Again; no-one was injured, nothing was damaged or stolen, there wasn't any impact on the military effectiveness of the units involved (it is possible radar were being tested and issues found, that's why they are tested and if this was the case the USN is unlikely to share the relevant technical information). Although you disagree, there is no evidence that Fravor or Dietrich etc. lied about anything (you haven't commented on examples given of aircrew making much more serious misidentifications, instead apparently claiming that Fravor's training/ experience rules out him ever making an error in judging the size, range and speed of a small, featureless white ovoid percept, by eye, in the absence of fixed landmarks).
No injury is required for a crime (or multiple) to be commited, read what I said before. That's not a legal defense and easily destroyed in the whole context of a supposed "cover-up".
Also, it's not up to you (or me) to decide if their statements are valid or not, I don't think we can assume anything without a formal investigation. Not even that witnesses described unusual procedures, still these could be standard for sensitive (classified testing) events (note: I don't think it was a test). Fravor and others weren't debriefed, that's a fact, but that might reflect operational norms rather than conspiracy.
My point is that no definitive answer can be given prior to an inquiry.
PERIOD.
They exist to answer if said crimes had been commited. Not to assume a single one.
If I think that's the case, and they were ALL (not just one - ALL) correct, that's just an opinion (and based on the evidence, very likely), which is no different than yours, which insist they were "mistaken".
The ammount of people saying they noticed odd stuff in the sky, Fravor and other pilot accounts (separated from them), odd radar readings, etc. PLUS such cover-up stories, indicate a strong need to do such investigation.
If it was just one set of reports, that, for sure, would make this "conspiracy angle" a lot weaker. When you combine all of them at the same time, things get a little different (that's how I see it).
It could be a regular drone for all we know, that doesn't mean no crimes were commited.
Please stop giving excuses about the U. S. military, as if they didn't have scum in their midst doing that sort of thing. I would be surprised if that wasn't the case here.
To think nothing happened is automatically presuming one of those things with no basis: GUILTY / INNOCENCE. We can't put our fingers on either, before investigating, then reaching a conclusion. Just like I can't say ALIENS were involved, without putting forth any evidence. Said evidence needs to be produced, and this is the best (or only way) to do it.
That's how investigations work, we don't assume anything, we listen to all parties involved, we identify the ones in charge (which the men telling about a cover-up said were assisting the "Men in Black" that got the data... we try to identify who those MiBs were, what kind of data was stolen or lost/wiped, etc.).
It may all be a bunch of shit and they may be inventing stories (UFO conspiracies go like this: the government denies knowledge, hides it, there's not a lot to back anything, images/videos are always fuzzy, etc. - the same trope, I know...).
Maybe, maybe not.
We can't tell, before trying to find out more about what those ships were doing it, why any data was taken and for what reason... I don't think you are going to get useful answers (if any at all) with mere FOIA requests. These are a joke.
There's a lot of work and paperwork to go through, and it may be hard to reach anywhere. Assuming it's impossible, though, is accepting defeat. Has anyone tried? I doubt it. It would be a task of the U.S. Congress, if we didn't have idiots running everything.
If these men were all willing to say a cover-up happened, I bet they weren't just spewing nonsense to appease UFO enthusiasts - rather, were putting a target on themselves, because tomorrow they can all be accused of commiting perjury, giving false statements to the federal government, obstruction of justice, defamation/fraud...
Imagine if they are all asked to talk about what they said, so far?
The fact there are multiple people from that period (2004) saying there was a cover-up and mishandling of ship's data, doesn't mean you are going to hear the same stories (or confirmation) from Fravor, Dietrich... They were involved elsewhere, not in charge of these parts of the ship, unlike the guys I mentioned. That's like assuming a mere user like me is in charge of the Metabunk forums/website.
Something specific was done to prevent information from leaking. Doesn't have to be aliens...
If this was a legit secret project, destroying records, threatening witnesses, withholding data they have a legal obligation to provide... are not OK according to the law.
UAP scrutiny is important not because we are trying to find little-green men from Mars. That's idiotic reasoning. We want to know, too, how that trillion dollar budget is being spent.
Congressional hearings featured testimonies from whistleblowers who alleged government cover-ups, including threats to witnesses and other outlandish stuff such as the recovery of "non-human biologics" from crashes. Claims of data suppression appear in multiple UAP contexts, supporting this "angle".
The cryptologic technician Karson Kammerzell, who was also aboard the Princeton, and is one of the men that spoke about it, said the crew received an email featuring Underwood's FLIR footage, and the "official statement" was: "the fast moving objects captured by the AEGIS system that the Princeton had been tracking for days were falling ice".
To which there was this reply: "Falling ice doesn't turn 90 degrees and accelerate 600 miles an hour". Gary Voorhis also explained the SPY-1 would have easily been able to identify the objects as ice crystals had they been so. Mick West interviewed him, and he talked about it after 39 minutes (
LINK FOR THE VIDEO HERE).