Journalist Reveals Tic Tac UFO is Actually Lockheed Martin Technology — And the Pentagon Doesn’t Know
- Cristina Gomez
- Jul 8
- 3 min read
Updated: Jul 25
Investigative journalist Ross Coulthart has made what an explosive that the the famous Tic Tac encounter isn’t alien technology — it’s Lockheed Martin. For twenty years, the 2004 USS Nimitz Tic Tac incident has stood as the crown jewel of UFO evidence. Military witnesses, radar data, infrared video, and technology that seemed impossible to explain captivated the world. Commander David Fravor described craft with capabilities “far superior to anything we had,” performing maneuvers that defied known physics. But according to Coulthart, speaking on the Need to Know podcast, the truth is far more terrestrial — and potentially more disturbing.
“I now know categorically that the Tic Tac is Lockheed Martin technology,” Coulthart stated without hesitation. When pressed for sources, he declined to elaborate but emphasized the implications: “Why is the United States government now participating at White House executive level in collusion with the national security state to keep secret the fact that they’ve made these advances?”
The revelation raises profound questions about America’s defense infrastructure. If Lockheed Martin possesses technology capable of dropping from 80,000 feet to sea level in less than a second with no visible means of propulsion, why hasn’t this revolutionary capability been deployed to defend America? More critically, why are defense contractors apparently withholding breakthrough technology from the Pentagon that likely funded its development?
Coulthart believes the answer lies in a strategic miscalculation. His sources suggest that while America developed advanced electrogravitics technology in secret, foreign adversaries — particularly China — have achieved similar or superior breakthroughs. The excessive compartmentalization meant to protect these programs may have instead created dangerous blind spots, leaving America vulnerable to technologies it helped pioneer.
This vulnerability became apparent through what military officials call drone “incursions” over America’s most sensitive installations. A 60 Minutes investigation revealed that mysterious drones have been operating over U.S. military bases for over six years, with authorities admitting they cannot track, identify, or intercept them. General Glen VanHerck, former commander of NORAD and NORTHCOM, acknowledged this represents “a capability gap” in America’s defenses.

The most dramatic example occurred at Langley Air Force Base, where swarms of unknown drones appeared for 17 consecutive nights in December 2023. The threat was so serious that F-22 Raptors — aircraft worth over $100 million each — were relocated to nearby bases for protection. According to Coulthart’s sources, this represents a calculated demonstration by China, essentially announcing they can operate advanced aircraft over America’s most secure facilities without consequence.
The technology involved appears to represent a breakthrough in electrogravitics — anti-gravity propulsion that could revolutionize everything from energy production to space travel. Analysis of the original Tic Tac data by physicist Kevin Knuth revealed impossible flight characteristics: acceleration forces over 5,000 times gravity, no visible propulsion, no sonic booms despite supersonic speeds, and no heat signatures despite requiring hundreds of gigawatts of power. These characteristics suggest technology that transcends conventional aerospace engineering.

The New Jersey drone incidents of late 2024 add another layer to this mystery. While experiencing widespread drone activity, New Jersey happens to host both massive military installations like Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst and a major Lockheed Martin facility in Moorestown specifically focused on drone testing and intelligence capabilities. Coast Guard vessels reported being pursued by 12–30 drones, while local sheriffs described seeing 50 craft emerging from the ocean with 8-foot wingspans.
Official responses have been contradictory and inadequate. Congressman Jeff Van Drew claimed the drones originated from an Iranian “mothership,” while Pentagon officials denied both Iranian involvement and foreign adversary activity. If the craft aren’t Iranian, American, or foreign adversaries, what exactly is operating in American airspace with apparent impunity?

Coulthart suggests we’re witnessing either advanced testing by American contractors near their own facilities or foreign adversaries demonstrating breakthrough capabilities. Either scenario represents a fundamental breakdown in how America manages its most critical technologies. The same compartmentalization designed to protect national security may have created the conditions for America’s greatest strategic vulnerability.
The implications extend beyond military applications. If electrogravitics technology exists but remains locked in black programs while adversaries deploy it openly, America faces not just military disadvantage but economic and technological obsolescence. The country that first harnesses clean, unlimited energy and revolutionary transportation will reshape global power permanently.
The truth about the Tic Tac may be more terrestrial than extraterrestrial, but the implications for national security and global power could be equally profound.

Sources
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cmxyApOGPCA&t=36s&ab_channel=StellarProductions
https://www.repi.mil/Portals/44/Documents/State_Fact_Sheets/NewJersey_StateFacts.pdf
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K98A4CLMwf4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qpFz-SPCSJc&ab_channel=PIX11News
https://www.youtube.com/live/oGE4lmK_IN8?si=qkkyrlY4Y55_gOnq
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