Where'd They All Go?

Air Force Maj. Gen. William Neil McCasland (ret.) took off his wearable devices, put his phone and prescription glasses down and left his home on foot February 27. He apparently took the time, however, to lace up his hiking boots, don his holster, and load his .38 prior to leaving.

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Stranger yet is that it took about two weeks from the disappearance for the first news story to hit. McCasland has the highest possible clearance in the Department of Defense and oversaw the most classified DoD projects, including so-called “UAPs,” unidentified aerial phenomena, what the department now calls UFOs.

His longtime wife, Susan McCasland Wilkerson, posted on Facebook about a week after he had disappeared. She insisted McCasland, 68, had no risk of dementia, was retired 13 years from the Air Force, and no longer maintained special access to DoD secrets.

“Neil does not have any special knowledge about the ET bodies and debris from the Roswell crash stored at Wright-Patt,” she wrote. “Though at this point with absolutely no sign of him, maybe the best hypothesis is that aliens beamed him up to the mothership. However, no sightings of a mothership hovering above the Sandia Mountains have been reported.”

This is an oddly flippant kicker to a post that was geared toward crowdsourcing any info that could be used to locate her missing husband.

Beege Welborn

I sent the news of the general's vanishing to Ebola when it broke, and we both thought it was the oddest thing ever. Neither of us had any idea it could possibly be connected to so many others in a single program.


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