Retired Air Force general who oversaw a $4.4 billion research program is missing in New Mexico
Retired Maj. Gen. William Neil McCasland, the former commander of the Air Force Research Laboratory, has been missing since Feb. 27, and law enforcement says it is concerned for his safety.
The Bernalillo County Sheriff's Office announced that the 68-year-old was last seen at approximately 11:00 a.m. near Quail Run Court NE. Authorities do not know what he was wearing or which direction he was traveling.
BCSO said it is concerned for McCasland's safety because he has medical issues, though specific details about those issues have not been disclosed.
As of the latest update, there has been no breakthrough in the search.
A Distinguished Career in National Defense
McCasland is not an ordinary missing person. He is a retired two-star general who spent decades at the highest levels of Air Force science and technology. He was commissioned in 1979 after graduating from the U.S. Air Force Academy with a Bachelor of Science in astronautical engineering, then earned advanced degrees from MIT in aeronautical engineering in 1980 and astronautical engineering in 1988, the Daily Caller reported.
During his career, which spanned 16 assignments, McCasland commanded Kirtland Air Force Base's Phillips Research Site and led the Air Force Research Laboratory. In that role, according to his official biography, he was responsible for the Air Force's $2.2 billion science and technology program and an additional $2.2 billion in customer-funded research and development, overseeing a global workforce of 10,800 people.
That is the kind of institutional knowledge and security exposure that makes a disappearance more than a local news item. A man who managed billions of dollars in classified defense research vanishing without a trace near a major Air Force installation warrants serious attention.
The Search So Far
BCSO spokeswoman Deanna Aragon told The Daily Caller via email that the department had no major updates. She confirmed the search remains active:
"He is still missing and we are still actively looking for him. We currently have assistance from NM search and rescue and are asking for the public's assistance to call tips into the missing persons hotline number that's listed on the bottom of the flyer."
New Mexico Search and Rescue joined the investigation on Sunday. McCasland is described as 5'11" and 160 pounds.
Col. Justin Secrest, base commander of the 377th Air Base Wing at Kirtland, issued a brief statement acknowledging the situation:
"We are coordinating closely with local authorities and defer all updates regarding the search efforts to the Bernalillo County Sheriff's Office."
Secrest added that the base's "thoughts are with his family during this difficult time." The measured language is standard, but the fact that Kirtland's current commander felt the need to issue a public statement at all speaks to McCasland's stature and his continued ties to the installation. He reportedly serves as a board member of the Kirtland Partnership Committee.
What We Don't Know
The gaps in this story are significant. No clothing description. No known direction of travel. Medical issues that authorities cite as cause for concern but won't specify. These are the kinds of unknowns that make a missing persons case exponentially harder, and they raise questions about the circumstances surrounding his disappearance.
Was he on foot? In a vehicle? Did he leave voluntarily, or did something happen to him? None of these questions has been publicly answered.
For a man of McCasland's background, the security implications are unavoidable. Retired generals who oversaw sensitive research programs carry knowledge that doesn't expire with their commissions. Whether this disappearance has any dimension beyond a medical emergency remains to be seen, but it is the kind of case that should command resources well beyond a county sheriff's office.
A Community and a Country Watching
McCasland dedicated his career to the defense of this country. He spent decades advancing the science and technology that keep American warfighters ahead of their adversaries. The least his country owes him now is a search effort that matches the seriousness of his service.
Anyone with information is urged to contact the Bernalillo County Sheriff's Office or its Missing Persons Unit. Four days is a long time for a 68-year-old man with medical issues to be unaccounted for. Every hour matters.



