Security21:06 · Jun 14

Retired Air Force General’s Disappearance Raises New Questions After Fresh Footage Surfaces

WallaCenter
Translated & summarized from Walla by baba
The story · English

A new image has deepened the mystery surrounding the disappearance of retired Major General William Neal McCasland, 68, in a sprawling U.S. federal investigation that now involves 11 deaths and disappearances among scientists, nuclear workers and military personnel. The photo, released by the Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Office after a freedom of information request, shows McCasland leaving a sports and outdoor gear store in New Mexico on February 26, one day before he vanished from his home in Albuquerque without a trace.

In the picture, McCasland appears alert in daylight, wearing sunglasses and walking out with a large delivery bag and a small yellow item tucked under his arm. The contents of the bag are unknown, though social media users have suggested the yellow object may have been a compact first-aid kit. The reporter who uncovered the image said he may simply have been picking up a preordered item rather than wandering aimlessly.

The new footage fits with earlier reporting that McCasland met Pentagon Space Force personnel at a restaurant around 6 p.m. that same day, possibly just hours after the store visit. A witness told police he seemed unusually quiet and detached, despite his high security clearance and the fact that his name appears in classified documents due to be released soon. His wife, Susan Wilkerson, also told investigators that he appeared to be preparing for his disappearance.

According to police recordings of emergency calls, Wilkerson said McCasland left home around 11 a.m. on the morning he disappeared, taking only boots and a .38 caliber revolver that has not been found. He left behind his cellphone, wallet, smart watch and even his reading glasses. She also said he had been prescribed a new medication after symptoms of brain fog and concern over cognitive decline. Similar disappearances, including that of a former NASA scientist and a nuclear lab worker whose body was later found in a forest, have raised fears of an organized pattern, while former FBI officials say evidence may point to coordinated action against people linked to advanced nuclear and technological research. The investigation is ongoing.

Read the original at Walla
Open the live terminal