Many Dead/Missing Scientists on the same Defense Tech for JPL, NASA, Wright-Patterson
All working on related advanced materials, directed energy, and weapons physics
I don’t know if this has anything to do with rumors I’ve heard recently of imminent disclosure of extraterrestrial contact. I can’t take any credit for putting this together. All credit goes to The Sentinel, and here is a summary portion of one of Sentinel’s recent posts:
“The entire chain of human expertise behind a strategic national security technology, the alloy enabling American independence from Russian rocket engines, has been broken. The inventor is gone. The commander is gone. The mentor is dead. Every person who held the complete institutional memory of how Mondaloy [a special nickel alloy that withstands very high temperatures] went from a laboratory curiosity to a flight-qualified engine component has been removed from the system.
At the same installation where that alloy was qualified, three more of the lab’s employees died in a single night, and the motive has never been established.
[Above left: retired Air Force Maj. Gen. William Neil McCasland, a former commander of the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson.]
At the institution that processes data for America’s planetary defense infrastructure, an astronomer was shot dead by a man whose prior arrest on that same property was dismissed eleven days before the killing.
At America’s premier nuclear weapons laboratory, an employee who sat on a DOE advisory board drove onto the campus, told her daughter she’d forgotten her badge despite apparently using it that morning, wiped her government phone, and walked into the wilderness four days after Reza did the same thing 800 miles away.
Five of the nine names in this briefing are women. Of the three who vanished without a trace, two are women, and both share identical signatures: belongings left behind, digital trails severed, no body recovered. Reza and Casias generated search and rescue. McCasland generated FBI and cable news. If you were selecting targets to minimize the speed and scale of the institutional response, you would choose accordingly.
Each case, on its own, has an explanation or an open investigation. The cluster does not.
No entity is examining these incidents as a cluster. The cases are distributed across six jurisdictions, three states, and at least eight investigative agencies. The structural architecture of the response guarantees that no one will ever see the list unless someone builds it.
We just built it.”
To read their full original post, click HERE
. . . . . . . .
There is little official “news” about all these dead and missing scientists. One of the strangest cases (aside from the guy who tied a rope to a tree and his neck then drove off at high speed, decapitating himself) says nothing of here high-tech defense industry background - she is just a “missing hiker”
I highly recommend you also read another related post by The Sentinel, briefly quoted below:
“On June 26, 2025, four days after Monica Jacinto Reza disappeared and three days before the official search was even suspended, someone created a memorial page for her on Find a Grave.
Memorial ID 284387277. Monica Jacinto Reza. Born December 30, 1964. Died June 22, 2025. Death location: Angeles National Forest, Los Angeles County, California, USA. Remains: Green burial… [This] was added while helicopters were still in the air looking for her.
Look up what “green burial” means. No embalming. Biodegradable container. Straight into the earth. You need a body for that.
No public reports indicate her remains were recovered. No obituary has been published. No death certificate is accessible through public databases. No funeral announcement has been issued. The Homicide Bureau Missing Persons Unit has not announced a resolution.
Someone declared Monica Jacinto Reza dead and buried four days into the search. While SAR teams from half the state of California were still combing the mountainside.” (from The Green Burial)
I gotta say, this is very, very odd and I’m glad someone’s pattern/anomaly recognition program has brought it to public attention.




