Eleven Scientists With Top-Secret Clearances Are Dead and Nobody in the Media Wants to Talk About It

Eleven Scientists With Top-Secret Clearances Are Dead and Nobody in the Media Wants to Talk About It

Eleven scientists and officials with access to America’s most classified military, nuclear, and aerospace programs have turned up dead or missing since 2022 — and the legacy media has apparently decided this isn’t worth mentioning between their segments on Trump’s McDonald’s orders and whatever AOC is crying about this week.

Nothing to see here, folks! Just nearly a dozen people with top-secret clearances dropping like flies across the country. Happens all the time. Totally normal. Move along.

Let’s walk through this, because it’s wild. The latest count includes NASA scientists, Los Alamos employees, an MIT physicist who was gunned down near his university apartment, an Air Force Major General, and — here’s where it gets really interesting — a 34-year-old antigravity researcher named Amy Eskridge who co-founded something called the Institute for Exotic Science.

Eskridge died in Huntsville, Alabama back in June 2022. Officially ruled a self-inflicted gunshot wound. But before she died, she gave an interview in 2020 where she said — and we’re quoting here — “We discovered antigravity, and our lives went to [expletive] and people started sabotaging us.” She also said that scientists who “stick your neck out” tend to “disappear” from public work after breakthroughs, and warned: “They will bury you. They will burn down your house.”

Two years later she was dead at 34. But sure, nothing weird going on.

The full list reads like a thriller novel that Tom Clancy would’ve thrown in the trash for being too on-the-nose. Monica Jacinto Reza — NASA scientist. Carl Grillmair — astrophysicist. Nuno Loureiro — MIT physicist, shot dead. Frank Maiwald — NASA engineer. Melissa Casias and Anthony Chavez — both connected to Los Alamos National Laboratory, which is where we build nuclear weapons, in case you forgot. Michael David Hicks — another NASA researcher. Steven Garcia — a contractor. Jason Thomas — pharmaceutical scientist. And retired Air Force Major General William “Neil” McCasland.

Eleven people. All with access to programs most Americans don’t even know exist. All dead.

President Trump called the situation “pretty serious” — which, coming from a man who doesn’t exactly panic easily, should tell you something. He said he’d “just left a meeting” on the matter and told reporters, “I hope it’s random, but we’re going to know in the next week and a half.”

You hope it’s random? We ALL hope it’s random, Mr. President. Because if it’s not random, then somebody is systematically eliminating the people who know America’s deepest secrets, and that’s the kind of sentence that shouldn’t exist outside of a Jason Bourne movie.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt confirmed the investigation, saying “no stone will be unturned.” The FBI is involved. The National Nuclear Security Administration put out a statement saying they’re “aware of reports related to employees of our labs, plants and sites and is looking into the matter.” Which is government-speak for “yeah, we noticed eleven of our people are dead too, thanks for asking.”

Now here’s the part that makes this story go from disturbing to downright bizarre. The Trump administration is reportedly looking into the UFO and UAP connection. Several of these scientists worked on programs related to advanced propulsion, exotic technologies, and the kinds of classified projects that Congress has been demanding answers about for years. Eskridge literally claimed she was researching antigravity. Loureiro was a physicist at MIT. McCasland was a Major General in the Air Force.

We’re not saying little green men are involved. (Although at this point, who knows?) What we ARE saying is that when eleven people with access to America’s most sensitive programs all end up dead, and at least one of them was on record saying she was being sabotaged and threatened before she died, maybe — just maybe — the media should spend five minutes on this instead of running their forty-seventh panel discussion on why Trump likes ketchup on his steak.

The corporate press loves conspiracy theories when they involve Trump and Russia. They’ll run wall-to-wall coverage of anonymous sources and “people familiar with the thinking” for three straight years. But eleven dead scientists with top-secret clearances? Crickets.

Funny how that works.

We don’t know what happened to these people. We don’t know if there’s a connection. But you know what? Neither does anyone else — and that’s exactly the problem. Somebody needs to find out, and fast. Because if there IS a pattern here, every scientist in America who’s ever touched a classified program just became a potential target.

The Trump team says answers are coming within the next week and a half. We’ll be watching. And unlike CNN, we’ll actually report what they find.


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