Since 2023, scientists and officials with access to nuclear and space secrets have died or disappeared, some leaving everything behind; Trump says the cases will be investigated
ed note–as always, lots of ‘must knows’ that every war-weary Gentile with a vested interest in his/her own future survival needs to understand about all of this.
Firsto, ladies and Gentile-men, while it is possible that the intelligence agencies of other world powers could be involved, there is ONE ‘state’ and its intelligence agency that already has a well-established record of engaging in the assassinations of nuclear scientists, namely those in Iran, and that’ state’ of course is the Jewish one.
Now, what is most troubling about this is WHY Israel would engage in such a risk as this, and particularly at a time when her popularity in America is sinking like a witness for the prosecution wearing concrete shoes in the East River of NY.
What new ‘project’ was/is the US government working on? Was there some new weapons system being developed by the USGOV that, like Israel’s race-specific bioweapons, targets Jews and leaves Gentiles unaffected?
Either way, as we point out often here on this humble little informational endeavor, there is much more going on behind the scenes than simply a case of this–

–which far too many ‘experts’ utilize as the lone piece of ‘evidence’ in coming to the kinds of conclusions that they do about the ‘bromance’ between POTUS DJT and the terrorist Jew Netanyahu.
Israel National News
The mystery gripping the United States in recent days seems drawn from a particularly conspiratorial Hollywood script, but it is beginning to alarm the highest levels in Washington.
Since 2023, 10 scientists and senior officials with access to some of America’s most closely guarded nuclear and space secrets have died or disappeared without a trace.
Public pressure is mounting, and on Thursday, U.S. President Donald Trump addressed the case for the first time. ‘I just came out of a meeting on this,’ Trump told reporters, calling the situation ‘very serious.’ He added: ‘I hope it’s random, but we’re going to know in the next week and a half. Some of them were very important people, and we’re going to look at it over the next short period.’
The President’s remarks came a day after White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt faced questions during a briefing about whether the intelligence community was probing a possible link between the cases. She said she had not yet consulted the relevant agencies but would do so and provide an answer, adding that if the reports were accurate, the administration would consider the matter worthy of investigation.
The delayed response has fueled public anger, with critics accusing the administration of failing to take seriously a potential national security threat involving individuals with access to sensitive information that US rivals — particularly China, Russia, and Iran — would seek to obtain. Republican Congressman Tim Burchett said citizens should not trust the government on the issue, arguing that the number of missing individuals in these specific research fields cannot be coincidental.
The case gained momentum about a month ago with the disappearance of retired Air Force general William Neil McCasland, 68. He was last seen leaving his home in New Mexico, leaving behind his phone, smart devices, and even his glasses, and taking only a handgun. His wife told a 911 operator it appeared he was trying ‘not to be found.’ McCasland previously oversaw the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, a site long associated with rumors of extraterrestrial research since the 1947 Roswell incident. His disappearance has fueled speculation within the UFO research community.
The circumstances of McCasland’s disappearance mirror other cases. Steven Garcia, 48, a government contractor who worked at a facility producing about 80% of the non-nuclear components for US nuclear weapons, disappeared in August 2025 after leaving his home in New Mexico with only a handgun, without a phone, wallet or keys.
Anthony Chavez, 79, and Melissa Casiazs, 54, an administrative secretary with high-level security clearance, both worked at Los Alamos National Laboratory — one of the most important nuclear sites in the United States — and disappeared in 2025 in the same manner: leaving on foot and abandoning all belongings.
The list has continued to grow. Monica Jacinto Reza, 60, a group manager at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory who worked on a space materials project funded by McCasland, disappeared during a trip with friends in California. Other JPL scientists, Frank Maywald and Michael David Hicks — who was involved in NASA’s DART asteroid deflection project — died under unclear circumstances. In addition, pharmaceutical researcher Jason Thomas was found dead at the bottom of a lake in Massachusetts in March after going missing in December 2025.
At least two died violently: astrophysicist Carl Grillmair, whose work was linked to the US Air Force, and nuclear physicist Nuno Loureiro, who led a breakthrough in nuclear fusion energy, were both shot to death in their homes.
Former senior FBI official Chris Swecker believes all of this is rooted in espionage involving intelligence agencies.