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Silver Alert WILLIAM McCASLAND: Retired General missing from Bernalillo County, NM - 27 Feb 2026 - Age 68 - Some Draw Parallels to Nancy Guthrie (3 Viewers)

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BCSO releases new timeline on missing retired Air Force general​

The Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Office released more details Thursday regarding the ongoing search for 68-year-old William “Neil” McCasland.

McCasland, a retired U.S. Air Force general, has been missing since Feb. 27, 2026. He was last seen at his home in the area of Quail Run Court NE.

A timeline from BCSO reveals McCasland interacted with a repairman around 10 a.m. on Feb. 27. His wife returned home at 12:04 p.m. to find him missing. His phone and glasses were left behind, and he was reported missing at 3:07 p.m.

BCSO has identified missing items, including hiking boots and a .38 caliber revolver. A gray U.S. Air Force sweatshirt found nearby prompted further searches, though it’s not confirmed to be his.

BCSO has expanded its neighborhood canvass to over 700 homes, seeking security footage. Despite extensive searches, no confirmed sightings or videos of McCasland have emerged.
Hopefully the gun was taken for protection from wildlife and not for himself🥴
 

New photo released in search for retired Air Force Gen. William McCasland missing from Albuquerque foothills​

Nearly two weeks after retired Air Force Gen. William McCasland disappeared from his home in the Albuquerque foothills, investigators have released a new photo they believe shows what he may have been wearing the day he vanished.

Items unaccounted for from his home include hiking boots, a wallet, and a .38 caliber revolver with a leather holster.

BCSO released a new photo on Thursday showing a light green, long-sleeve button-up outdoor shirt, which is believed to be the top McCasland was wearing.

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Search continues for retired Air Force general, missing for 2 weeks​

As the search for retired Air Force General William Neil McCasland continues in its second week, authorities in New Mexico are set to give an update Monday.

McCasland, 68, was last seen at his home on Feb. 27 in Albuquerque, New Mexico, at around 11 a.m. local time. According to the Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Office, he left his phone, glasses and wearable devices at home.

On March 3, the FBI announced it was joining the search efforts.

Police later issued a Silver Alert for McCasland’s disappearance. As of March 6, the sheriff’s office said it hasn’t found any evidence of foul play but would not rule out any scenarios.

Authorities said they’ve received “dozens of tips” related to the search.
 

Sheriff: No sightings of retired Air Force General Neil McCasland​

Authorities in New Mexico are continuing to search for retired Air Force General William Neil McCasland as efforts stretch into a third week.

During a news conference Monday, investigators said there have still been no confirmed sightings of McCasland.

Around 10 a.m. the day he went missing, he was seen talking to a repairman at his Albuquerque home. At 11 a.m., his wife left for an appointment. When she returned an hour later, McCasland wasn’t in the home. She reported him missing when he was still not home, just after 3 p.m.

There have been no sightings of McCasland since that day.

The sheriff’s office says they issued a Silver Alert because McCasland had once reported being in a “mental fog.” However, investigators don’t believe he was cognitively impaired and say he was in good health.

“There’s no indication, and we are not putting forward that Mr. McCasland was disoriented or confused,” said Lt. Kyle Woods of the Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Office. “Arguably, he would still be the most intelligent person in the room that any of us would be in. Highly intelligent, highly capable, but that information was given to us early on, and out of an abundance of caution, we escalated to a silver alert to try to garner as much public attention as possible to try to help locate him as soon as possible.”


Police say they can’t rule anything out because they have no evidence indicating why or how McCasland disappeared.

“We’ve had a lot of tips, and we will go through every tip,” said Sheriff John Allen, “but there are some tips with some outlandish theories, conspiracy theories. We will look into everything, but we are trying as a law enforcement agency and entity. We look into facts to make sure that we can retrace before Mr. McCasland went missing. And to also make sure that we’re looking for any clues for anything that was nefarious, for anything that was violent.”

Investigators say they have no indication that anyone had threatened McCasland.

They say they have conducted intensive interviews with several people who know McCasland and who live in the area around his home. They’ve contacted more than 600 residents looking for surveillance video, which they continue to review.


According to the sheriff’s office, he left his phone, glasses and wearable devices at home. They say it would be highly unusual for him to leave those items at home.

Police said a wallet, red backpack, revolver and a holster for the gun that belonged to McCasland are still unaccounted for and were not found at the home.

At one point, investigators thought McCasland might be wearing a particular green shirt and hiking boots. However, those boots and that shirt were found in McCasland’s second home in Pagosa Springs. Investigators aren’t sure if he owned multiple versions of the boots or shirt.

They hoped to garner clues from his electronic devices.
 

Searcher: Few law enforcement officials seen while looking for missing general​

An independent searcher scouring the New Mexico desert for signs of missing retired U.S. Air Force general William McCasland says he’s come across few law enforcement officials.

Erik Schlimmer, who traveled from Colorado to search for McCasland, said he’s seen little law enforcement in the days that he’s been out searching the desert.

“I’m really surprised, I haven’t seen anyone,” he said. “I got here three days ago, and I’m under the impression that a lot of the searchers are volunteers, so they’re going to be out here on the weekend. But I was out here all day Sunday and didn’t see anyone. I haven’t seen any aircraft, any drones, haven’t seen any searchers.”

Schlimmer said the conditions of the search area aren’t to be underestimated.

“I’ve been spending most of my time off-trail, and it’s very, very rugged. Lots of loose rock, loose soil, cactuses, boulders, extremely rugged terrain.”
 

Missing UFO authority never seen leaving his home: Ross Coulthart​

Investigative journalist Ross Coulthart points out an interesting wrinkle to the Feb. 27 disappearance of William Neil McCasland, a retired Air Force officer believed to have knowledge of government programs on UFOs and potential nonhuman intelligence.

The 68-year-old McCasland reportedly went missing after leaving his Albuquerque, N.M., home on foot to go hiking. But Coulthart notes McCasland was not actually seen leaving of his own volition. Rather, a repairman is the last person to have seen him at the residence.

“One hour, he was there with a repairman who saw him in the home, and when his wife came back a little over an hour later, he had disappeared,” Coulthart told “Katie Pavlich Tonight” on Friday.

The local sheriff department’s investigation appears to be at a standstill, and surveillance cameras from neighbors’ properties have yielded nothing, he said.

Left at McCasland’s home was his tracking watch and mobile phone, while a firearm and holster had been taken.

Meantime, a former colleague of McCasland’s, aerospace engineer Monica Reza, disappeared while hiking in the Los Angeles forest with a companion nine months ago.
 

Missing UFO authority never seen leaving his home: Ross Coulthart​

Investigative journalist Ross Coulthart points out an interesting wrinkle to the Feb. 27 disappearance of William Neil McCasland, a retired Air Force officer believed to have knowledge of government programs on UFOs and potential nonhuman intelligence.

The 68-year-old McCasland reportedly went missing after leaving his Albuquerque, N.M., home on foot to go hiking. But Coulthart notes McCasland was not actually seen leaving of his own volition. Rather, a repairman is the last person to have seen him at the residence.

“One hour, he was there with a repairman who saw him in the home, and when his wife came back a little over an hour later, he had disappeared,” Coulthart told “Katie Pavlich Tonight” on Friday.

The local sheriff department’s investigation appears to be at a standstill, and surveillance cameras from neighbors’ properties have yielded nothing, he said.

Left at McCasland’s home was his tracking watch and mobile phone, while a firearm and holster had been taken.

Meantime, a former colleague of McCasland’s, aerospace engineer Monica Reza, disappeared while hiking in the Los Angeles forest with a companion nine months ago.
The way his colleague disappeared is even weirder than him. This is from the link in your article.


(NewsNation) — A former colleague of missing Air Force Gen. William McCasland disappeared while hiking months before he did, according to authorities.

Monica Reza was last seen hiking in the Los Angeles forest with a companion nine months ago. Police say Reza was about 30 feet behind the person she was with, smiling and waving. When the person turned back around, she was gone. Rescue teams searched for days, but her body was never recovered.

Reza was an aerospace engineer who developed a special metal used in rockets. The project was funded by the U.S. government and overseen by McCasland.

Wife of missing general pumps brakes on UFO ‘misinformation’

NewsNation could not verify whether or not these missing persons cases are connected at this point.

McCasland, 68, was reported missing after leaving his Albuquerque, New Mexico, home on foot Feb. 27. In a March 6 release, the sheriff’s office said it had not uncovered any evidence of foul play but was considering all possible scenarios.

According to the sheriff’s office, McCasland left his phone, glasses and wearable devices at home. Police say a wallet, red backpack, revolver and holster belonging to him are still unaccounted for.

During a Monday news conference, investigators said there have been no confirmed sightings of McCasland.

Monica Reza work caught McCasland’s attention in early 2000s

Reza and McCasland first connected after her patented nickel‑based “super‑alloy,” Mondaloy, caught the Air Force general’s attention.

At the time, McCasland oversaw the Air Force Research Laboratory Space Vehicles Directorate, which funded research into advanced materials needed for reusable space vehicles and weapons. In that role — and as commander of the Phillips Research Site — McCasland used Reza’s research.

In 2016, Reza’s work helped Aerojet Rocketdyne achieve a major milestone in rocket‑engine technologies. Aerojet Rocketdyne was sold in 2023 for $4.7 billion to L3 Technologies.
 
There are a lot of articles linking these missing people. This is the DM one



16:27, 21 Mar 2026, updated 10:08, 23 Mar 2026By KELLY GARINO, US REPORTER

A retired Air Force general known in UFO circles has gone missing during a hike in New Mexico, just months after a former colleague disappeared in a nearly identical case.

US Major General William Neil McCasland, 68, was last seen on the morning of February 27 as he left his Albuquerque home with only a backpack, wallet and .38-caliber revolver for a trail run, according to the Bernalillo County Sheriff's Office.

Sources previously told The New York Post that McCasland was a 'gatekeeper' and 'participant' in the UFO community.

His disappearance has only fueled speculation around the disappearance of 60-year-old Monica Reza, who had worked on a rocket project overseen by McCasland, who also went missing in June 2025.

In a chillingly similar case, Reza was last seen hiking in a California forest with a colleague, smiling and waving moments before she 'vanished off the face of the earth,' according to NewsNation.

For months, authorities and volunteers have combed the area using every resource at their disposal, but the aerospace engineer remains missing without a trace.

At a recent press conference, Sheriff John Allen said a Silver Alert was issued for McCasland after reports of a 'mental fog' in the months before his disappearance, adding that he had no other known health problems.

Yet despite an intensive search involving drones, helicopters, ground crews and K-9 units, the avid outdoorsman - and any trace of his belongings - also remains missing.

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US Air Force Major General William Neil McCasland (pictured), 68, who was in the UFO community, went missing in February after leaving on a hike near his New Mexico home

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Months before, 60-year-old Monica Reza (pictured), who had worked on a rocket project overseen by McCasland as an aerospace scientist, also went missing during a hike

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McCasland's disappearance came days after President Trump pledged to release files on UFOs and extraterrestrial life

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'Let me be straight. We've had a lot of tips, and we will go through every tip. But there are some tips with some outlandish theories, conspiracy theories,' the sheriff said.

'We will look into everything, but we are trying as a law enforcement agency and entity,' he added.

The general's wife, Susan McCasland, posted on Facebook to set the record straight amid what she described as 'misinformation' about her husband's disappearance.

'It is true that Neil had a brief association with the UFO community,' she wrote. 'This connection is not a reason for someone to abduct Neil.

'Though at this point with absolutely no sign of him, maybe the best hypothesis is that aliens beamed him up to the mothership. However, no sightings of a mothership hovering above the Sandia Mountains have been reported.'

Just nine months ago, Reza - known professionally as Monica Jacinto at Aerojet Rocketdyne as a material scientist - was last seen hiking on the popular Mount Waterman Trail in the Angeles National Forest in Los Angeles.

Like McCasland, she loved hiking. She was just 30ft behind the man she was with when she vanished on what was described as a 'normal day,' according to NewsNation.

'He turned around, next thing you know, she was just completely gone,' the outlet reported.

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McCasland's wife Susan (both pictured) shared that her husband's UFO ties 'is not a reason for someone to abduct Neil'

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In June 2025, Reza (pictured) was hiking 30 feet behind a companion on a Los Angeles trail when she 'vanished off the face of the earth'

'Rescue teams spent days looking for her, but actually never recovered her body.'

Reza worked for Aerojet Rocketdyne, a high-profile company funded for years by NASA and the Air Force Research Laboratory, according to SpaceNews.

In the 1990s, she engineered a nickel-based superalloy that could survive extreme oxygen environments without added weight - technology that helped create the AR1 engine, set to replace Russian RD-180 engines on United Launch Alliance rockets.

Her patented invention brought her into McCasland's sphere, as he oversaw the Air Force group that funded early-2000s research on advanced materials for reusable spacecraft and weapons systems.

McCasland's Air Force biography reveals he oversaw advanced materials as director of the Space Vehicle Directorate's materials wing and commanded the Phillips Research Site at Kirtland Air Force Base from 2001 to 2004.

His roles ultimately had a direct connection to Reza's highly successful research.

The general had also led research at Ohio's Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, which Marik Von Rennenkampff, a former Obama-era national security analyst, described as 'where all the super-secret research happens,' CNN reported.

On the day he vanished, McCasland spoke with a repair person at his home at 10am, while his wife left around an hour later for a medical appointment, the sheriff's office said.

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Reza (pictured) worked for Aerojet Rocketdyne, funded for years by NASA and the Air Force Research Laboratory, and created a nickel-based superalloy for rockets

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McCasland (pictured) oversaw the Air Force group that funded Reza's early-2000s research
 
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Maybe it is more sinister than aliens. Originally from a DM article.


A chilling pattern has emerged after a string of US scientists died or went missing in recent months.

Retired General William Neil McCasland, 68, and NASA aerospace engineer Monica Jacinto Reza, 60, were both major figures in the Air Force Research Laboratory. The general oversaw Reza's work on creating a futuristic metal for rocket engines.

Within the span of eight months, both have mysteriously vanished without a trace while allegedly hiking in the Southwest United States.

McCasland's reported ties to secret UFO programs at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, and Reza's work with space-age technology used for advanced propulsion, have led many to claim without evidence that the pair are fleeing from parties that wish to silence them because of what they know.

Independent researchers and even a member of Congress fear the pattern has grown even darker after three scientists in the fields of chemical biology, nuclear fusion and astrophysics were murdered or found dead in just the last three months.

One of those renowned scientists was working on a breakthrough that could one day revolutionize science, creating an unlimited energy source that may end fossil fuel use as we know it.

Tennessee Congressman Tim Burchett told the Daily Mail he saw a clear pattern in these seemingly unrelated deaths and disappearances, noting that the work several of them were doing has been linked to theories about extraterrestrial spacecraft.

'There have been several others throughout the country that have disappeared under suspicious circumstances,' Burchett said. 'I think we ought to be paying attention to it.'

Pictured: Monica Reza.

Congressman Raises Alarm Over Missing Nuclear Scientist

Burchett also blasted the nation's intelligence community, specifically calling out the so-called 'alphabet agencies' such as the FBI, for being unhelpful and frustrating his attempts to find out the truth about what has happened to these scientists.

'The numbers seem very high in these certain areas of research. I think we'd better be paying attention, and I don't think we should trust our government,' he warned.

McCasland has not been seen since February 27, when he suddenly left his home without a phone and was last spotted near Quail Run Court NE in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

The congressman specifically noted that McCasland's disappearance was a major national security issue, claiming that the general not only possessed some of America's nuclear secrets but also worked with recovered UFO technology housed in Ohio.

McCasland's name became associated with UFO topics after the 2016 WikiLeaks release of emails from John Podesta, Hillary Clinton's campaign chairman.

In the emails, musician Tom DeLonge, founder of Blink-182 and the UFO-focused To The Stars Academy (TTSA), referenced McCasland multiple times, claiming he had advised him on disclosure matters and helped assemble an advisory team.

The general had previously led the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson, which was rumored to hold extraterrestrial debris from the 1947 Roswell UFO crash.

'Everybody's talking about the UFO stuff,' Burchett said. 'Those folks are very secretive about what they know. So I suspect very much that [McCasland] was involved in some of that.'

William Neil McCasland, 68, was last seen near Quail Run Court NE in Albuquerque, the Bernalillo County Sheriff's Office said

Wife Says No Foul Play Suspected in McCasland Disappearance

McCasland's wife, Susan, claimed that 'foul play' was not suspected in her husband's disappearance, but noted that the avid hiker and cyclist left home with only a pair of boots and his .38-caliber revolver.

The retired Air Force officer did not take his phone, wearable devices and prescription glasses, leaving behind any way of tracing or contacting him.

Burchett also confirmed that Reza was working on special metals used in missiles and rocket technology, which raised questions for him about where those materials originally came from.

'I've talked to people in departments that say, in fact, they do exist. There is [UFO] material. We don't really know what it is or what to do with it,' Burchett claimed.

However, the congressman said he had also spoken with members of the intelligence community who claimed they had no knowledge about UFOs or the US military's alleged work to reverse engineer that technology.

'I honestly think that they both are telling the truth as far as they know it. It's a very compartmentalized issue,' said Burchett.

Reza was the co-inventor of the special metal called Mondaloy and was serving as the Director of the Materials Processing Group at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory when she vanished without a trace last summer.

Conspiracy theorists have noted that an online memorial claiming Reza was dead appeared on the website Find a Grave just four days into the search for the missing scientist.

That page has mysteriously been taken down after alleging that Reza was given a 'green burial,' meaning a body would have needed to be found, placed in a biodegradable container and put straight into the earth.

Investigators with the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department have not announced the discovery of a body, and the case remains unsolved.

Meanwhile, the deaths of the other three scientists have been equally disturbing.

Nuno Loureiro was leading efforts to create fusion energy, a form of clean energy that could upend the multi-trillion-dollar fossil fuel energy

MIT Scientist Nuno Loureiro Shot Dead in Boston

Nuno Loureiro, 47, was assassinated at his home in the Boston suburb of Brookline on December 15, 2025. Authorities said the gunman was Claudio Neves Valente, a former classmate in Portugal.

Loureiro, a respected physicist, had recently become the director of the Plasma Science and Fusion Center at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and was reportedly on the brink of revolutionizing the energy sector as we know it.

Loureiro's research centered on plasma physics, the study of super-hot, ionized gases, and how to apply them to fusion energy, a promising clean power source.

However, independent investigator Daniel Liszt has claimed that this obscure science has also been tied to speculation about the advanced propulsion of secret UFO tech, noting that Loureiro's background also involved neutron star mergers - a theorized source of unlimited energy.

Carl Grillmair was killed by a gunshot wound while on his front porch. The scientist have been studying exoplanets and dark matter at the California Institute of Technology

Scientist Known for Groundbreaking Exoplanet Research

Astrophysicist Carl Grillmair, 67, was killed in his home on February 16, 2026, after being mysteriously gunned down on his front porch around 6am local time.

Grillmair had contributed to the discovery of water on a distant planet, with colleagues calling his work 'ingenious' and adding that the research could point to signs of life less than 160 light-years from Earth.

The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department named Freddy Snyder, 29, as a person of interest in Grillmair's homicide case and later charged the man with murder, carjacking and burglary.

However, police did not release a motive in the alleged homicide and it was unclear if the two men knew one another or whether the shooting was targeted.

Grillmair lived in a rural home in Llano (Pictured). Police responded to reports of an assault with a deadly weapon and later arrested a suspect for carjacking and murder

Remains of Missing Novartis Scientist Found in Massachusetts

Meanwhile, the remains of 45-year-old Jason Thomas were discovered on March 17 in Wakefield, Massachusetts, at Lake Quannapowitt.

Thomas had been the assistant director of chemical biology at Novartis, a global pharmaceutical company, before disappearing on December 12, 2025.

His work reportedly focused on using chemistry and biology to discover and create new medicines, including potential treatments for cancer.

Novartis has active contracts with the US Department of War and has previously worked with the Department of Health and Human Services.

The Daily Mail has reached out to Novartis for comment on the nature of Thomas's work.

The Wakefield Police Department said that the cause of death still needed to be determined, but 'no foul play is suspected.'

Jason Thomas was found dead after being pulled from a Massachusetts lake on March 17. He had been missing since December 12, 2025

Congressman Warns Delayed Response May Hinder Investigation

When asked if the public was taking this mysterious string of events seriously enough, Burchett said, 'I'm thinking it is now.'

However, the congressman said he feared it had taken too long for the disappearances and deaths to gain mainstream attention, allowing 'the trail to cool off.'

'He might find [McCasland]... I don't want to speculate on what's happened to him, or where he is now,' Burchett said. 'But anytime there's a delay between the disappearance and us taking it seriously, that begs the question of why? Why were we not immediately paying attention to this?'

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