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FBI Probes Links In At Least 10 Secret Government Lab Deaths And Disappearances

The FBI is investigating possible links among at least 10 deaths and disappearances of staff at secret U.S. government laboratories. The cases stretch back to 2022 and involve personnel tied to nuclear, aerospace and space-technology work. Reported incidents include missing retired Maj. Gen. William Neil McCasland, a burned Tesla that killed NASA engineer Joshua LeBlanc, and the fatal shooting of Caltech scientist Carl Grillmair.

News organizations and lawmakers have compiled lists ranging from 10 to 11 individuals, and the White House says it is reviewing the cases with all relevant agencies and the FBI. House Oversight Chair James Comer and Rep. Eric Burlison have demanded briefings and formal records from the Defense Department, NASA and the Department of Energy. The Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration says it is looking into reports about employees at its labs, plants and sites. President Trump said he had "just left a meeting," called the situation "pretty serious," and expected answers in about a week and a half. Some officials and experts caution there is not yet public evidence tying all cases together and warn against leaping to conspiratorial conclusions.

Early coverage, heavily driven by Fox reports, emphasized a striking pattern and named many cases, prompting lawmakers and public alarm. More recent reporting by CBS moved the story from pattern-spotting to confirmation that the FBI is actively investigating possible connections among roughly 10 staffers at secretive labs. Social media and OSINT researchers amplified both concern and detail, noting overlaps among several missing researchers and highlighting specific case facts and timelines. At the same time, some former officials and independent experts told CBS and others they see no obvious single explanation, underscoring the limits of public information.

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This story is compiled from 16 sources using AI-assisted curation and analysis. Original reporting is attributed below. Learn about our methodology.

📌 Key Facts

  • The FBI is conducting a formal probe into possible connections among at least 10 deaths and disappearances of staff who worked at secretive U.S. government laboratories; some outlets report an 11th related case has been identified (Amy Eskridge).
  • Those named in reporting include current and former employees tied to nuclear and space programs and sensitive sites (examples: retired Maj. Gen. William Neil McCasland — missing; NASA engineer Joshua LeBlanc — found dead in a burned Tesla; JPL materials engineer Monica Jacinto Reza — missing; Los Alamos–linked employees Anthony Chavez and Melissa Casias; contractor Steven Garcia; pharmaceutical scientist Jason Thomas — later found in a lake; Caltech scientist Carl Grillmair — shot; Nuno Loureiro — shot; plus others whose causes remain undisclosed).
  • Federal agencies and the White House say they are reviewing the cases: the Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration and NASA acknowledged they are looking into reports and coordinating with relevant agencies, and White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said officials and the FBI are reviewing the incidents together; President Trump said he had been briefed, called the situation "pretty serious," and expected more answers soon.
  • House Oversight Chair James Comer and Rep. Eric Burlison have sent formal letters and demanded briefings from the FBI, Department of Defense, NASA and the Department of Energy about the cluster of deaths and disappearances, warning that "something sinister" could be involved.
  • Reporting provides specific, sometimes unusual case details: McCasland reportedly left home without a phone and prescription glasses but with a handgun and boots; Joshua LeBlanc was reported missing from his Huntsville home, left his phone and wallet, and was later found in a burned Tesla with vehicle data showing it had sat at an airport earlier that morning; Amy Eskridge died by a reported self-inflicted gunshot in 2022 after publicly claiming an "antigravity" breakthrough and alleging harassment; some other cases involved shootings or have no publicly disclosed cause or autopsy information.
  • Media and commentators have amplified concern (e.g., physicist Michio Kaku and TV personalities calling the pattern "unheard of" or troubling), while energy-security and law-enforcement experts and a former DOE official have cautioned there is no publicly confirmed evidence linking the cases and warned against conspiratorial social‑media theories.
  • Investigations remain active and largely case-by-case: local authorities continue their probes with FBI assistance where requested, and unrelated investigations (for example, an NTSB/FAA probe into a separate plane crash that killed aerospace engineer James 'Tony' Moffatt and his family) are ongoing; no publicly released findings yet establish a definitive common cause linking the cluster.

📰 Source Timeline (16)

Follow how coverage of this story developed over time

April 22, 2026
3:39 PM
NASA nuclear engineer found dead in burned Tesla after vanishing from his Alabama home last year
Fox News
New information:
  • Identifies NASA nuclear engineer Joshua LeBlanc, 29, as one of the scientists who died under circumstances now being grouped with other cases.
  • Details his July 22, 2025 death in Huntsville, Alabama, including that his Tesla collided with a guardrail and several trees before burning, leaving his body and car burned beyond recognition.
  • Reports that LeBlanc was reported missing at 4:32 a.m. the same day, having left his phone and wallet at home and failed to show up at his NASA job.
  • Says investigators used Tesla Sentry Mode data to track the vehicle, finding it had sat at Huntsville’s airport for about four hours on the morning of his death before the crash.
  • Specifies LeBlanc’s role as a team lead for NASA’s Space Nuclear Propulsion instrumentation and control maturation and later for the DRACO nuclear thermal propulsion engine.
  • Notes that family members initially feared he had been abducted and viewed his behavior that day as highly uncharacteristic, including lack of communication and an unexplained westward trip.
April 21, 2026
10:50 PM
FBI investigating deaths, disappearances of staff at secretive government laboratories
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • CBS report explicitly states the FBI is investigating 'possible connections' between the 10 missing or dead scientists and staff cases, tightening the focus on linked incidents rather than just a loose cluster.
  • The CBS segment specifies that all 10 individuals worked at 'sensitive nuclear or space technology laboratories,' underscoring the national-security nature of the labs.
  • The report attributes the information directly to an FBI investigation and on-air reporting by CBS journalist Anna Schecter, reinforcing that this is not just media pattern-spotting but a confirmed federal probe.
9:16 PM
Investigation into deaths, disappearances of staff at secretive government labs
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • CBS reports that the FBI is actively investigating the cases of at least 10 staffers at secret government labs who have died or disappeared.
  • The segment frames the incidents explicitly as involving personnel at 'secret government labs,' rather than only individual cases like McCasland.
  • CBS positions this as a consolidated federal inquiry, indicating the bureau is formally looking across multiple incidents.
8:06 PM
Aerospace defense engineer, military veteran killed in plane crash with family
Fox News
New information:
  • Identifies James 'Tony' Moffatt, a 60-year-old decorated military pilot and aerospace engineer with NASA ties, as a new scientist whose death is being discussed alongside the 11 earlier cases.
  • Reports that Moffatt, his wife Leasa, and their adult sons Andrew and William were killed when their Mooney M20 single-engine plane crashed near Union County, South Carolina, around 6:30 p.m. on April 17, 2026, during a return flight to Huntsville, Alabama.
  • States that NTSB and FAA have opened investigations but have not yet determined a cause of the crash.
  • Details Moffatt's background: 21-year military career, training as an experimental test pilot at the U.S. Naval Test Pilot School, work as a payload and flight crew support specialist at NASA's Johnson Space Center on 14 Space Shuttle ISS construction missions, and later role as a principal research engineer at the University of Alabama in Huntsville.
  • Notes that Andrew Moffatt, 30, was himself a research engineer and scientist at the University of Alabama in Huntsville's Research and Engineering Support Center.
  • Highlights that Fox framing explicitly raises the question of whether the crash is related to the previously noted 11 scientist deaths and disappearances, though no evidence of a link is provided.
5:26 PM
Missing scientists probe was sparked after 'UFO General' disappeared, Republican lawmaker reveals
Fox News
New information:
  • Rep. Eric Burlison says the disappearance of retired Air Force Maj. Gen. William Neil McCasland, dubbed the 'UFO general,' was a key trigger for the new congressional investigation.
  • Burlison reveals his staff had already been trying to contact McCasland for a separate investigation when the general vanished from his Albuquerque home in February.
  • New details from the Bernalillo County Sheriff's Office: McCasland's phone and prescription glasses were left behind, while his hiking boots, wallet and a .38‑caliber revolver were missing.
  • Burlison states that in roughly a five‑month span, four or five people involved in advanced aerospace research have disappeared after walking out their front doors and never returning.
  • House Oversight Chair James Comer and Burlison have sent letters to the FBI, Department of War, NASA and Department of Energy demanding information and a staff‑level briefing by April 27.
12:27 PM
Nancy Grace warns of troubling 'pattern' in deaths and disappearances of 11 scientists
Fox News
New information:
  • Nancy Grace, on Fox News' 'Hannity', publicly alleged a troubling 'pattern' among 11 nuclear and space-linked American scientists dead or missing since 2022.
  • Grace emphasized claimed overlaps including work on anti-gravity propulsion, heat-resistant materials, propulsion systems, and, in some cases, links to the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory.
  • She highlighted that several cases allegedly lacked autopsies or public autopsy reports and that multiple scientists were last seen leaving home, reportedly without their phones, wallets, keys, or cars.
  • The Fox segment reiterated that at least 11 people in sensitive national-security fields have died or vanished since 2022, most tied to nuclear science, space research, or unidentified anomalous phenomena studies.
  • The piece notes that Hicks' and Maiwald's causes of death remain unknown, while others were shot, died by an apparent self-inflicted gunshot, or were later found after going missing.
12:04 AM
NASA coordinating with relevant agencies in missing scientists probe
Fox News
New information:
  • NASA spokesperson Bethany Stephens said on X that NASA is coordinating and cooperating with relevant agencies regarding the missing scientists and that nothing currently indicates a NASA-related national security threat.
  • The White House, via press secretary Karoline Leavitt, said it is working with all relevant agencies and the FBI to holistically review all cases together and look for potential patterns.
  • Fox now lists 11 scientists dead or missing since 2022, not 10, and provides a fuller roster of names and causes or circumstances where known.
  • House Oversight Chair James Comer publicly said "something sinister" could be involved and specified that his committee has formally reached out to the Department of War, FBI, NASA, and Department of Energy for all information on the 11 individuals.
April 20, 2026
2:00 PM
Lawmakers demand answers as scientists tied to US secrets die or vanish
Fox News
New information:
  • Confirms that on Monday, Oversight Chair James Comer and Subcommittee Chair Eric Burlison sent formal briefing requests to the FBI, Department of Energy, NASA and the Department of War.
  • Clarifies that Comer and Burlison describe current evidence as 'unconfirmed public reporting' and say they are seeking to determine whether any broader national security risk exists.
  • Reports the Department of War's response that it has 'no active national security investigations' involving any current or former personnel tied to the cited cases.
  • Adds fresh White House reaction: Press secretary Karoline Leavitt says officials are working with relevant agencies to gather more information, and President Trump says he 'just left a meeting' on the matter and calls it 'pretty serious stuff.'
  • Provides additional narrative detail on several cases, including retired Air Force Maj. Gen. William 'Neil' McCasland leaving home with a wallet and firearm but no other personal items, and JPL materials engineer Monica Reza disappearing during a California hike in June 2025.
  • Notes lawmakers cited possible professional connections among some of the scientists via past Air Force–funded research on advanced materials for space and weapons systems, while authorities have not indicated the incidents are linked.
April 19, 2026
3:19 PM
Comer warns ‘something sinister’ may be behind deaths, disappearances of 11 nuclear, space-linked scientists
Fox News
New information:
  • House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer has sent formal letters to the Department of War (Pentagon/DoD), FBI, NASA, and Department of Energy demanding information on 11 specific scientist deaths and disappearances.
  • Comer publicly warned on Fox & Friends Weekend that 'something sinister could be happening' and said he plans to bring agency leaders before Congress after they review his inquiries.
  • The article names all 11 individuals in the cluster, including their roles and affiliations, tying several directly to NASA, Los Alamos and other sensitive programs.
  • President Donald Trump said he 'just left a meeting on that subject,' called the situation 'pretty serious,' and said he expects to know within about 'a week and a half' whether the pattern is random.
  • The National Nuclear Security Administration confirmed it is 'looking into the matter' in response to renewed attention.
12:00 PM
String of scientist deaths, vanishings fuels expert talks of shadow ops and silenced secrets: 'Very serious'
Fox News
New information:
  • Fox identifies at least 11 specific individuals who have died or vanished since 2022, most tied to nuclear science, space research, or related work, and names several with photos and role details.
  • New case specifics include the February 16, 2026 shooting death of Caltech scientist Carl Grillmair outside his home, with 29-year-old Freddy Snyder charged with his murder.
  • Details on other cases include the December 2025 shooting of Nuno Loureiro at his Massachusetts home tied to a Brown University mass shooting, and the later discovery of Novartis scientist Jason Thomas's body in Lake Quannapowitt after he went missing.
  • The article reiterates that causes of death for some, including former JPL scientist Michael David Hicks and NASA JPL scientist Frank Maiwald, remain publicly undisclosed.
  • It restates that aerospace engineer Monica Reza, Kansas City National Security Campus worker Steven Garcia, retired Air Force Gen. William Neil McCasland, and others remain missing under what are described as suspicious circumstances.
  • An expert quoted by Fox raises the possibility that some of the scientists could have been targeted for their knowledge or forced to disappear for their own protection, although this is presented as speculation rather than confirmed fact.
April 18, 2026
11:00 AM
Renowned physicist alarmed by 'unheard of' number of scientists dying or vanishing now on White House's radar
Fox News
New information:
  • Identifies Dr. Michio Kaku as a prominent physicist publicly warning that at least 10 scientists with advanced security clearances have died or vanished, calling the pattern 'unheard of.'
  • Provides concrete case details for several incidents, including the Feb. 27 disappearance of retired Maj. Gen. William Neil McCasland from his New Mexico home, leaving phone, keys and glasses but taking a handgun and boots.
  • Names two additional missing former Los Alamos National Laboratory employees, Anthony Chavez and Melissa Casias, including dates and circumstances of their disappearances and their ties to the lab.
  • Quotes NNSA acknowledging that it is aware of reports related to employees of its labs, plants and sites and is 'looking into the matter.'
  • Quotes White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt confirming that the administration and FBI are 'actively reviewing all cases' to look for potential commonalities.
April 17, 2026
9:19 PM
What we know about deaths, disappearances of staff at government labs
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • President Trump told reporters he had 'just left a meeting' on the disappearances and deaths and called it 'pretty serious stuff,' while adding he hopes it is a coincidence.
  • CBS reports the FBI is not currently leading a unified pattern investigation but is 'aware and providing all assistance requested' as local cases proceed.
  • The Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration issued a statement saying it is 'aware of reports related to employees of our labs, plants, and sites and is looking into the matter.'
  • Retired Maj. Gen. William Neil McCasland, 68, former commander of the Air Force Research Laboratory, has been missing from the Albuquerque area since late February and is one of four current or former employees at sensitive sites who have gone missing in New Mexico over roughly the last year.
  • A former Department of Energy official told CBS there is no evidence the cases are linked and emphasized that many lab employees hold mundane, non-sensitive jobs despite 'sketchy sounding' titles.
  • Multiple energy security and law enforcement experts interviewed by CBS said they see no obvious link between the individual cases and viewed social-media theories as conspiratorial.
7:02 PM
White House reviewing cases of missing, dead scientists for possible links as 11th person identified
Fox News
New information:
  • White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt says the Trump administration is working with "all relevant agencies and the FBI" to review all identified cases together for possible links.
  • Leavitt issued a written statement on X promising that "no stone will be unturned" and that the White House will provide updates.
  • President Trump said he had "just left a meeting" on the cases, called the situation "pretty serious," and predicted answers within about a week and a half.
  • Fox News reports the list of cases has grown to 11 with the addition of Huntsville-based researcher Amy Eskridge, who died in 2022 at age 34.
  • The Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration acknowledged awareness of reports involving employees at its labs, plants and sites and said it is "looking into the matter."
5:40 PM
Rep Burlison demands FBI probe after top US scientists vanish or turn up dead
Fox News
New information:
  • House Oversight Committee member Rep. Eric Burlison has publicly called for the FBI and 'every agency' to investigate the cluster of scientists' deaths and disappearances.
  • Burlison says his office referred the case of Matthew Sullivan, who died by suicide under what he calls suspicious circumstances, to the Office of Inspector General and the FBI, and that the FBI deemed the referral 'credible and urgent.'
  • The piece recounts that McCasland's wife publicly posted on Facebook that he retired years ago and that it is 'quite unlikely that he was taken to extract very dated secrets from him,' injecting skepticism about espionage motives.
  • The Fox hit reinforces that at least 10 U.S. researchers with access to top-level secrets have gone missing or turned up dead since 2023, and highlights that several (including Monica Jacinto Reza, Anthony Chavez, Melissa Casias, Steven Garcia, and McCasland) reportedly walked out of their homes before vanishing.
  • President Trump is quoted saying he has just left a briefing on the cases, hopes they are 'coincidence,' and will know more soon, but he does not say whether he believes the cases are connected.
3:37 PM
11th scientist death emerges in string of missing, dead officials with access to US secrets
Fox News
New information:
  • Amy Eskridge, a Huntsville-based experimental propulsion researcher who died by reported self-inflicted gunshot on June 11, 2022, is now being cited as the 11th case in the cluster.
  • Eskridge co-founded the Institute for Exotic Science and publicly claimed in 2020 that she and colleagues had discovered 'antigravity,' after which she described escalating harassment, threats and sabotage.
  • She warned in a recorded interview that researchers who report unconventional breakthroughs can be pressured out of public view or 'disappear' from publishing, and said she felt forced to publish to protect herself.
  • The Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration gave Fox News a statement confirming it is aware of reports about employees at its labs, plants and sites and is 'looking into the matter.'
  • President Trump told reporters he had 'just left a meeting' on the string of cases, called the situation 'pretty serious,' and said he hoped it was random but expected answers within roughly a week and a half.
  • Fox names and visually highlights additional individuals in the cluster, including contractor Steven Garcia, Los Alamos–linked employees Melissa Casias and Anthony Chavez, and pharmaceutical scientist Jason Thomas, alongside previously noted names like Gen. McCasland and Monica Jacinto Reza.