Investigators on social media think they’ve identified the anonymous accounts linked to retired Air Force General William Neil McCasland, who has been missing. One of these accounts made a startling claim about another general being killed in a deal involving nuclear materials.
McCasland, age 68, went missing from his Albuquerque, New Mexico home on February 27. Coincidentally, this is the same day the account ran by a self-proclaimed expert on aerospace and science shared its last post.
The account, which can be found at @tmbspaceships, claims to be operated by a “38-year retired active-duty veteran” of the Air Force with a doctorate in engineering. It lists various Air Force organizations as its previous workplaces.
Both the Air Force Institute of Technology and the Air Force Materiel Command are located at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, which McCasland oversaw from 2011 to 2013. He has a long history with the Air Force, including earning a doctorate in astronautics engineering from MIT in 1988.
A little over six months prior to his disappearance, Major General John Rossi stated that a two-star general who died in 2016 was actually killed for not handing over nuclear materials. This remark adds an eerie context to recent events.
Reportedly, the general died just before he was set to receive his third star and take command of the Army Space and Missile Defense Command. Investigators suggested his death was fueled by extreme sleep deprivation and job-related anxiety.
The account in question believes that Rossi did not take his own life, stating, “I don’t think he would have committed suicide.” It suggested he might have been targeted due to his stance on nuclear weapons and their management.
McCasland was known to have dealt with some of the most sensitive technologies in the U.S. military, holding positions such as the head of Wright-Patterson and deputy commander of the Space and Missile Systems Center.
Interestingly, McCasland had links to popular culture as well; emails released by WikiLeaks showed that Tom DeLonge, the musician from Blink-182, had been in touch with him regarding UFOs.
McCasland allegedly played a significant role in the creation of DeLonge’s ‘To the Stars Academy,’ which included various experts in the field of UFO analysis and research.
As the search for McCasland continues into its second week, officials have provided more details regarding the timeline of his disappearance. His wife, Susan, last saw him at around 11:10 a.m. When she returned from an appointment shortly after noon, he was gone, and the house showed no signs of struggle or departure.
Authorities noted that a .38 caliber revolver and other personal items were missing from their home.
Susan McCasland, who also has a background in government physics and military service, posted on Facebook after her husband’s disappearance, speculating about the possibility of an alien abduction. It was an unusual claim, suggesting that maybe he was taken aboard a “mothership,” though she noted there hadn’t been any sightings around the Sandia Mountains.
No further comments have come from her on the matter.




