Now many unsuspecting people might discount this craft as a cloud, however anyone with years of experience can tell you...this is an alien disk. In the video, you can see it actually rotating as the lighting on the craft changes revealing its rotating pattern. The craft is thin, about three meters thick and 20 meters across but it's amazing to see. This could easily carry a dozen crew on board.
Scott C. Waring - UFO Sightings Daily
Eyewitness states:
Lights on object
Walked out in front porch and it was just sitting there. Watch for 30 minutes before I had to get ready when I came back it was gone
White craft in the sky with a light going back and forth. Almost looked like it was spinning. Caught pictures and video.
The skies over Bonner Springs, Kansas, were transformed into a stage for the strange and unexplained this week. Frankie Camren, a local resident, was riding his Harley-Davidson when his attention was captured by an eerie black ring hanging in the sky. Stunned, he pulled over and recorded the bizarre sight—an intensely dark ring with smoke swirling around it, floating motionless in the air.
The video spread like wildfire, with Camren’s phone "blowing up" as locals shared theories ranging from a flock of birds to a new app effect. But this wasn’t an app trick or a trick of the eye. FOX meteorologists later offered an explanation: a smoke ring created by an explosion. However, Camren wasn’t convinced. There were no loud noises, no sign of an explosion—just the silent, hovering
anomaly.
But this isn’t the first time a black ring has caused a stir in the skies. For those familiar with UFO history, this sighting echoes a far older case documented in the Condon Report—the September 1957 incident at Fort Belvoir, Virginia. In that historic case, U.S. Army personnel witnessed a similar black ring, which floated above the base before vanishing. The Fort Belvoir incident, documented as "Case 47" in the Condon Report, remains unexplained to this day. Official explanations ranged from smoke to a rare atmospheric phenomenon, but just like the Kansas sighting, those who saw it weren’t convinced.
So, are these eerie black rings just smoke from unseen explosions, or are they something far more mysterious? The striking resemblance between the 1957 Fort Belvoir ring and the Bonner Springs anomaly suggests a mystery that has spanned decades, crossing generations while remaining unsolved.
Could we be witnessing a phenomenon that even science struggles to explain? Or is this a recurring glimpse into something beyond our understanding? The sky holds its secrets, and sometimes it chooses to share them—if only briefly.