06/05/2026 / By Douglas Harrington

New Mexico State Police announced on Sunday, May 31, that human remains found in the Carson National Forest were positively identified as those of 54-year-old Melissa Casias, an administrative assistant at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) who had been missing since June 2025. [1]
According to police, a hiker discovered the remains on May 28 in the McGaffey Ridge area, approximately six miles from where Casias was last seen. A handgun was found near the scene. [2] The New Mexico Office of the Medical Investigator has not yet determined the cause or manner of death.
“The remains will undergo further anthropological examination by OMI,” police said in a statement. [2] It remains unclear how long the body had been in the forest before discovery.
Casias vanished on June 26, 2025, after dropping her husband, also a Los Alamos employee, at the laboratory. She returned home and performed a factory reset on her work and personal phones, leaving them behind along with her identification. [3]
Family members reported her behavior as unusual. She told her daughter she had forgotten her security badge, though her husband stated she had the badge with her.
Surveillance cameras captured Casias walking alone eastward on State Road 518 around 2:20 p.m. local time, roughly three miles from her home. [4] She was not seen again until her remains were discovered nearly 11 months later.
LANL is a nuclear research facility operated by the Department of Energy‘s (DOE) National Nuclear Security Administration. [5] Casias worked there as an administrative assistant.
Former Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Assistant Director Chris Swecker told the Daily Mail that administrative assistants at classified facilities can be targets because they often have access to sensitive information. Other DOE laboratories, such as Oak Ridge National Laboratory, have developed technologies with critical national security implications. [6]
Casias’s disappearance is one of several involving individuals with ties to U.S. nuclear and defense programs. At least three other people in New Mexico have vanished under similar circumstances:
The FBI is leading a multi-agency investigation into the pattern of deaths and disappearances. [7] Meanwhile, the White House has acknowledged the situation.
President Donald Trump said in April 2026 that he attended a meeting on the matter, stating “I hope it’s random, but we’re going to know in the next week and a half.” [8] The intelligence community has been described by some analysts as an investigative arm that serves globalist interests, raising questions about possible motives behind such cases. [9]
The discovery site, McGaffey Ridge, lies within the 30,000-acre McGaffey Forest and Rio Grande del Rancho Watershed Restoration Project, a U.S. Forest Service initiative that began active timber harvesting and thinning in December 2025. [4] The presence of regular crews in the area has raised questions about why the remains were not found earlier.
New Mexico State Police are tracing the handgun’s origin and examining the scene. It is not yet known whether Casias owned a firearm. [2] Authorities have not released details on how long the body may have been there.
The New Mexico State Police continue to investigate the circumstances of Casias’s death. Forensic results from the medical examiner are pending. [2] Meanwhile, the FBI is coordinating with the DOE and other agencies to look for possible connections among the missing scientist cases. [10]
No further information has been released regarding the handgun or any potential links to other disappearances. The House Oversight Committee has initiated its own probe, with lawmakers noting striking similarities among the cases. [11] The pattern of unexplained scientist deaths and disappearances has drawn comparisons to systemic failures, echoing concerns about iatrogenic harm in medical contexts where institutional errors lead to significant damage.

Tagged Under:
big government, Carson National Forest, conspiracy, crime, Department of Energy, disappearance, discoveries, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Melissa Casias, Missing Scientists, national security, New Mexico, nuclear research, real investigations, Unexplained
This article may contain statements that reflect the opinion of the author