Data Analysts Stunned as 'Ghost Flights' Appear on Radar—Nearly Identical Airline Routes Mapped in Parallel Dimensions
An independent data deep-dive has uncovered a chilling anomaly: dozens of commercial airline flights have been tracked simultaneously on two different flight radar databases, only to disappear mid-air on one map while continuing perfectly on another.
"It’s like the same plane is in a glitch in the matrix—existing in two realities at once," says lead analyst Marie Chen. "We found 347 cases over the past six months where an airline jet vanished from FAA logs but remained visible on civilian trackers, flying the exact same path with zero deviation. The flight numbers match, but the tail registrations don’t."
The glitch is most pronounced on long-haul routes over the Pacific, where analysts say entire airline manifests show passengers listed as both "onboard" and "checked in, no show" at the exact same timestamp. One Delta flight was seen hovering at 38,000 feet over the Pacific for 14 minutes—yet no aircraft had filed a flight plan in that zone.
"When you overlay the data, the ghost airline flights are a perfect match—speed, altitude, heading—but they report no crew, no cargo, and no transponder code. It’s as if reality forgot to delete a copy-paste error."
The FAA is investigating, but Chen warns: "Either our surveillance systems are hallucinating, or these airline flights are crossing into a parallel timeline. And if they are, someone is coming back from the other side."