Majestic Documents Validation
How one recently declassified CIA file validates several Majestic documents
I recently spent some time reviewing the Majestic Documents to see whether they shared any consistent identifying markers that could be used for corroboration. If folks have seen this validation elsewhere, please let me know. This post will be less writing and more concerned with simply sharing some relevant evidence I recently discovered validating the veracity of certain Majestic documents.
834021: Eventually, I realized that a few of the Majestic docs have a stamp in the lower right hand corner with the identifying number “834021-” followed by the corresponding page number. Curious to see if this existed within any contemporaneous declassified evidence, I checked the CIA FOIA portal:
Much to my pleasant surprise, I discovered this was not some random irrelevant document. Far from it. As it would turn out, I had discovered 345 pages of Paperclip Intelligence documents that were only declassified on June 22nd, 2022—literally not even four years ago! And then I realized something even cooler. It turned out that all of these docs also had the “834021” identifying stamp in the lower right hand corner of each page. For example, here is a screenshot showing four of the 345 pages, each of which with the “834021” circled in red for reference:
Now, here are the relevant Majestic documents I mentioned earlier. First, not surprisingly, is a CIA-JIOA Paperclip document (url in screenshot below) that also bears this routing number in addition to the “MJ-12” name on the distribution list:
Also, for example, is the Table of Contents for this MJ-12 Annual Report. Note the “834021” in the lower right hand corner (and “ER-1-2735” in the upper right hand corner, as also seen on page three of this recently declassified file):
A-1762.1: Relatedly, I ran a check against the routing number “A-1762.1” in the CIA FOIA portal. Unsurprisingly, it yielded only one single result:
More surprising to me, however, was that this yielded one hit, on page 3 of 5 of this pdf declassified on June 13, 2003—one positive match with the “A-1762.1” identifier. Even more interesting was that this doc actually has one additional identifier, “ER-1-2735,” in the upper right hand corner, which is seen in the MJ annual report immediately following this image and in the immediately preceding MJ Table of Contents.
Within the 1st MJ-12 Annual Report screenshot below, see the matching Executive Registry number “ER-1-2735” in the upper right hand corner, in addition to the matching “A-1762.1” in the middle of the page here:
CIA SI 28-55: Last but not least, we have “CIA SI 28-55,” described as:
“TOP SECRET Central Intelligence Agency Information Report CIA/SI 28-55 entitled: A DIGEST OF WORLD WIDE UNIDENTIFIED FLYING OBJECT INTELLIGENCE MATERIAL AS CONTAINED IN THE ARMED FORCES SECURITY AGENCY SIGNALS, RADAR, COMMUNICATIONS, AND HUMAN INTELLIGENCE OPERATIONS IN THE FIRST FIVE YEARS.
The relevant file from the CIA FOIA portal is a three-page pdf, with the third page being a letter from Sam Goudsmit to a redacted individual regarding the Robertson panel’s conclusions. The letter on page three is not relevant. What is relevant is the annotated note on page two, which I have circled in red and included here for reference.
This all but confirms that “CIA/SI 28-55” indeed was the file number for internal CIA UFO reports, along with the veracity of the information in the 1st MJ-12 Annual Report cover page shown above.
These findings provide additional evidence of MJ-12’s existence during the late-1940s and 1950s. It’s virtually impossible to logically reconcile this supporting evidence with the idea that “Majestic-12” was just some paperwork invented during the 1980s. Perhaps this represents the type of disclosure we should expect in 2026. Not from the government, but from dedicated civilian research.










incredible