Quote:GENERAL McCASLAND’S WIFE: DISAPPEARANCE WAS PLANNED…
April 7, 2026 / Joseph P. Farrell
In case you've been following that very odd story of the disappearance of U.S. Air Force major general William McCasland, there's been a very intriguing development that just surface, a development that occasions today's Wile E. Coyote run to the end of the speculation tree's twig, and a somersaulting galloping plunge into the canyon of high octane speculation below. The article was shared by T.M., who has our thanks for catching this one and bringing it to our attention!:
Missing Air Force general with ties to UFO community ‘planned not to be found,’ wife says in chilling new 911 call
All of the oddity of the disappearance is summed up in the opening paragraphs of the article:
Quote:The wife of retired Air Force general William “Neil” McCasland who disappeared without a trace from his New Mexico home in February told 911 dispatchers she feared her husband “planned not to be found.”
Susan Wilkerson called 911 three hours after her husband, who has strong ties to the UFO community, vanished from their Albuquerque home on Feb. 27 with hiking boots and a revolver.
“My husband is missing. It’s been about 3 hours and I have some indication that he must have planned not to be found,” Wilkerson warned 911 dispatchers in newly released audio obtained by the Law&Crime Network.
Wilkerson told dispatchers that her alien-expert husband suspiciously turned his phone off and left it at home alongside his prescription glasses before he vanished.
“He turned it off and left it behind which seems kind of deliberate because he’s always got his phone. He has a smartwatch. I don’t know if that’s with him or not,” she said.
The worried wife told dispatchers that her husband had changed his clothes and left on foot in the middle of the day while she was out at an appointment.
“I think he’s on foot. All of our cars and bicycles are in the garage,” Wilkerson said.
The revelations raise a number of important questions, and imply various general scenarios of possibilities and implications. The first and most obvious question is, why are we learning of this 9/11 call only now? And why would Mrs. McCasland call law enforcement? Normally, law enforcement does not respond to missing persons calls in the case of adults until the passage of several hours of time, less in the case of children or adolescents. But a mere three hours? Surely Mrs. McCasland would have known that she was unlikely to get much of a response to a missing persons call after a mere three hours. This raises a second question. Surely Mrs. McCasland had some idea of the highly classified nature of her husband's work. She probably did not know any details and may not even have known the general area of his work. But she surely would have had some idea of its sensitivity and his importance to the national security. So why did she not call the nearby military authorities and alert them? In other words, surely there were security emergency procedures in place that would have included Mrs. McCasland, and these might have included instructions to call such-and-such a number to report an emergency. Perhaps she did, and we are not being told. Perhaps she did, and was less than satisfied with the response, and then decided to call law enforcement. Either way, my point is that it would seem very possible that we are not being told everything about the role either of the military or of law enforcement in the story.
Beyond all this however, is the Mrs. McCasland's assertion that she thinks her husband's disappearance had been deliberately planned by him: all their bicycles and cars were still in their garage, his phone - presumably with its geopositioning - was turned off and left at their home along with his prescription glasses. Yet, he had apparently changed clothes, which included "hiking boots" and "a revolver."
That set of facts could indicate almost anything, and the following general scenarios seem to be implied as the high octane speculations of the day, namely that (1) General McCasland was perhaps thinking to disappear and (a) assume an entirely new identity and new life, or (b) to "end it all" by hiking into the desert. In the first instance, he would have walked to some place, perhaps changed clothes again, and made his further way as a hitchhiker, or passenger on public transportation. Or (2) General McCasland was indeed apprehended in his home by professionals, who instructed him on what to bring with him, and kidnapped him, perhaps walking with him some distance to parked transportation. Leaving his glasses behind would have been a key detail for such a team, for knowing his prescription, spectacles could be provided, while leaving them behind suggests the two scenarios outlined under (1) above. The problem here is whose professionals it may have been. There are three possibilities: (a) a group intending to hold him ransom, which appears not to be the case as he went missing in February, well over a month, and no ransom appears to have been demanded (if indeed, we would be informed of such); (b) some foreign power abducted him to learn whatever secrets he holds, and hence, it is unlikely we will ever hear from the general again, or © he was abducted by our own government, in order to him him from revealing those secrets, and perhaps this was done preemptively, to keep him from being abducted by some foreign power. (And, in this context, by "foreign power" and given the general's alleged connections to exotic technologies and UFO-related issues, I do not limit the meaning to those on this planet.)
Of all these scenarios, the only one that appears to be implausible at this juncture is (2a). The two scenarios under number (1) appear to be the least complicated and most likely. The problem, however, is the general's alleged black projects involvement, and that means it's far too early to rule out (2b) and (2c). And once we arrive at (2b) and (2c), then we are once again confronted by the question of why Mrs. McCasland called in law enforcement, and did so so quickly after his disappearance. There is something that does not make sense here. When, really, did the military become aware that he was missing? And how soon before or after that did Mrs. McCasland call law enforcement? And why did she call them?
And all this as Mr. Trump's administration, and Congress, keep "tickling" the UFO issue, and as we were preparing for the first manned lunar orbit mission in decades...
This case, in other words, just became even more interesting...
See you on the flip side...
"It is hard to imagine a more stupid or more dangerous way of making decisions than by putting those decisions in the hands of people who pay no price for being wrong." – Thomas Sowell