The body of Melissa Casias has been found in a remote area of New Mexico’s Carson National Forest, almost 11 months after the Los Alamos National Laboratory employee walked out of her home and vanished.
This discovery marks another chapter in the disturbing wave of deaths and disappearances involving individuals tied to highly sensitive government programs. It arrives after President Trump ordered full UFO disclosure and two sets of classified files have now been released to the public.
Casias, 54, worked as an administrative assistant at Los Alamos National Laboratory, the historic site of the Manhattan Project and a hub for ongoing nuclear weapons research. She was last seen alive on June 26, 2025, in Ranchos de Taos.
BREAKING: Human remains belonging to a lab employee have been found in the Carson National Forest in New Mexico.
— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) June 1, 2026
Investigators say a gun was found near the remains of Melissa Casias, who worked at the Los Alamos National Laboratory.
Casias was last seen alive on… pic.twitter.com/kBjzd6QW01
New Mexico State Police confirmed the identification of her remains after a hiker found them in the McGaffey Ridge area. A handgun was recovered alongside the body. The cause and time of death remain undetermined pending further investigation by the Office of the Medical Investigator.
The circumstances of her disappearance raised immediate red flags. Casias left behind her phones and identification after performing a factory reset on both devices, wiping all records of contacts and activity.
Surveillance captured her walking alone eastward on State Road 518 around 2:20 p.m. that day. Her husband, also a LANL employee, and daughter reported unusual behavior that morning involving a claimed forgotten security badge.
Family members and private investigators have maintained that Casias lost her security clearance due to financial troubles and that the disappearance stemmed from personal stress rather than foul play.
New Mexico State Police have indicated it appears she may have left voluntarily. Yet the discovery of her remains in a heavily trafficked forest restoration zone—where crews began active work in December 2025—has only intensified public scrutiny.
?? Melissa Casias, Los Alamos National Lab scientist missing since June 26, 2025, has been found dead.
— Mario Nawfal (@MarioNawfal) June 1, 2026
A handgun was recovered right next to her remains.
This matches a strange pattern… roughly half of these cases turned out to be "suicides."
Yeah, suuuure, like Epstein,…
Former FBI Assistant Director Chris Swecker previously expressed concern over the case, noting: “In a classified lab, or just a high clearance lab, they would basically be in the know on what’s going on. And it wouldn’t be the first time their administrative assistant has been targeted.”
Casias was one of several New Mexico-linked individuals with defense and nuclear program connections who went missing under similar conditions. The pattern has drawn nationwide attention since the February 2026 disappearance of retired Air Force Maj. Gen. William Neil McCasland, widely described as a UFO gatekeeper. His vanishing occurred just days after President Trump issued a full disclosure order.
That incident kicked off intensified coverage of a broader series of cases. By mid-April 2026 the tally had reached at least 11.
These reports detail repeated losses among personnel with overlapping expertise in NASA projects, nuclear propulsion, aerospace engineering, JPL rocket technology, and potential UFO-related programs.
From a NASA scientist found charred in a Tesla crash to an aerospace engineer and family killed in a plane incident, the cases accumulated. Speculation around JPL disappearances and experts tied to “dark project secrets” added layers, highlighting vulnerabilities in fields critical to U.S. superiority.
Despite the mounting cases, President Trump has stated the incidents are not connected. In remarks to reporters he said there is “not much of a connection” and expressed hope they represent coincidence involving “a lot of scientists.”
NOW – Trump says string of missing and dead scientists are not connected: "There's not much of a connection." pic.twitter.com/BSaOPYDOuo
— Disclose.tv (@disclosetv) April 30, 2026
Two major tranches of UFO-related disclosure files have since been released under the Trump administration, giving Americans unprecedented access to previously hidden documents and videos, although it’s not clear what many of the footage shows.
Official narratives continue to treat each case in isolation, pointing to stress, personal issues, or unrelated accidents. Yet the clustering of nuclear lab employees, aerospace engineers, JPL rocket scientists, and figures with documented access to classified propulsion and advanced technology programs has left many questioning whether the deep state apparatus is working overtime to protect its secrets even as disclosure moves forward.
Los Alamos remains central to America’s nuclear security infrastructure. Administrative staff in such environments routinely handle sensitive information. The pattern now spans multiple states and facilities, with several cases involving wiped devices, abandoned personal items, and sudden, unexplained exits—hallmarks that fuel legitimate concern rather than idle conspiracy.
The discovery of Casias’s remains does not close the book. It opens new questions about timing, access, and potential motives at a moment when the American public is finally receiving long-suppressed information on unidentified aerial phenomena and related technologies.
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