A mysterious shiny object floating high over Manhattan's West Side set  off a flurry of reports and wild speculation Wednesday that a UFO was flying over the city.Police  and the FAA  said they began getting flooded with calls starting at 1:30  p.m. from  people reporting a silvery object hovering high over Chelsea.Law   enforcement sources said they believed the object was likely some sort   of balloon, but as of late Wednesday they had not confirmed exactly what   it is.A Daily News reporter  could see a tiny, silver dot  floating approximately 5,000 feet above  23th St. and Eighth Ave., where  dozens of people gathered late in the  afternoon to catch a glimpse."It's been hovering there for a while. I'm  just kind of baffled," said Joseph Torres, 49, of Dyker Heights,  Brooklyn, who spotted the object after leaving a movie.
 "How  can it be ordinary? There is something going on."Despite clear skies,  it was not easy to make out the tiny object shimmering overhead."You   really have to look up to see it," said one witness, who gave only his   first name, Rico. "It's a little crazy. I guess that's why they call  it  an unidentified flying object because they don't know what it  is."Not long after the first sightings, messages began appearing on Twitter  linking to a month-old press release announcing the publication of a  book by a retired NORAD officer predicting that UFOs would buzz the  earth's major cities on Oct. 13.
"How  can it be ordinary? There is something going on."Despite clear skies,  it was not easy to make out the tiny object shimmering overhead."You   really have to look up to see it," said one witness, who gave only his   first name, Rico. "It's a little crazy. I guess that's why they call  it  an unidentified flying object because they don't know what it  is."Not long after the first sightings, messages began appearing on Twitter  linking to a month-old press release announcing the publication of a  book by a retired NORAD officer predicting that UFOs would buzz the  earth's major cities on Oct. 13.
The Federal Aviation Administration said it received several calls to its operations center but after reviewing radar data, the agency could not find anything out of the ordinary."We re-ran radar to see if there was anything there that we can't account for but there is nothing in the area," said spokesman Jim Peters. "There was some helicopter traffic over the river at that time and we checked with LaGuardia Tower. And they said they had nothing going low at that time.""Nothing that we can account for would prompt this kind of response," he said.Peters said if it was a weather balloon or any kind of organized balloon release, authorities should have been notified in advance. Police officials said they had received no notification.
The Federal Aviation Administration said it received several calls to its operations center but after reviewing radar data, the agency could not find anything out of the ordinary."We re-ran radar to see if there was anything there that we can't account for but there is nothing in the area," said spokesman Jim Peters. "There was some helicopter traffic over the river at that time and we checked with LaGuardia Tower. And they said they had nothing going low at that time.""Nothing that we can account for would prompt this kind of response," he said.Peters said if it was a weather balloon or any kind of organized balloon release, authorities should have been notified in advance. Police officials said they had received no notification.
 
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