Full Transcript

·YouTLDR

Here's What Nobody's Telling You About The "Missing Scientists" Cases | Ep. 1768

41:547,478 words · ~37 min readEnglishTranscribed Apr 24, 2026
AI Summary

Matt Walsh examines the recent viral phenomenon of 'missing scientists,' separating sensationalist tabloid filler from a handful of genuinely suspicious cases involving high-level researchers in New Mexico and Alabama. He concludes that while many cases are likely tragic accidents or suicides, the clustering of disappearances near national laboratories warrants an independent, non-governmental investigation.

The intersection of national security, aerospace research, and the potential for domestic intelligence operations touches on the integrity of the US scientific establishment and the limits of government transparency.

Section summaries

0:00-2:06

Historical Context: Operation Damocles

watch

Provides the necessary historical evidence that scientist assassinations are a real geopolitical tool.

2:06-5:15

Media Reaction & NBC Report

optional

Covers mainstream media coverage and White House interest but lacks deep detail.

5:15-15:45

Case Study: Amy Escridge & Anti-Gravity

watch

Crucial for understanding how 'fringe' science and potential mental health issues complicate these narratives.

15:45-16:48

Sponsor: Done with Debt

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Commercial advertisement.

16:48-28:21

The New Mexico Disappearances

watch

The core of the most credible evidence regarding the Los Alamos/Sandia cluster.

28:21-35:42

California Cases & Media Origins

optional

Explains how the 'viral list' was built and looks at California cases like Monica Reza.

35:42-37:48

Sponsors: Tecovas & Helix

skip

Commercial advertisements.

37:48-39:54

CIA Mexican Crash & Conclusion

watch

Uses a recent CIA cover story in Mexico to illustrate why government 'accidents' should be questioned.

Key points

  • Operation Damocles & State-Sponsored Assassination — Historical precedent, such as Israel's MSAD targeting former Nazi rocket scientists in Egypt and recent AI-enabled remote assassinations in Iran, proves that intelligence agencies actively target scientists to halt technological advancement.
  • The 'New Mexico Cluster' — Multiple individuals with ties to Los Alamos National Laboratory and Sandia—including Major General William Neil McCaslin and engineer Anthony Chavez—disappeared within a 10-month window, often leaving behind phones and wallets.
  • Tabloid Padding and AI Misinformation — Media outlets like the Daily Mail and Newsweek are accused of 'padding' the list of missing scientists with unrelated deaths (e.g., heart attacks or hiking accidents) to drive clicks, often misattributing quotes to credible journalists.
  • The Amy Escridge Anomaly — Anti-gravity researcher Amy Escridge died of a gunshot wound ruled a suicide after claiming she was being harassed; however, her lack of peer-reviewed work and the illogical nature of her alleged harassment (e.g., license plate switching) raise questions about her mental stability.
Israeli spies program the AI to compensate for the machine gun's movement in the back of the pickup truck as well as the input delay from the remote operation of the weapon. Matt Walsh
If you're going to suggest that shadowy assassins are taking out American scientists... you can't spend 60 seconds on the topic and then move on. Matt Walsh

AI-generated from the transcript. May contain errors.

0:00

Beginning in the early 1960s, one after

0:02

another, former Nazi scientists and

0:04

engineers were targeted for

0:06

assassination in an Israeli intelligence

0:08

operation called Operation Damocles. The

0:11

scientists had taken new jobs developing

0:14

rockets for Egypt. And it was very clear

0:16

that MSAD, Israel's intelligence agency,

0:19

didn't want that program to continue.

0:21

So, MSAD agents sent mailbombs,

0:23

organized driveby shootings, and in one

0:25

case managed to make a prominent arms

0:28

dealer named Hines Krug disappear

0:30

completely. As the New York Times

0:32

reported at the time, quote, "The expert

0:34

Dr. Krug, who once held a top post with

0:36

a uh Stutgart Research Institute for Jet

0:39

Propulsion Physics, disappeared in

0:41

Munich on Tuesday, he was last seen

0:42

leaving his Munich office for an

0:44

appointment." Operation Damocles was

0:46

ultimately a successful program. It

0:48

terrified Nazi scientists and it

0:50

certainly made the idea of working for

0:51

Egypt much less appealing. It was also

0:54

good practice for MSAD which went on to

0:55

conduct many more assassinations of

0:57

foreign scientists. Most recently in

0:59

Iran just a few years ago uh towards the

1:02

end of Trump's first term, MSAD managed

1:04

to kill Iran's nuclear scientists using

1:07

a remotec controlled AI enabled machine

1:10

gun that was hidden in the back of a

1:12

pickup truck that was parked on the side

1:14

of the freeway.

1:15

uh which there it is right there. Uh

1:18

Israeli spies program the AI to

1:20

compensate for the machine gun's

1:22

movement in the back of the pickup truck

1:24

as well as the input delay from the

1:26

remote operation of the weapon. So when

1:29

the scientists drove by, all the MSAD

1:30

agent had to do was press the button and

1:33

shoot him. And at the time Iran had no

1:35

idea what had happened that they assumed

1:37

that snipers had been hiding near the

1:39

freeway. Initial media reports suggested

1:41

that a a gun battle had taken place. And

1:44

for their part, the MSAD contributed to

1:45

this confusion by blowing up the pickup

1:47

truck once the target was dead. Now, we

1:50

sometimes hear about these kinds of

1:52

operations when they're conducted by our

1:54

own intelligence services or

1:56

intelligence agencies that work with the

1:57

CIA, like the MSAD. That makes sense.

2:00

It's effective propaganda that sounds

2:02

like you're reading a spy thriller. And

2:04

people on our side like to brag about

2:07

successful operations. But at the same

2:08

time, it's very rare to hear about

2:11

similar operations that are conducted by

2:13

foreign governments within our borders.

2:16

And there's only two possible reasons

2:18

for that. Either foreign governments

2:19

aren't conducting any assassination

2:21

operations on US soil or they're

2:24

conducting those operations without

2:26

being detected or at least without our

2:27

government telling us about them. Now,

2:30

especially with the war in Iran

2:31

underway, it's not hard to wonder

2:33

whether indeed American researchers are

2:35

being targeted without the government

2:38

telling us. And in recent days, as

2:40

you've probably heard, there's a lot of

2:41

concern about this possibility. It's

2:43

gone mainstream, and now the White House

2:46

uh is involved. Watch.

2:49

Retired Major General William Neil

2:51

McCasslin was last seen in his home in

2:53

New Mexico in late February.

2:55

>> My husband is missing. Tonight, his case

2:58

is at the center of swirling online

3:00

conspiracies over the deaths or

3:02

disappearances of at least 10 scientists

3:05

that have caught the attention of the

3:06

White House.

3:07

>> I just left the meeting on that subject.

3:09

So, pretty serious stuff.

3:11

>> An FBI spokesperson now confirms the

3:13

bureau is spearheading the effort to

3:15

look for connections into the missing

3:17

and deceased scientists. So far, there's

3:19

no evidence linking the cases. But among

3:21

the disappearances fueling speculation

3:24

online, Monica Resza, a former NASA

3:26

scientist who vanished this past summer

3:28

while hiking in California, and Alabama

3:31

based anti-gravity researcher Amy

3:34

Katherine Escridge, whose death in 2022

3:36

was ruled a suicide. Others have ties to

3:39

nuclear research, aerospace programs,

3:42

and classified projects.

3:43

>> That's definitely something I think this

3:45

government and administration would deem

3:46

work worth worth looking into.

3:48

McCasslin's disappearance has drawn a

3:50

lot of attention because at one point he

3:51

worked inside an Air Force base in Ohio,

3:54

long rumored to house extraterrestrial

3:56

debris despite repeated Air Force

3:59

denials. And his wife wrote on Facebook,

4:01

"It seems quite unlikely that he was

4:04

taken to extract very dated secrets from

4:07

him."

4:10

Now, whenever there's a confusing and

4:12

alarming story like this, the worst

4:14

thing you can do as a media organization

4:16

is broadcast a superficial drive by

4:19

report. And that's exactly what NBC just

4:21

did in that clip we uh played. If you're

4:24

going to suggest that shadowy assassins

4:25

are taking out American scientists or

4:27

might be, then you can't spend 60

4:29

seconds on the topic and then move on.

4:31

It's it's too important for that kind of

4:32

treatment. Now, to be clear, this is

4:36

obviously a story worth pursuing,

4:38

looking into. It's also a story that's

4:40

extremely easy for media outlets to mess

4:42

up. For the most part, they want the

4:44

number of dead or missing scientists to

4:46

keep increasing because that creates

4:48

more drama. And as a result, they're

4:50

they're not doing a deep dive into each

4:52

one. Instead, they're making you think

4:54

that every single case is equally

4:55

suspicious, which just isn't true.

4:58

There's a lot of distraction going on

4:59

here for one reason or another, and it's

5:01

drawing attention away from the cases

5:03

that deserve a second look. So today

5:06

we're going to go one by one through all

5:09

of these cases, all the scientists who

5:10

have allegedly been killed or who died

5:13

under suspicious circumstances. We'll

5:15

talk about everyone who was just

5:17

mentioned the NBC report and many

5:19

others. And uh we'll we'll do our best

5:23

to look at it objectively and figure out

5:25

if there might be something going on

5:26

here. Um so we'll start with Amy

5:29

Escridge because on the surface she's

5:31

the most disturbing case. Although when

5:33

you dig into it, there are a lot of

5:34

issues with the narrative uh that that's

5:36

circulating around. So Amy Escridge died

5:40

in Huntsville, Al Alabama on June 11th,

5:43

2022 at the age of 34. The cause of

5:45

death was a gunshot to the head, which

5:47

was determined to be suicide. Shortly

5:50

before her death in 2020, Escridge

5:52

claimed that she was preparing to

5:54

present major findings on anti-gravity

5:56

research, quote unquote, which has

5:58

relevance to UFOs and their propulsion

6:00

systems. although she needed approval

6:02

from NASA. And to this end, Escridge

6:04

started a now defunct website called the

6:07

Institute for Exotic Science, which she

6:09

said would provide a public-f facing

6:11

persona to disclose anti-gravity

6:13

technology. Escridge was also involved

6:15

in her father's company, Holocron

6:18

Engineering, which was supposedly

6:20

developing a triangle anti-gravity

6:22

craft, although they didn't get very

6:24

far. um anti-gravity research for the

6:26

record is not an established branch of

6:28

science and Escridge had no published

6:31

papers in any peer-reviewed publication.

6:33

Now, it's not to say that peer review is

6:34

the most important thing, but it doesn't

6:37

it does make it clear that she was not

6:38

an established leading US scientist or

6:42

anything like that. Uh now, in any

6:45

event, according to Escridge, she was on

6:48

the verge of a big breakthrough and

6:49

somebody wanted to stop her. uh a month

6:51

before her death, according to a UFO

6:53

investigator named Frank Milbour.

6:56

Escridge reportedly sent a text message

6:59

to a friend warning that her life was in

7:03

danger. And the alleged text read in

7:06

part, "If you see any report that I

7:08

killed myself, I most definitely did

7:10

not. If you see any report that I

7:12

overdosed myself, I most definitely did

7:14

not. The dominoes are being lined up all

7:17

over again."

7:18

Obviously, that's a very conspicuous

7:21

thing for somebody to write shortly

7:22

before they die of a gunshot wound to

7:23

the head. On the one hand, it could

7:25

indicate exactly what it says, that this

7:27

person was being harassed by people who

7:29

wanted her dead. On the other hand, you

7:31

need context for a text message like

7:33

that because it's also possible that

7:35

this woman was simply paranoid and

7:37

mentally unwell. And to make that

7:39

determination, you need context. Uh

7:41

David Wilcock, the paranormal content

7:44

creator, also repeatedly said that he

7:46

wasn't suicidal. And according to

7:48

police, he just shot himself on April

7:50

20th when they responded to a residence

7:52

uh where he was located. So maybe you

7:55

could fold that into this uh overall

7:57

story or maybe not. So with that in

7:59

mind, uh here's a podcast interview

8:01

featuring Escridge several years before

8:03

her death in which she talks about um

8:06

how a suspicious Lexus pulled up near

8:08

her apartment complex. She describes the

8:10

apartment complex as low income and says

8:13

that a high-end blacked out Lexus is in

8:16

an unusual site in the parking lot. And

8:18

supposedly this Lexus is part of the

8:20

larger plan to harass her. And so you

8:23

listen to this carefully and assess her

8:25

credibility. Watch.

8:27

>> Within 2 minutes of me saying, "Hey, we

8:31

should walk over there later and take a

8:33

picture of the license plate." We were

8:36

still standing there at the window

8:38

looking at it, talking about it. And a

8:41

Eastern European looking mother with a

8:45

black beanie dressed all in black in his

8:48

50s or 60s walked out of the apartment

8:51

directly across from ours holding a

8:53

license plate.

8:55

And he opened the trunk of the Lexus and

8:57

he took out some tools and he changed

9:00

the license plate right in front of our

9:03

faces.

9:05

And then he walked back to his apartment

9:08

and he put the old license plate on the

9:11

front patio and went inside,

9:14

left it outside. And it was literally

9:17

like, "Come get the license plate. I

9:19

have more. I have more where this came

9:22

from. Come get the license plate." And

9:25

then after that, the Lexus started

9:27

tailing me. And every time I saw the

9:29

Lexus, it had a different license plate.

9:32

It would be like Alabama plates, a

9:34

different state plate. It would be

9:35

random dealer plates, none of which were

9:38

local, just like cardboard temporary

9:40

dealer plates, none of which were any

9:42

local dealers. Every time I saw it, it

9:45

was different plates. It would follow me

9:47

to the gas station to go get beer. I

9:50

would go get beer at the gas station and

9:52

that Lexus follows me. And even my ex

9:56

called an Uber once.

9:59

He called an Uber.

10:01

The Lexus pulled out from the spot

10:04

across the parking lot from our

10:05

apartment, drove over to our apartment,

10:08

and said, "Hey, I'm your Uber here to

10:10

pick you up."

10:13

The license matched in the Uber app, but

10:17

they didn't have an Uber sticker or a

10:19

lift sticker.

10:21

You can't you can't drive Uber if you

10:23

don't have a Uber sticker. Like over the

10:25

past, this has been going on for like I

10:28

don't know four or five years. And over

10:31

the past 12 12 months, it's been like

10:33

escalating, escalating, like more

10:35

aggressive, more invasive, digging

10:37

through my painted, like digging through

10:39

my underwear drawer and sexual threats

10:41

over the past like 3 to 6 months. And

10:44

now I'm like, I have to publish.

10:47

I have to publish because like it's only

10:50

going to get worse until I publish.

10:52

There's no way out of this. There's no

10:55

way out of this up situation until I

10:58

publish.

11:01

So, the problem here is that um really

11:04

what she's saying doesn't make much

11:05

sense. I mean, there's no logical reason

11:07

why somebody would do any of this. If

11:09

she's a threat to somebody because of

11:10

her research, it doesn't make much sense

11:12

for them to send a Lexus and change its

11:14

license plates in front of her or

11:17

Moonlight as her Uber driver or break

11:19

into her house or look through her

11:20

underwear drawer. Um she also doesn't

11:23

mention any police report or any

11:24

surveillance footage or anything. She's

11:27

asking us to take her word for all of

11:30

this. And you might say, well, the Lexus

11:32

driver is trying to intimidate her so

11:33

that she doesn't publish her research.

11:35

These people are supposedly sinister

11:37

enough that they're capable of murdering

11:39

her, and yet they held off for several

11:42

years,

11:43

hoping they could scare her by changing

11:45

some license plates around. But if

11:47

that's the case, you have to ask, why

11:49

didn't she simply publish her

11:50

groundbreaking research online? Why did

11:52

she feel the need to wait for NASA or

11:55

peer review or anything like that? Why

11:57

would these shadowy figures allow her to

12:00

talk about their pressure campaign

12:02

online for years before they took her

12:05

out? These are all important questions

12:07

and no major news outlets are remotely

12:09

interested in answering them. One of the

12:10

things you need to be careful about as

12:12

you read stories about these scientists

12:14

is that a lot of outlets are extremely

12:16

sloppy with details. Uh many of them are

12:18

probably using AI to generate their

12:20

stories.

12:22

Um, for example, as you can see here,

12:24

the Daily Mail reported, quote,

12:25

"Journalist Michael Shelonburgger

12:27

testified before a public hearing on

12:29

unidentified anomalous phenomena that

12:31

Escridge was murdered by a private

12:33

aerospace company in the US because she

12:35

was involved in the UAP conversation."

12:39

Now, when I read that quote, I did a

12:40

double take because Michael Shelonberger

12:41

is a serious journalist. We site his

12:43

work on the show all the time. And if he

12:45

did the research and concluded that

12:47

Escridge had been murdered by a private

12:48

aerospace company, then I'd be very

12:51

inclined to at least take that story

12:54

seriously. But if you pull up the actual

12:56

testimony, Shelonburgger didn't say

12:57

anything like that. The attribution is

12:59

just completely wrong. It's just not

13:01

right. He didn't say anything about

13:03

Escridge or how she was supposedly

13:05

murdered. In reality, the claim came

13:07

from a retired UK intelligence officer

13:09

named Frank Milbour who got in touch

13:12

with Escridge before her death. He told

13:14

investigators that in his view Escridge

13:17

was indeed being harassed. In fact, he

13:19

claimed that Escridge had been targeted

13:20

with a directed energy weapon uh is what

13:24

he said. So, so who is Frank Milbour?

13:26

Well, he's also the uh source for the

13:28

alleged text message where Escridge says

13:29

that she's not suicidal. As it turns

13:31

out, he's a British paratrooper veteran

13:33

and intel officer who claimed that in

13:35

the late 1980s, the British special

13:38

forces shot down a nonhuman craft in

13:41

Northern England. Melbourne, who, you

13:44

know, doesn't have firsthand knowledge

13:46

of the shootown, but he claims that he

13:48

spoke to an uh MI6 officer named cenamed

13:52

John and the UK Air Force crew that

13:54

fired on the UFOs, which were supposedly

13:56

traveling at hypersonic speed. So,

13:58

that's where this all comes from. Uh

14:00

this is from the Daily Mail. According

14:01

to Milbourne, quote, "John said they

14:04

were tasked to secure and retrieve the

14:06

craft in the north of England. They were

14:08

flown in by helicopter. They established

14:11

a uh cordon, a perimeter, and they

14:14

approached the craft." He didn't

14:16

describe the craft. He just said it was

14:18

obvious that it was nonhuman, and it was

14:20

obvious that there were occupants who

14:21

had fled the scene on foot, or whatever

14:24

you call it. He said then it became a

14:26

task of tracking down these beings to

14:28

try to bring them into custody. Part of

14:30

the unit was left protecting the craft.

14:32

They would have left maybe six to eight

14:33

blooning

14:35

the craft and others who uh would have

14:38

been on foot quad bikes or 4x4s trying

14:40

to track down these entities that

14:42

escaped from it with helicopter

14:43

supporting. He said after that it was

14:45

totally passed over. He said scientists

14:47

and technicians came in and it was

14:49

completely out of our hands. We were

14:50

flown away by helicopter and we knew

14:53

nothing after that.

14:55

So, we don't get a description of the

14:56

UFO. We're only told that the aliens ran

14:59

away and that there was a hot pursuit of

15:01

some kind involving quad bikes, like

15:03

something out of a movie, and then the

15:05

whole thing was just dropped. The

15:06

government didn't kill Jon to keep him

15:08

quiet or anything like that, so he he

15:10

just told all his friends. Put simply,

15:12

Frank Milbour has a history of making

15:14

unverifiable, outlandish,

15:17

Hollywood style claims, and now he's

15:19

making another one. He's he's saying

15:20

that um this woman was hit with a

15:22

mysterious energy beam and harassed and

15:24

targeted for assassination.

15:27

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Now, on the other hand, there are

16:16

disappearances that are obviously worth

16:18

a deeper investigation. Consider the

16:19

case of 29-year-old Joshua Leblanc. As a

16:23

NASA scientist who worked on rockets and

16:25

nuclear propulsion last summer, he died

16:28

in a car accident. And here's how local

16:29

news reported on his death at the time.

16:32

Watch.

16:34

>> Joshua Leblanc grew up in New Iberia,

16:36

but he was working in Huntsville at NASA

16:38

as an electrical engineer. His family

16:41

reported him missing earlier this week.

16:43

His car was found Tuesday afternoon 2

16:46

hours away from his home with no signs

16:48

of him anywhere.

16:50

Joshua Leblon was well known in New

16:52

Iberia where he graduated from Catholic

16:54

High and later attended and graduated

16:56

from UL Lafayette. His family tells me

16:59

he last communicated with them at 4:32

17:02

a.m. Tuesday. They also told me he never

17:04

showed up for a job that he loved that

17:06

morning as well. What we do know about

17:07

his disappearance is this. Alabama

17:10

authorities did track his blue Tesla

17:12

Model 3. According to the Tesla car

17:13

data, it stopped for 4 hours at the

17:16

Huntsville International Airport, which

17:18

is about 12 minutes from his apartment.

17:20

The data shows his car left the airport,

17:23

traveled west on Alabama back roads

17:25

before crashing in Florence, Alabama.

17:28

Tuesday, 2 p.m., the car was discovered

17:31

in a body inside, but the body was found

17:34

burned beyond recognition, according to

17:35

family members. But the case has only

17:38

raised more questions. Leblah's phone,

17:41

his personal belongings, and even his

17:43

dog were all left behind in his

17:45

Huntsville apartment. Family members say

17:47

the detour and disappearance don't match

17:49

anything Joshua had planned for that

17:50

day. And now, they believe he may have

17:52

been abducted from his home.

17:56

Now, by itself, does any of this

17:58

reporting prove or even suggest that

18:00

LeBlanc was targeted by an intelligence

18:02

agency? No, it doesn't. Nor does it make

18:04

much sense for someone to use a Tesla to

18:06

kill him since Teslas have cameras that

18:07

are constantly recording. And while the

18:09

family has their concerns, it's also

18:11

possible that they're mistaken. But

18:12

given the circumstances, you'd think the

18:14

authorities would have investigated and

18:15

come up with some kind of explanation

18:17

for what LeBlanc was doing and why he

18:19

would have left his phone behind.

18:21

Normally, it's not hard to figure out

18:23

these kinds of basic details, but in

18:24

this case, none of those details have

18:25

been forthcoming. Maybe now that it's

18:28

getting more attention, that that will

18:29

change. And then there's another case

18:31

NBC mentioned, the disappearance of

18:33

68-year-old US Air Force uh Major

18:36

General William Neil McCasslin. And this

18:39

is where the cases are worth paying more

18:43

attention to. Now, unlike Escridge, uh

18:46

McCassland had an established scientific

18:49

career. According to the New York Post,

18:51

he served in senior Pentagon ro roles

18:53

involving nuclear science, space

18:55

research, and defense initiatives. He

18:57

also commanded the Air Force Research

18:59

Laboratory at New Mexico's Wright

19:01

Patterson Air Force Base where wreckage

19:03

from the 1947 Roswell crash was

19:05

purportedly shipped. Well, the Air Force

19:07

has denied that. During his career,

19:09

McCasslin also oversaw research at Los

19:12

Alamos National Laboratory in New

19:14

Mexico, which was famous for its work

19:15

developing the first atomic bomb. And

19:18

Congressman Eric Berles of Missouri says

19:20

that he had contacted McCasslin

19:22

concerning his research into UFOs. And

19:24

according to the post, quote, "My

19:25

hasselin also appears in the Wikileaks

19:27

dump of Hillary Clinton campaign manager

19:29

John Podesta's emails. Former Blink 182

19:32

singer Tom Delange was in frequent

19:34

contact with Podesta regarding UFOs and

19:36

identified McCasslin as his insider

19:39

source on you uh on alien intel. Leaked

19:42

calendar notification showed a meeting

19:44

scheduled between Podesta, Delange, and

19:46

McCasslin on January 24th, 2016.

19:51

Now, on February 27th of this year,

19:53

Massland, an experienced hiker, left his

19:56

home in Albuquerque without his phone or

19:58

prescription glasses. All he took with

19:59

him apparently was his wallet and his

20:01

hiking boots and a 38 revolver.

20:05

Now, before leaving at 10:00 a.m., he

20:07

spoke to repairmen at his home. His wife

20:10

left for a doctor's appointment at 11:00

20:11

a.m. 11:10 a.m. to be precise. And by

20:14

the time she returned an hour later, he

20:16

was missing. Couple hours later, his

20:18

wife called 911. Listen,

20:21

>> this is April. How may I help you?

20:22

>> Hi, April. My name is Susan Wilkerson.

20:25

Um, my husband is missing.

20:27

>> Okay.

20:28

>> And he's It's been about 3 hours and I

20:32

have some indication that he must have

20:35

planned not to be found. He's left his

20:38

phone. He changed his clothes into I

20:40

don't know what. I think he's on foot.

20:42

All of our cars and bicycles are in the

20:45

garage. I left for a doctor's

20:48

appointment at about 11:10

20:51

and uh he was here at that time

20:54

>> at the house and I got back from that at

20:57

noon and he was gone. He turned it off

21:00

and left it behind which seems kind of

21:03

deliberate cuz he's always got his

21:05

phone. He has a smartwatch. I don't know

21:08

if that's with him or not.

21:10

>> Has he ever done this before?

21:13

>> Never. nothing even remotely like it.

21:15

He's a retired Air Force major general.

21:18

He's very responsible, but he's also

21:21

facing some medical issues.

21:24

>> Do you have any video at your home?

21:27

>> No.

21:28

>> Has he been diagnosed with any mental um

21:30

disorders or anything like that?

21:33

Well, we've been seeing a dock for both

21:37

physical and mental in terms of anxiety,

21:41

short-term memory loss, lack of sleep.

21:45

The same doc I went to see today. Other

21:47

than saying if his brain and body keep

21:51

deteriorating, he didn't want to live

21:53

like that. But it seemed to me that was

21:57

just a man, I hate how this is going

22:00

kind of thing. because I told him, "Yes,

22:01

you do. Yes, you do."

22:04

>> Okay. We're going to send some deputies

22:05

up to talk to you, see if you can search

22:07

a little bit and see what's going on.

22:08

Okay.

22:08

>> Sure.

22:09

>> So, he has both mental and physical

22:11

issues. He's retired. He's given

22:12

indications that he might not want to

22:14

continue on with his life. Uh,

22:16

tragically, and his his wife believes he

22:18

doesn't want to be found, and he left

22:20

with a gun. Now, the police dispatched a

22:21

helicopter with an infrared scanner to

22:23

try to find him, but they said it was

22:24

too hot outside for the scanner to be

22:26

useful. Quote, "The mountain was just

22:28

lit up like a candle." Sheriff said, "We

22:30

couldn't differentiate from heat

22:31

signatures and the heat from the rocks."

22:35

So again, the simplest explanation is

22:36

clear. You can easily make the case that

22:38

in all likelihood, this elderly man with

22:40

mental health problems may have

22:42

committed suicide or become

22:43

incapacitated while he was on a hike or

22:46

attacked by an animal or fallen or any

22:49

number of possibilities. There aren't

22:51

any indications that he was actively

22:52

involved in any high level research or

22:54

was on the verge of any kind of

22:55

breakthrough at all. What makes this

22:58

case interesting is that in a relatively

22:59

short period of time, several other

23:00

people with connections to national

23:02

laboratories basically went missing the

23:05

same way. Within around 10 months, they

23:07

all disappeared without taking their

23:08

cell phones with them. Some of them had

23:10

weapons.

23:12

So, let's go through those cases.

23:13

Starting with 78-year-old Anthony

23:15

Chavez, a research and development

23:17

engineer who also worked in Los Alamos.

23:20

Spent most of his career working on a

23:21

dualaxis radiographic hydrodnamic test

23:25

facility which is involved in uh nuclear

23:28

weapons research.

23:30

And Chavez had long retired. He hasn't

23:33

been working since 2017. Like McAlin,

23:36

Chavez was last seen leaving his home on

23:38

foot with his car parked in the

23:40

driveway. Unlike Mccasin, Chavez left

23:42

behind his wallet. He was reported

23:44

missing in May of 2025 and still has not

23:46

been located despite an extensive search

23:49

for him. And then 3 months after Chavez

23:52

disappeared, 48-year-old contractor

23:54

Steven Garcia

23:56

also went missing. And he disappeared in

23:59

pretty much the same way. He was last

24:01

seen on August 28th, leaving his home in

24:02

Albuquerque at 9:00 a.m. carrying only

24:04

his gun, leaving his wallet and his keys

24:06

behind. Police said they had some reason

24:09

to believe that he may have been a

24:10

danger to himself. Watch.

24:14

>> This one is chilling to me because as

24:16

you said, it echoes Neil McCassen's

24:19

disappearance right down to the same.

24:22

The same thing, the state of New Mexico.

24:23

So Steven Garcia, I mean, he had a top

24:26

security clearance at Casey Nese.

24:28

>> Is that is that per a source though? A

24:30

source said that.

24:30

>> This is per a source. Um, yes, per a

24:32

source that was close to Garcia. But

24:35

look where he worked at KCNC, I mean

24:38

they manufacture 80% of non-uclear

24:41

components that go into building

24:43

military nuclear weapons. And uh I mean

24:46

he oversaw tens of millions of dollars

24:49

of assets, equipment, some classified,

24:52

some not. I mean, we don't know what was

24:54

going on in this guy's head, right? The

24:57

officials had said that he may have been

24:59

a danger to himself. He was seen

25:01

carrying a gun. And it sounds crazy, but

25:04

between Garcia and General McCasslin, I

25:08

have to wonder, and again, I know this

25:10

sounds crazy, but it could be an option

25:12

here. I mean, is is the government doing

25:14

this? Are are they taking out their own

25:16

people because of XYZ?

25:21

>> Now, the Albuquerque facility of the

25:23

Kansas City National Security Campus

25:25

manufactures most of the non-uclear

25:26

components that are used in weapons. At

25:28

the same time, a property custodian uh

25:31

isn't the most essential employee in

25:33

that facility. So, it's not clear to

25:34

anyone why he would be a potential

25:37

target for any reason. But again, the

25:39

similarity of these disappearances is

25:41

striking. And then there's another

25:43

disappearance to add to the list. The

25:45

case of 53-year-old Melissa Cas who also

25:48

worked at Los Alamos.

25:51

And uh Melissa Casios was not a a UFO

25:54

researcher or a nuclear weapons expert.

25:56

She was an administrative assistant.

25:58

There's no indication one way or another

26:00

that she had access to sensitive

26:02

information or research at all. She was

26:04

last seen in June of 2025 entering her

26:06

car in the afternoon after shopping

26:08

downtown. She reportedly dropped lunch

26:10

off for her daughter before saying she

26:12

was going to uh work from home. Um it's

26:16

the last site there you can see.

26:18

Investigators have since recovered a

26:20

pair of shoes that match the ones that

26:21

she was wearing. They've also discovered

26:23

that her phone has been uh factory

26:25

reset. But based on this information, if

26:28

we're being honest, there are about 10

26:30

million explanations for why she might

26:31

be missing. The most likely explanation,

26:34

of course, is that she was attacked by a

26:35

criminal who had no idea where she

26:37

worked. And when that happens, contrary

26:39

to what you might see on television,

26:41

it's actually not easy for police to

26:42

figure out who did it. I think about the

26:44

Nancy the Nancy Guthrie case, which is

26:47

still unsolved. If the the FBI can't

26:49

find out what happened to Nancy Guthrie,

26:51

then the odds are low that anyone's

26:53

going to be able to track down a random

26:55

administrative assistant. People are

26:59

much much less safe than we might like

27:01

to think. It's one of the reasons we

27:03

have the Second Amendment.

27:06

But the fact that we have so many people

27:08

all of them affiliated with national

27:09

laboratories at one point or another all

27:12

disappearing in a relatively short frame

27:15

frame of time is obviously worth further

27:17

investigation. That said, we do have to

27:19

acknowledge that

27:21

sometimes people die in strange ways.

27:24

Sometimes people kill themselves.

27:26

Sometimes sometimes people who say they

27:28

aren't suicidal and they're not going to

27:30

kill themselves do. In fact, that

27:32

happens a lot. Uh sometimes they trip

27:35

and fall while they're hiking. And

27:37

sometimes these people tend to live near

27:39

each other and work in the same kinds of

27:41

places. Los Alamos alone employs well

27:43

over 10,000 staffers. It's not

27:45

unreasonable to think that two or three

27:46

of them over the course of more than a

27:48

year might become suicidal independent

27:50

of one another. Recall that after

27:52

January 6th, several Capitol police

27:55

officers committed suicide. In fact,

27:56

within months of January 6, four

27:58

officers killed themselves. The media

28:00

tried to link that to January 6 itself.

28:03

They were claiming that these all

28:05

counted towards that day's death toll, a

28:08

death toll that was actually just one

28:10

Ashley Babbot. Now, in that case, the

28:13

attempt to draw a connection was absurd.

28:15

Um, is this another example of that sort

28:18

of thing of an erroneous connection

28:20

being drawn in order to prop up a media

28:23

narrative?

28:25

In the case of January 6, the m the

28:26

media narrative was uh driven by

28:29

politics. of course in this case is it's

28:31

driven by if it is if it is just a

28:33

narrative is it being driven by ratings

28:35

by clicks we don't know yet

28:39

but let's keep going because there are

28:40

more names to get through and I promised

28:42

that we would go through this

28:43

objectively and just give you all the

28:45

facts so we'll continue to do that and

28:47

again some of them are worth a closer

28:49

look reports that quote NASA materials

28:52

engineer Monica Reza who served as

28:54

director of the materials processing

28:56

group at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory

28:58

also remains missing

28:59

after disappearing during a hike in

29:02

California in June 2025. Reza is one of

29:05

four cases that are linked to Los

29:07

Angeles County, including Calteex Carl

29:10

Grilmare and uh two other Jet Propulsion

29:13

Lab experts, Frank Maywald and Michael

29:16

David Hicks. So, let's take these in

29:17

turns starting with Resa who

29:19

incidentally are not worked on projects

29:21

that were overseen by Macassent at at

29:24

one point. So, the local Fox affiliate

29:26

reports that quote, "Reza disappeared

29:28

while hiking with a friend near Mount

29:29

Waterman in the in the Angelus National

29:32

Forest. According to her companion, they

29:34

were roughly 30 feet apart when they

29:35

made eye contact. She smiled and waved

29:37

to indicate that she was fine. Moments

29:39

later, when the friend turned around

29:41

again, she had vanished." Now, she

29:44

disappeared in June of 2025, and her

29:46

body still has not been found despite an

29:47

extensive search and recovery effort.

29:50

Now, right away, we should be able to

29:51

point out the obvious, which is that

29:52

it's extremely unlikely that a CIA

29:54

assassin snatched her during this hike.

29:57

I mean, if you're going to run an

29:58

operation like that, it's probably a

29:59

good idea to do it when the target is

30:01

alone, not right next to their friend.

30:03

So, again, the default assumption here

30:05

should be that she fell off a ravine or

30:06

or, you know, or something like that. I

30:08

mean, that's the AAM's razor. That's the

30:10

simplest possible explanation. But the

30:12

other missing scientists from Los

30:13

Angeles County, uh, scientists are a

30:16

little harder to explain away. So here

30:18

is Carl Gilmare the Caltech scientist.

30:21

He was 67 years old specialized in

30:23

astrophysics at the infrared processing

30:25

and analysis center on campus. That

30:28

center also partners with NASA. Grill

30:30

Mayor was a renowned scientist who was

30:32

famous for his work on dark matter in

30:35

galactic structures as well as for

30:37

discovering the existence of water on a

30:39

distant exoplanet. A few months ago, uh

30:42

he was shot to death on his front porch

30:45

in Antelope Valley. Watch

30:48

>> the Caltech campus is in mourning

30:50

tonight after a renowned astrophysicist

30:52

was killed during a carjacking.

30:54

>> Carl Grillmeer was described as a

30:56

brilliant man, a man who helped us

30:58

better understand our own planet and the

31:00

vast universe that surround us. CBSLA's

31:03

Hunter Sards live at Caltech in Pasadena

31:05

with the very latest on this story.

31:07

Hunter

31:09

>> Juan Susie Carl was known here on this

31:11

campus for his humor and for his

31:14

creativity. Those I spoke to today said

31:16

this is not only a huge loss for loved

31:18

ones, it's a huge loss for the entire

31:21

field of science.

31:24

Shock and sadness on the campus of

31:26

Caltech as colleagues mourn the loss of

31:29

groundbreaking astrophysicist and

31:31

astronomer Carl Gilmeer.

31:33

>> We are shocked. This was so unexpected.

31:36

Carl was full of life. The 67year-old

31:39

killed Sunday in the Analopee Valley

31:41

spent decades devoted to understanding

31:43

the galaxies, studying the Milky Way,

31:45

and making groundbreaking discoveries,

31:47

helping scientists better understand our

31:49

planet. According to the Los Angeles

31:51

Sheriff's Department, they responded

31:52

early Monday morning to a shooting in

31:54

the town of Lo, southeast of Palmdale.

31:57

They say around the same time, reports

31:58

of a carjacking eventually led them to

32:01

the suspect accused of shooting

32:03

Grommyer, who was quickly arrested and

32:05

charged with murder and carjacking.

32:07

>> Now, the suspect who allegedly shot the

32:09

scientist before apparently carjacking

32:11

someone has been identified as

32:12

29-year-old Freddy Snider. Good luck

32:15

finding a picture of him. For some

32:16

reason, the authorities haven't released

32:18

one. I certainly couldn't find it. Uh if

32:20

they did release one, it's hard to find.

32:22

According to local reports, Snyder had

32:24

been arrested several months earlier for

32:26

trespassing on Gilmare's property while

32:28

armed with a rifle. And there's still no

32:31

official motive. But hearing these

32:34

facts, it's hard not to think of the

32:36

murder of MIT professor uh Nuno FG

32:38

Laurero in front of his home in a Boston

32:42

suburb.

32:43

As you as you probably remember, a

32:45

gunman shot the professor after killing

32:47

two students at Brown University. In

32:49

that case, it was pretty clear that the

32:50

killer was upset that his career was a

32:52

failure. and he blamed Brown while also

32:54

harboring jealousy for the professor's

32:56

success. At the same time, the Brown

32:58

shooter did kill himself. So, we don't

33:01

have a definitive understanding of his

33:02

motive either. And some of these lists

33:05

mention Michael David Hicks, who died in

33:07

July of 2023. I've seen his name come up

33:08

at NewsNation, New York Post, Newsweek,

33:11

and other outlets. He was a veteran

33:13

researcher at the Jet Propulsion

33:14

Laboratory for more than two decades.

33:16

There's no indication of how he died

33:17

exactly, so uh there's not much to go

33:20

on. no cause of death has been released.

33:21

For all we know, he might have been hit

33:23

by a car or died of a heart attack. A

33:25

lot of outlets are adding his name and

33:27

picture to other lists of missing or

33:28

dead scientists, which tells you

33:29

something that a lot of them are trying

33:32

to pad the statistics a bit. They're

33:34

trying to sell a narrative

33:36

that may not be entirely true. And

33:38

they're not and many of these outlets

33:40

don't really care if it's true or not

33:42

because they want the narrative. They

33:44

just want the clicks. This is this is

33:46

one this is one aspect of the story.

33:47

It's why it's worth looking into is the

33:49

total breakdown in trust. We can't trust

33:53

the news outlets.

33:55

You know, we know that we can't trust

33:57

who can we trust. Um and so when

34:01

something like this happens, it's it's

34:03

not clear what the actual facts are and

34:04

that's why we're trying to lay them out.

34:07

Now, the magazine um Unheard ran its own

34:10

deep dive recently into several of these

34:12

missing scientists. And while they're

34:13

more skeptical about the narrative even

34:15

than I am, they did include this

34:17

paragraph on the origins of the story,

34:19

which is pretty interesting, it's always

34:20

important to try to figure out when

34:21

everyone's talking about particular

34:23

topic where it began exactly. And here's

34:25

what they came up with. Quote, "Where

34:28

did this narrative even come from?" The

34:29

earliest article on this topic is dated

34:31

March 22nd, was published in Daily Mail.

34:33

It notes five missing scientists. Two

34:35

days later, a website called The Liberty

34:37

Line added another name, expanding the

34:39

list to six. According to its exac

34:41

account, the website specializes in

34:43

Philadelphia sports and whatever else

34:45

comes to mind. Right-wing media and

34:47

influencers kept adding names until we

34:49

reached Escridge with old cases treated

34:51

as breaking news. And finally, the story

34:53

made its way to Fox News and the White

34:55

House briefing room.

34:57

Now, what's frustrating about this is

34:58

that indeed there are several

35:00

disappearances and deaths that are worth

35:01

further investigation.

35:04

I don't think any reasonable person can

35:05

deny that. We simply don't have many

35:08

details about deaths that are obviously

35:10

suspicious and that involve very high

35:13

level scientists, including retired

35:14

scientists. But by the same token, no

35:16

reasonable person can deny that the

35:18

tabloids and even some major media

35:20

outlets that function as tabloids are

35:23

mainly interested in turning this whole

35:24

story into a circus. They're adding

35:26

names to the list that obviously don't

35:27

belong just so they can create paranoia

35:30

and drive clicks. And in the process,

35:32

they're distracting from some actual

35:34

investigations that need to happen,

35:35

particularly investigations into

35:36

Leblanc, McCastlin, Chavez, Garcia, and

35:39

Cas.

35:42

And show us the picture of the man who

35:43

killed the Caltech scientist. Otherwise,

35:45

as usual, a legitimate story is at risk

35:48

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38:07

Yesterday we talked at some length about

38:09

false flag uh the false flag operation

38:11

that took place in Charlottesville at

38:12

the Unite the Right rally during Trump's

38:14

first term. It was well funded,

38:16

wellorganized, highly effective. Whole

38:19

thing was engineered to give Democrats a

38:21

pretext to suspend civil liberties,

38:23

which they did. We might choose to

38:25

believe that these kinds of operations

38:27

don't take place on American soil, but

38:29

they do all the time.

38:32

At the same time, you'd have to be

38:33

willfully blind to think that

38:34

intelligence agencies, including

38:36

potentially our own, wouldn't want to

38:38

make certain people disappear, or at the

38:41

very least, they might lie about what

38:43

happened to those people. Just the other

38:45

day, for example, we were told that two

38:47

CIA officers died in a tragic and very

38:50

strange car crash in Mexico. Watch.

38:54

This is what Mexican authorities say was

38:56

a massive drug lab hidden in the woods.

38:59

You can see rows of canisters, bags, and

39:02

ovens. A rare look inside a secret meth

39:04

lab in northern Mexico. But tonight,

39:07

what happened after the law enforcement

39:08

operation is raising questions about US

39:11

involvement in the crackdown. A source

39:13

with knowledge of the matter tells NBC

39:15

News two CIA officers along with two

39:17

Mexican officials died following the

39:20

operation this weekend in a car

39:21

accident. Mexico's president Claudia

39:24

Shanebomb is promising a thorough

39:26

investigation.

39:29

So, this is like the line from Mission

39:30

Impossible about how the US government

39:32

will disavow all knowledge if you're

39:33

caught or killed. Everyone knows those

39:36

CIA agents did not die in a car crash.

39:38

But that's the cover story the US

39:40

government is going with. And again, it

39:42

happens all the time. And for that

39:44

reason, we simply cannot be satisfied

39:46

with the information we have so far

39:47

about these missing or dead scientists.

39:52

We don't know what's going on. I would I

39:54

it would be nice if I could end this

39:56

monologue by saying, "Well, I've gotten

39:58

to the bottom of it. Here's what's

39:59

really happening." That would make for a

40:01

that would make for a better title.

40:02

Anyway, gotten to the bottom of this

40:04

story. I haven't gotten to the bottom of

40:05

it. I don't know. That's my conclusion.

40:09

Um and I'll be honest with you that we

40:11

need an independent investigation, one

40:13

that's not conducted exclusively by the

40:15

government into each of those deaths

40:18

that I mentioned. Put all the facts out

40:20

there. Let us debate the merits of every

40:23

single case. Without transparency,

40:26

bodies keep piling up. Theories

40:28

multiply.

40:30

Tabloid articles spiral out of control.

40:33

Most of them will be way off the mark.

40:36

And in that environment, when an

40:38

intelligence agency does take out one of

40:40

its targets, no one, even the most

40:43

discerning observer, will have any way

40:46

of knowing.

40:48

That'll do it for the show today. Thanks

40:50

for watching. Thanks for listening. Talk

40:52

to you on Monday. Have a great weekend.

40:54

Godspeed.

41:02

>> I do believe that if people have

41:04

committed treason against the United

41:06

States of America, their statues should

41:09

not be in the capital.

41:11

>> History is written by the victors. And

41:13

since the 1960s, we've been told, mostly

41:15

by people whose ancestors didn't even

41:17

live here during the war, that the South

41:18

committed treason.

41:20

But if the Confederates were traitors,

41:25

then why was Jefferson Davis never put

41:27

on trial for treason?

41:30

What were Abraham Lincoln and Andrew

41:31

Johnson afraid?

41:33

Do they know something they're not

41:35

allowed to say today?

41:37

It's time for the truth. So, here it is.

41:39

Roberty Lee was a military genius and a

41:42

man of immense honor. He was beloved by

41:44

Americans from the North and South for a

41:46

century after the war. This is the real

41:49

history of the Civil War.

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