continental US civilian city — rather than a military installation — is named as the object's post-recovery destination.
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The Coyame Recovery and Transport to Atlanta
On August 25–26, 1974, a CIA-coordinated recovery team staged at Fort Bliss, Texas covertly entered Mexican airspace, retrieved a silver disc from a halted Mexican military convoy (all convoy personnel found dead), sanitized the site with high explosives, and transported the object back to US territory via CH-53 Sea Stallion helicopter. The recovery team first rendezvoused at a point in the Davis Mountains approximately 25 miles northeast of Valentine, Texas, where the disc was transferred from the helicopter to a sealed ground transport truck. The convoy then proceeded to Atlanta, Georgia.
The Denb Report — an anomalous document first published on electronic bulletin boards in 1992 and independently corroborated by researcher Leonard Stringfield as "authoritatively written using correct military terminology" — provides the Atlanta destination without explanation of which specific facility received the disc. Atlanta's role as an Air Force logistics hub through Dobbins Air Reserve Base and its proximity to research infrastructure make it a plausible intermediate or final destination for UAP material processing.
Implications
Ryan S. Wood, author of Magic Eyes Only, rates the Coyame case as medium to high authenticity based on the operational detail in the Denb Report. The use of a civilian city as the stated destination — rather than a named military base like Wright-Patterson Air Force Base — is consistent with the alleged CIA OGA model of moving recovered UAP materials "fairly quickly into private hands" after military retrieval, as described by journalist Christopher Sharp's sources regarding OGA operations.