
Ten government scientists with access to America’s most classified nuclear and aerospace secrets have either disappeared or been found dead under suspicious circumstances since mid-2024. The FBI has been mobilized. The White House just announced a coordinated review across every relevant federal agency.
And you’re finding out about it right now, in this newsletter, because the mainstream media has been too busy writing think pieces about Trump’s tie color to cover what might be the biggest national security story in a decade. Unbelievable.
We’re not talking about ten random people. We’re talking about scientists and engineers connected to Los Alamos National Laboratory, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and the Kansas City National Security Campus. These are the people who know how our nuclear weapons work, how our satellites operate, and what our classified space programs are doing. And they’re vanishing like characters in an Agatha Christie novel — except nobody’s gathering everyone in the drawing room to figure out whodunit.
Retired Air Force Major General William “Neil” McCasland disappeared near Albuquerque on February 27th. He left behind his phone, his glasses, and his personal devices. Just — gone. A two-star general who spent his career in classified programs walked away from his own life without taking his phone. That doesn’t happen by accident.
Monica Reza, a group manager at JPL, vanished during a hiking trip in California last June. Carl Grillmair, a Caltech astrophysicist, was shot and killed in February 2025. Anthony Chavez, a Los Alamos employee, disappeared in May 2025. Steven Garcia, a government contractor at the Kansas City National Security Campus, has been missing since August 2025.
And those are just the names we know.
Chris Swecker, a former FBI Assistant Director, went on Fox News and said what everybody with two brain cells was already thinking — this could be “modern-day espionage” and not coincidence. You think? Ten scientists with overlapping professional connections to America’s nuclear weapons infrastructure either dead or missing over a span of less than two years, and we’re still pretending this might be a coincidence?
Pop quiz: if ten Russian nuclear scientists vanished under mysterious circumstances, would CNN call it a coincidence? They’d have a countdown clock and a theme song within the hour.
President Trump addressed the situation on April 16th, and his comments were about as reassuring as a doctor telling you “we’ll know more in a week and a half.” His exact words: “I hope it’s random, but we’re going to know in the next week and a half. I just left a meeting on that subject. Pretty serious stuff. Some of them were very important.”
“Pretty serious stuff.” That’s Trump-speak for “somebody is going to have a very bad month.”
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt confirmed that the FBI is now reviewing all of the cases together — not as isolated incidents, but as a potential pattern. “No stone will be unturned,” she said. Good. Because right now there are a LOT of stones and not a single one of them has been flipped over in public.
Here’s what drives us crazy about this. If this were a Netflix series — ten nuclear scientists, classified access, mysterious deaths, government cover-up — everybody in America would be binge-watching it and posting theories on Reddit. But because it’s actually happening in real life, the same media that spent three years chasing invisible Russian collusion can’t be bothered to ask why America’s nuclear brain trust is being picked off.
McCasland and Reza reportedly worked together on a space materials project. Multiple victims had connections to JPL and Los Alamos. The cases span from 2023 to February 2026. Somebody is connecting these dots — or at least they’d better be — because the alternative is that America’s most sensitive nuclear secrets are walking out the door with people who aren’t coming back, and nobody in charge thought to sound the alarm until the body count hit double digits.
We don’t know who’s behind this. Could be China. Could be Russia. Could be Iran. Could be somebody we haven’t even thought of yet. But we do know this — when ten people with the keys to America’s nuclear kingdom start disappearing, “we’re looking into it” isn’t good enough.
Watch this story. Because if the media won’t cover it, we will.


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