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Here’s What Nobody’s Telling You About The ‘Missing Scientists’ Cases
Beginning in the early 1960s, one after another, former Nazi scientists and engineers were targeted for assassination in an Israeli intelligence operation called “Operation Damocles.” The scientists had taken new jobs developing rockets for Egypt, and it was very clear that Mossad — Israel’s intelligence agency — didn’t want that program to continue. So Mossad agents sent mail bombs, organized drive-by shootings, and in one case, managed to make a prominent arms dealer named Heinz Krug disappear completely. As the New York Times reported at the time, “The expert, Dr. Krug, who once held a top post with a Stuttgart research institute for jet propulsion physics, disappeared in Munich on Tuesday. … He was last seen leaving his Munich office for an appointment.”
Operation Damocles was ultimately a successful program. It terrified Nazi scientists, and it certainly made the idea of working for Egypt much less appealing. It was also good practice for Mossad, which went on to conduct many more assassinations of foreign scientists — most recently in Iran. Just a few years ago, towards the end of Trump’s first term, the Mossad managed to kill Iran’s nuclear scientist using a remote-controlled, AI-enabled machine gun that was hidden in the back of a pickup truck that was parked on the side of the freeway.
Credit: Darron Mark/Corbis via Getty Images
Israeli spies programmed 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. So when the scientist drove by, all the Mossad agent had to do was press the button to shoot him. And at the time, Iran had no idea what happened. They assumed that snipers had been hiding near the freeway. Initial media reports suggested that a gun battle had taken place. And for their part, the Mossad contributed to this confusion by blowing up the pickup truck once the target was dead.
We sometimes hear about these kinds of operations when they’re conducted by our own intelligence services, or intelligence agencies that work with the CIA (like the Mossad). And that makes sense — it’s effective propaganda that sounds like you’re reading a spy thriller. And people “on our side” like to brag about successful operations. At the same time, it’s very rare to hear about similar operations that are conducted by foreign governments, within our borders. And there’s only two possible reasons for that: Either foreign governments aren’t conducting any assassination operations on U.S. soil, or they’re conducting those operations without being detected — or at least, without our government telling us about them.
Especially with the war in Iran underway, it’s not hard to wonder whether, indeed, American researchers are being targeted, without the government telling us. And in recent days, as you’ve probably heard, there’s a lot of concern about this possibility. It’s gone mainstream, and now the White House is involved. Watch:
Whenever there’s a confusing and alarming story like this, the worst thing you can do as a media organization is broadcast a superficial, drive-by report. And that’s exactly what NBC just did in that clip. If you’re going to suggest that shadowy assassins are taking out American scientists, or might be, then you can’t spend 60 seconds on the topic and then move on. It’s too important for that kind of treatment.
To be clear: this is obviously a story worth pursuing. But it’s also a story that’s extremely easy for media outlets to mess up. For the most part, they want the number of “dead or missing scientists” to keep increasing, because that creates more drama. And as a result, they’re not doing a deep dive into each one. Instead, they’re making you think that every single case is equally suspicious, which just isn’t true. There’s a lot of distraction going on here, for one reason or another, and it’s drawing attention away from the cases that deserve a second look.
So today we’re going to go, one-by-one, through all of the scientists who have allegedly been killed, or died under suspicious circumstances. We’ll talk about everyone who was just mentioned in that NBC report, and many others. We’ll start with Amy Eskridge, because on the surface, she’s the most disturbing case — although when you dig into it, there are a lot of issues with the narrative that’s going around.
Amy Eskridge died in Huntsville Alabama on June 11, 2022, at the age of 34. The cause of death was a gunshot to the head, which was determined to be a suicide. Shortly before her death, in 2020, Eskridge claimed that she was preparing to present major findings on “antigravity research” — which has relevance to UFOs and their propulsion systems — although she needed approval from NASA. To this end, Eskridge started a now-defunct website called “The Institute for Exotic Science,” which she said would provide a “public-facing persona to disclose anti-gravity technology.” Eskridge was also involved in her father’s company HoloChron Engineering, which was supposedly developing a “triangle antigravity craft” — although they didn’t get very far. Antigravity research, for the record, is not an established branch of science, and Eskridge has no published papers in any peer-reviewed publication. That’s not to say that “peer review” is the most important thing, but it does make it clear that she wasn’t an established, leading U.S. scientist or anything like that.
In any event, according to Eskridge, she was on the verge of a big breakthrough. And someone wanted to stop her. A month before her death, according to a UFO investigator named Franc Milburn, Eskridge reportedly sent a text message to a friend warning that her life was in danger.
The alleged text read, in part: “If you see any report that I killed myself, I most definitely did not. If you see any report that I overdosed myself, I most definitely did not … The dominos are being lined up all over again now.”
Obviously, that’s a very conspicuous thing for someone to write, shortly before they die of a gunshot wound to the head. On the one hand, it could indicate exactly what it says — that this person was being harassed by people who wanted her dead. On the other hand, you need context for a text message like this, because it’s also possible that this woman was simply paranoid and mentally unwell. To make that determination, you need context. David Wilcock, the “paranormal content creator,” also repeatedly said he wasn’t suicidal — and according to police, he just shot himself on April 20 when they responded to a residence where he was located.
So with that in mind, here’s a podcast interview featuring Eskridge, several years before her death, in which she talks about how a suspicious Lexus pulled up near her apartment complex. She describes the apartment complex as low-income, and says that a high-end, blacked-out Lexus is an unusual sight in the parking lot. And supposedly, this Lexus is part of the larger plan to harass her. Listen to this carefully, and assess her credibility. Watch:
NEW: Researcher working on anti-gravity technology, whose death was ruled a su*cide, sent a text just one month before her death saying she would never kill herself, according to the Daily Mail.
Amy Eskridge was found with a gunshot to the head in Huntsville, Alabama.
Eskridge… pic.twitter.com/kUj5vrBPot
— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) April 22, 2026
The problem here is that, really, what she’s saying doesn’t make much sense. There’s no logical reason why someone would do any of this. If she’s a threat to someone because of her research, it doesn’t make much sense for them to send a Lexus and change its license plates in front of her, or moonlight as her Uber driver, or break into her house, or any of that. She also doesn’t mention any police report, or any surveillance footage, or anything — she’s asking us to take her word for all of this.
You might say, well, the Lexus driver is trying to intimidate her so that she doesn’t publish her research. These people are supposedly sinister enough that they’re capable of murdering her, and yet they held off — for several years — hoping that they could scare her by changing some license plates around. But if that’s the case, you have to ask: Why didn’t she simply publish her groundbreaking research online? Why did she feel a need to wait for NASA or peer-review or anything like that? Why would these shadowy figures allow her to talk about their pressure campaign online, for years, before they took her out?
These are all important questions. And no major news outlets are remotely interested in answering them. One of the things you need to be careful about, as you read stories about these scientists, is that a lot of outlets are extremely sloppy with details. Many of them are probably using AI to generate their stories.
For example, as you can see here, The Daily Mail reported, “Journalist Michael Shellenberger testified before a public hearing on Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena that Eskridge was ‘murdered by a private aerospace company in the US because she was involved in the UAP conversation.'”
Credit: The Daily Mail
When I read that quote, I did a double-take. Michael Shellenberger is a serious journalist. We cite his work on the show, all the time. If he did the research, and concluded that Eskridge had been murdered by a private aerospace company, then I’d be very inclined to, at least, take that story seriously.
But if you pull up the actual testimony, Shellenberger didn’t say anything like that. The attribution is completely wrong. He didn’t say anything about Eskridge, or how she was supposedly murdered. In reality, that claim came from a Retired U.K. intelligence officer named Franc Milburn, who got in touch with Eskridge before her death. And he told investigators that, in his view, Eskridge was indeed being harassed. In fact, he claimed that Eskridge had been targeted with a “directed-energy weapon.”
Credit: The Daily Mail
So who is Franc Millburn? He’s also the source for that alleged text message, where Eskridge said she’s not suicidal. As it turns out, he’s a British paratrooper veteran and intel officer who claimed that, in the late 1980s, the British special forces shot down a “non-human craft” in northern England. Milburn doesn’t have first-hand knowledge of this shootdown, but he claims that he spoke to an MI6 officer code-named “John” and the U.K.’s Royal Air Force crew that fired on the UFOs, which were supposedly traveling at hypersonic speeds.
Per The Daily Mail Milburn said, “John said they were tasked to secure and retrieve the craft in the north of England. They were flown in by helicopter. They established a cordon, a perimeter, and they approached the craft. ‘He didn’t describe the craft, he just said it was obvious it was non-human, and it was obvious that there were occupants who had fled the scene on foot – or whatever you call it. ‘He said then it became a task of tracking down these beings to try to bring them into custody. ‘Part of the unit was left protecting the craft. They would have left maybe six to eight blokes to cordon the craft, and the others would have been on foot, quad bikes, or 4x4s trying to track down these entities that escaped from it, with helicopters supporting. ‘He said after that it was totally passed over. He said, “scientists and technicians came in and it was completely out of our hands. We were flown away by helicopter, and we knew nothing more after that.”‘
So we don’t get a description of the UFO. We’re only told that the aliens ran away, and that there was a hot pursuit of some kind, involving quad bikes, like something out of a movie. And then, the whole thing was just dropped. The government didn’t kill John to keep him quiet, or anything like that. So he just told all his friends.
Put simply, Franc Milburn has a history of making unverifiable, outlandish claims. And now he’s making another one — he’s saying this woman was hit with a mysterious energy beam, harassed, and targeted for assassination. It’s simply not much to go on.
On the other hand, there are disappearances that are obviously worth a deeper investigation. Consider the case of 29-year-old Joshua Leblanc, a NASA scientist who worked on rockets and nuclear propulsion. Last summer, he died in a car accident. Here’s how local news reported on his death at the time. Watch:
A NASA nuclear scientist was found deceased in his Tesla after colliding with a guardrail, leaving his body so burned that he was completely unrecognizable, according to a new report from Fox News.
29-year-old Joshua LeBlanc, who worked on nuclear propulsion projects, died in a… https://t.co/C793en0aeU pic.twitter.com/8YIhgG7fE3
— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) April 22, 2026
By itself, does any of this reporting prove — or even suggest — that Leblanc was targeted by an intelligence agency? No, it doesn’t. Nor does it make much sense for someone to use a Tesla to kill him, since Teslas have cameras that are constantly recording. And while the family has their concerns, it’s also possible that they’re mistaken. But given the circumstances, you’d think the authorities would have investigated and come up with some kind of explanation for what Leblanc was doing, and why he would’ve left his phone behind. Normally it’s not hard to figure out these kinds of basic details. But in this case, none of those details have been forthcoming. Maybe now that it’s getting more attention, that will change.
Then there’s another case NBC mentioned — the disappearance of 68-year-old US Air Force Major General. William Neil McCasland. And this is where the cases are worth paying a lot of attention to.
William Neil McCasland
Unlike Eskridge, McCasland had an established scientific career. According to the New York Post, he “served in senior Pentagon roles involving nuclear science, space research and defense initiatives. He also commanded the Air Force Research Laboratory at New Mexico’s Wright-Patterson Air Force Base — where wreckage from the 1947 Roswell crash was purportedly shipped.” (Although the Air Force has denied that.) During his career, McCasland also oversaw research at Los Alamos National Laboratory, in New Mexico, which was famous for its work developing the first atomic bomb.
Congressman Eric Burlison of Missouri says he had contacted McCasland concerning his research into UFOs. And according to the Post, “McCasland also appears in the Wikileaks dump of Hillary Clinton campaign manager John Podesta’s emails. Former Blink-182 singer Tom DeLonge was in frequent contact with Podesta regarding UFOs and identified McCasland as his insider source on alien intel. Leaked calendar notifications showed a meeting scheduled between Podesta, DeLonge and McCasland on Jan. 24, 2016.”
On February 27 of this year, McCasland — an experienced hiker — left his home in Albuquerque without his phone or prescription glasses. All he took with him, apparently, was his wallet, hiking boots, and a .38-caliber revolver. Before leaving, at 10 a.m., he spoke to repairman at his home. His wife left for a doctor’s appointment at 11:10 a.m., and by the time she returned an hour later, he was missing. A couple hours later, his wife called 911. Listen:
So he has both mental and physical issues. He’s retired. He’s given indications that he might not want to continue on with his life, and his wife believes he doesn’t want to be found. And he left with a gun. The police dispatched a helicopter with an infrared scanner to try to find him, but they said it was too hot outside for the scanner to be useful.
“The mountain was just lit up like a candle,” a sheriff said. “We couldn’t differentiate from heat signatures and the heat from the rocks.”
So again, the simplest explanation is clear. You can easily make the case that, in all likelihood, this elderly man with mental health problems may have committed suicide, or become incapacitated while he was on a hike, or attacked by an animal, or any number of possibilities. There aren’t any indications that he was actively involved in any high-level research, or was on the verge of any kind of breakthrough.
What makes his case interesting is that, in a relatively short period of time, several other people with connections to national laboratories basically went missing the same way. Within around 10 months, they all disappeared without taking their cellphones with them. And some of them had weapons. So let’s go through those cases, starting with 78-year-old Anthony Chavez, a research and development engineer who also worked at Los Alamos. He spent most of his career working on a “Dual-Axis Radiographic Hydrodynamic Test” facility, which is involved in nuclear weapons research.
Anthony Chavez
Chavez had long retired. He hasn’t been working since 2017. And like McCasland, Chavez was last seen leaving his home on foot, with his car parked in the driveway — only, unlike McCasland, Chavez left behind his wallet. He was reported missing in May of 2025, and he still hasn’t been located, despite an extensive search.
Then, three months after Chavez disappeared, 48-year-old contractor Steven Garcia also went missing.
Steven Garcia
And he disappeared in pretty much the same way. He was last seen on August 28 leaving his home in Albuquerque at 9 a.m., carrying only his gun, and leaving his wallet and keys behind. Police said they had some reason to believe he may have been a danger to himself. Watch: