McCasland’s Disappearance Rekindles Scrutiny of Wright-Patterson’s UFO Ties and the Push for Disclosure

To the point

Renewed interest in Roswell follows the disappearance of retired Maj. Gen. William Neil McCasland and ties Wright‑Patterson to UFO investigations, reviving discussion of the 1947 crash with officials saying there is no evidence of extraterrestrial technology or bodies while researchers like Donald Schmitt point to deathbed confessions of recoveries, the broader UAP topic expanding with Navy encounters and Pentagon infrared videos, with Luis Elizondo and Marik Von Rennenkampff linking the base to both UFO lore and legitimate aerospace science, and 2023 hearings featuring David Grusch prompting Jared Moskowitz to demand full disclosure as the White House and DoD pursue record releases via the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office, all amid safety concerns for credible whistleblowers and ongoing searches for McCasland as culture, science, and politics mingle.

Retired Air Force major general missing for weeks once led Wright-Patterson, an Ohio base steeped in decades of UFO theories
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Retired Air Force major general missing for weeks once led Wright-Patterson, an Ohio base steeped in decades of UFO theories

By Alaa Elassar, CNN (CNN) — Streetlights shaped like alien heads line the roads of Roswell, New Mexico, where murals of flying saucers streak across storefronts and tourists pose beside statues of little green men. Nearly eight decades after a mysterious crash in the desert sparked global fascination with extraterrestrials, the small city remains synonymous