
UFO spotted near Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, the same base connected to the missing General William Neil McCasland
A massive cluster of unknown flying objects was spotted near Wright-Patterson Air Force Base on April 8th. Witnesses near the Ohio base captured video showing a silent triangle of glowing lights moving in perfect formation before splitting apart mid-flight.
The lights drifted slowly downward, flickering and pulsing and changing brightness individually as they hovered in the night sky. No sound. No standard navigation lights. Movement unlike any known aircraft, drone swarm, or satellite.
Fleet of UFOs appear over Wright-Patterson Air Force Base
The video was reportedly taken from Rainbow Lakes, a 60-acre outdoor recreational retreat in Fairborn, about four miles from the base.
If that location sounds familiar, it should. Wright-Patterson is one of the most talked-about military installations in UFO history and it just got a whole lot more interesting.
The McCasland Connection
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base has drawn renewed attention in recent months because the man who used to run its research laboratory is one of the 11 people on our growing list of scientists and military officials connected to America’s space and nuclear programs who have died or disappeared under suspicious circumstances.
Retired Major General William Neil McCasland, 68, went missing from his New Mexico home on February 28th. He reportedly left on foot wearing hiking boots and carrying a .38-caliber revolver. He did not take his phone, his wearable devices, or his prescription glasses. He left without any way to trace him. Authorities have not located a single clue about his whereabouts.
A 911 call released earlier this month captured a police dispatcher speaking with his wife, Susan Wilkerson, who said that her husband “had planned not to be found.”
McCasland led the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson from May 2011 until his retirement in 2013. That facility has been associated in UFO lore with alleged materials recovered after the 1947 Roswell incident for decades.
Wright-Patterson leads development in aerospace technology, advanced materials, sensors, human performance, and AI. McCasland oversaw the Air Force’s $2.2 billion science and technology program while he was there.
The Tom DeLonge Emails
McCasland’s name became publicly linked to UFO topics after the 2016 WikiLeaks release of emails from John Podesta, Hillary Clinton’s campaign chairman.
In those emails, Tom DeLonge, the founder of Blink-182 and the UFO-focused To The Stars Academy, referenced McCasland multiple times. DeLonge claimed McCasland had advised him on disclosure matters and helped assemble an advisory team.
DeLonge also suggested on a podcast that McCasland and several named and unnamed insiders were guiding him to carry out a slow disclosure of UAP information to the American public from government and contractor sources.
DeLonge claimed that the U.S. government and contractor groups already possess free energy technology, sometimes referred to as zero-point energy, that could make conventional energy sources obsolete. His exact words were that “one inch of air could power the US for hundreds of years.”
He suggested that To The Stars Academy was being restrained from releasing everything government insiders had provided but that the organization sought private investment to develop the technology for energy and aerospace purposes.
He further stated that TTSA expected to create a working anti-gravity craft and the company’s SEC filing noted that its aerospace division is “dedicated to finding revolutionary breakthroughs in propulsion, energy and communications.”
Scheduling emails from the WikiLeaks dump showed a planned meeting between DeLonge, Podesta, and someone signing as “Neil McC,” consistent with McCasland. Another email tied McCasland directly to Wright-Patterson, alleging he oversaw the lab where Roswell materials were supposedly sent.
These claims come from DeLonge and have not been officially confirmed by McCasland or government records. There is no public evidence that McCasland participated in UFO crash retrievals, reverse-engineering of non-human technology, or classified extraterrestrial programs.
His documented work focused on advanced aerospace research. But that work, combined with the WikiLeaks emails and now his disappearance, has fueled serious speculation in defense and intelligence circles about what he knew and why he’s gone.
Connect the Dots
Unknown craft spotted four miles from the base McCasland used to run. The same base rumored for decades to house recovered UFO materials. The same general who appeared in WikiLeaks emails advising on UFO disclosure. The same general who walked out of his house in February and has not been seen since.
Missing or Dead UFO Researchers and Scientists – Previous Coverage:
The Count is Now 11: Another UFO-Linked Scientist Found Dead After Warning Her Life Was in Danger >>
Missing UFO researchers, murdered scientists, and a dark pattern nobody wants to acknowledge >>
Nobody is saying these things are definitively connected. But if you’re paying attention, and you should be, the pattern is getting harder and harder to dismiss. Wright-Patterson keeps showing up in these stories for a reason.
McCasland keeps showing up for a reason. And now unidentified craft are being filmed in the sky right next to the facility he used to control. The number of coincidences is piling up fast. At some point, they stop being coincidences.
Pay attention.




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