These three interconnected prediction markets explore a single central question through different temporal lenses: will the United States government officially confirm the existence of extraterrestrial life? The markets are grouped because they address the same underlying event—formal US acknowledgment of aliens—but with three distinct deadlines. The first asks whether confirmation will occur by April 30, the second by May 31, and the third by any point before 2027. This multi-timeline structure reveals important information about market expectations and conviction. By comparing prices across the three markets, observers can extract subtle signals about when the collective forecast believes confirmation is most probable. If the market expects a near-term announcement, the April 30 and May 31 markets should trade at higher prices than the 2027 long-dated market. If confirmation is expected much later, prices should decline as deadlines approach. Price spreads between adjacent timelines indicate the marginal probability the market assigns to each interval—steep gradients suggest confidence in a particular window, while flat pricing reveals uncertainty about timing. These markets tap into genuine institutional and scientific developments. Ongoing congressional scrutiny of unidentified aerial phenomena, advances in detection capabilities, and evolving government transparency policies all create realistic pathways to disclosure. Whether triggered by space discovery, declassified findings, or formal policy announcements, these markets provide a structured mechanism to track how informed participants believe the probability of US confirmation distributes across time.