THE DEAD DROP: An Anonymous X Account Went Silent the Day the General Vanished. We Found What It Left Behind.
38 years of service. The wrong universities. The right physics. A 1998 observation from the cockpit of a military tanker. And a two-page document that might be the key to everything.
DATE: MARCH 11, 2026
SUBJECT: DIGITAL FORENSICS // @TMBSPACESHIPS ACCOUNT ANALYSIS AND 1998 SCHEMATIC ATTRIBUTION
CROSS-REF: [THE GHOST GENERAL] | [FORENSIC AUDIT: THE COVERT SPACE FORCE MOBILIZATION]
DATA CONFIDENCE: MEDIUM-HIGH (PUBLICLY ACCESSIBLE X ACCOUNT ARCHIVE, OPEN-SOURCE ACADEMIC RECORDS, WIKILEAKS PRIMARY SOURCE EMAILS, BERNALILLO COUNTY ASSESSOR RECORDS, INSTITUTIONAL BIOGRAPHIES). SCHEMATIC ATTRIBUTION ASSESSED AS PROBABLE, NOT CONFIRMED.
CLEARANCE: PUBLIC
If you have information relevant to locating William Neil McCasland, contact the Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Office Missing Persons Unit at (505) 468-7070 or text BCSO to 847411. Check trail cameras, dashcams, and GoPro footage from February 27–28. Share original, unedited files.
THE SIGNAL GOES DARK
On Monday we published The Ghost General. We mapped the institutional web nobody else was mapping. The defense consulting firm, the business partner every outlet misidentified as a community acquaintance, the wife whose career nobody checked, the statute nobody read, the emails nobody followed past the first one.
Today the story expands.
An anonymous X account called @TMBSPACESHIPS (display name “ELECTRIC PROPULSIVE SPACECRAFT”) has been posting about exotic electric propulsion, plasma physics, and ionized gas flight mechanics since November 2022. Blue-check verified. 1,645 posts. The bio reads: “38 year Active Duty USAF PhD Engineer. AFIT/AETC/AFMC - UT/OU.”
On February 27, 2026, the account stopped posting.
That’s the same day Maj. Gen. William Neil McCasland walked out of 1701 Quail Run Court NE without his phone or watch and disappeared. The last post was roughly 30 minutes before he was last seen.
Here’s the account. Here’s what the data shows.
THE ACCOUNT
“38 year Active Duty USAF PhD Engineer. AFIT/AETC/AFMC - UT/OU.”
McCasland served from 1979 to 2013. That’s 34 years, not 38. His degrees are from USAFA and MIT, not UT and OU. He served in AFMC — that part checks — but AFIT and AETC aren’t primary career assignments.
Four years off. Wrong universities. Two of three affiliations don’t match cleanly.
But in The Ghost General, we documented a consistent pattern: McCasland operated behind deliberate ambiguity. The WikiLeaks emails show him coordinating disclosure strategy while never publicly acknowledging any of it. A man who spent decades managing the gap between what’s said and what’s known wouldn’t put his real credentials in a public bio. He’d degrade them just enough to fail a data-scrape while keeping them close enough to signal relevance to anyone who already knew what to look for.
THE SCHEMATIC
On December 30, 2023, the account posted a photograph of a hand-drawn diagram on lined notebook paper. The tweet reads: “I saw this in 1998 from the cockpit of a KC-135.”
A KC-135 Stratotanker is a military aerial refueling aircraft. The author is claiming to be military aircrew who saw something they couldn’t explain, then went home and drew it.
Look at what they drew.

The drawing shows a bright object — labeled “Ball with Light” surrounded by a corona, descending through the atmosphere in sharp 90-degree steps. Behind it trails a multicolored ionization field in rainbow-layered bands. Annotations identify specific emission zones: green for ionized helium, yellow for fluorescence, purple for a “Dissipative Trailing Relaxation Zone.”
Now read the description block at the bottom:
“The Dot at the front was Incandescent white with a Halo of Crooks Dark Space. I initially saw it going East to West along Kansas Boarder. Approximate initial altitude FL1500 stepping down to FL900 in a series of quick 90° down steps. The Tail was a beautiful Multi-Color Fluorescent collapsing ionized gas zone over 100 miles long. I have seen the Bright Royal Green in Ionized Helium experiments before.”
Unpack that paragraph and every sentence is doing massive work.
FL1500 to FL900. Flight level 150,000 feet stepping down to 90,000 feet. Near-space. A KC-135’s ceiling is around 50,000 feet — the observer is looking up at something executing precise altitude drops where nothing conventionally flies.
“Crooks Dark Space.” A phonetic misspelling of Crookes dark space — a specific region in gas discharge tube physics where electron density drops and visible glow ceases. That’s laboratory vocabulary. Someone who has stood in front of a vacuum tube watching plasma glow patterns.
“I have seen the Bright Royal Green in Ionized Helium experiments before.” This is the sentence that matters most. The author isn’t theorizing. They watched something in the sky and recognized a specific emission color from hands-on laboratory work. They’re claiming direct experimental experience with plasma physics.
We tried to match the handwriting. McCasland’s 1980 SM thesis and 1988 PhD thesis are available through MIT’s DSpace digital repository. We pulled them. The signature pages have been scrubbed — McCasland’s signature, his supervisors’ signatures, all whited out. This isn’t targeted. MIT Libraries redact all signatures from digitized theses as standard policy. The physical copies in Distinctive Collections would have the originals, but the digital archive gives us nothing.
The schematic’s authorship rests on content, not penmanship. What the author knew. What they claimed to have seen. What they claimed to have done in a laboratory.
THE SECOND PAGE
Notebooks have multiple pages. We notice faint text bleeding through from the page beneath the drawing. We ran image enhancement to isolate it.
What came back is not notes. It’s a component list.

Center Left: Electron Gun. Magnetic Compressor. Continuous Marx Generator. Short Linear Accelerator. Tungsten Filament.
Right side, beneath the “500-1000W microwave transmitter” materials: Aluminum. Copper. Thorium. Chromium Dioxide. Cuprous Chloride. Beryllium Oxide (BeO). Helium-3 Ion (He 3 ION).
Top, annotations: Gas out. Cathodic Bridge. Thick Dielectric. Thorium Dioxide.
Read that list a few times slowly.
The front page is an observation. Someone drew what they saw. The back page is what happened next — someone sat down and started working backward from the observation to the engineering.
The two pages talk to each other.
The front page describes a “Halo of Crooks Dark Space.” The back page lists an Electron Gun and Cathodic Bridge. That’s the exact hardware that produces a Crookes dark space in a laboratory.
The front page shows a multicolored helium tail at ionization states +2 through +4. The back page specifies He 3 ION as a propellant, fed through a Short Linear Accelerator driven by a Continuous Marx Generator — a sustained high-voltage pulsed power system designed to ionize and accelerate plasma. That’s the engine for the 100-mile glowing tail.
The front page describes a craft at near-vacuum altitudes executing sharp maneuvers without aerodynamic stress. The back page lists Beryllium Oxide — a ceramic that is both an excellent electrical insulator and highly thermally conductive. It’s used in directed-energy systems to dissipate enormous heat without shorting. That’s the thermal management solution.
Cuprous chloride is used in copper vapor lasers, which produce intense green and yellow light — the same colors in the front page drawing. Thoriated tungsten (both thorium and tungsten appear in the list) is the standard emitter for high-performance thermionic cathodes. Chromium dioxide is strongly magnetic, a potential component of the magnetic compression stage.
The front page could be drawn by any technically literate military observer. The second page cannot. This is someone who looked at an aerial phenomenon and reverse-engineered a plausible hardware architecture. Pulsed power, particle acceleration, magnetic compression, with specific materials selected for their electrical, thermal, and magnetic properties.
That’s systems engineering.
SENTINEL ASSESSMENT: The bleed-through text transforms this document from observation to engineering hypothesis. The component list is internally consistent, technically coherent, and maps directly to the visual and spectral details on the front page. This is someone with hands-on experience in directed-energy systems, pulsed power, and plasma physics working backward from firsthand observation to first principles.
THE SPELLING PROBLEM
“FIOURESENT” for fluorescent. “Emmission” for emission. “Boarder” for border. “Gass” for gas. “Crooks” for Crookes. Five misspellings, every one phonetic — the author heard these words more than they read them.
This is someone who can identify helium ionization states on sight and reverse-engineer a Marx generator architecture from a visual observation. Someone with a PhD.
Two explanations.
The simple one: lots of physicists can’t spell. In an informal hand-drawn diagram — something sketched at home after a flight — phonetic approximations are common. “Crooks” for “Crookes” actually reinforces the lab experience claim — it’s someone who learned the term verbally from a colleague, never needing to spell the Victorian physicist’s name.
The operational one: if you’re a senior officer creating a record of something you observed from a military aircraft at near-space altitudes, you might intentionally degrade the document’s academic pedigree. Phonetic spelling creates plausible deniability. I didn’t write this. Look at the errors. A man with my credentials wouldn’t produce this. The hard technical data survives. The authorship trail degrades. The account even states this in a post made on 2/13/2026
THE PHYSICS MATCH
Everything in this analysis — the schematic, the second page, the description block — comes from one place: the @TMBSPACESHIPS account. 1,645 posts since November 2022. A single sustained focus: ionized gas as a propulsive medium.
The 1998 schematic is the most dramatic artifact in the archive we found, but it’s not an outlier. It’s the anchor. Everything else the account has posted reads like someone continuing to work the same problem they first encountered from the cockpit of a KC-135. Posts reference “ionized helium to He+(+5 or +6 state).” Posts discuss “electroacoustic wave interactions”. Dense engineering shorthand throughout.
So we have a profile. Retired USAF officer with a PhD. Decades of service. KC-135 flight time. Hands-on lab experience with ionized helium. Deep enough knowledge of pulsed power, particle acceleration, and magnetic compression to reverse-engineer a propulsion architecture from a visual observation. And a years-long obsession with plasma propulsion physics that has never surfaced in any journal or conference proceeding.
Now put McCasland next to that profile.
His MIT PhD was on fault-tolerant control of flexible structures. Sensors and actuators. On paper, this isn’t his field.
But careers diverge from dissertations. McCasland commanded the Phillips Research Site at Kirtland, directed-energy weapons and advanced space technologies. He ran the Space Based Laser Project Office. He oversaw AFRL’s entire $4.4 billion portfolio, which includes pulsed power, plasma science, and particle acceleration research. And since June 2019, as we documented in The Ghost General, he has sat on the Board of Trustees at Riverside Research, a not-for-profit conducting classified and unclassified research for the US government in optics, electromagnetics, and plasma physics.
The @TMBSPACESHIPS author knows plasma physics from the inside of a lab. McCasland’s career put him in command of the laboratories that do this work. The author’s knowledge has never been published. McCasland spent his career managing programs where publication wasn’t an option.
SENTINEL ASSESSMENT: The technical profile embedded in the @TMBSPACESHIPS account overlaps McCasland’s documented career at multiple points. The focus on ionized helium propulsion maps directly to the research domains of institutions he commanded. The absence of any published record for this body of work is itself consistent with someone whose expertise was developed inside classified programs. The match is strong. It is not proof.
THE TIMELINE
The account was created in November 2022. 1,645 posts in roughly three and a half years.
In February 2026, the cadence was regular. Posts every day. Every other day. Every five days at the widest gap. Active and engaged right up to the end of the month.
February 27, 2026: 10:38 AM @TMBSPACESHIPS makes it’s last post.
February 27, 2026, approximately 11:00 a.m.: McCasland is last seen leaving his home on foot.
Day 12. Nothing.
An account with documented daily-to-weekly posting through February 2026 stopped cold on the same day a retired USAF general with an overlapping technical profile disappeared from a home twelve minutes from Kirtland Air Force Base.
THE EDGES
What we are following from here.
The Coulthart escalation. Investigative journalist Ross Coulthart has publicly called McCasland’s disappearance a “grave national security crisis,” stating McCasland holds “some of the most sensitive secrets of the United States.” He’s drawing a direct line to Trump’s recent UAP disclosure promises. The national security framing is now mainstream.
The Whitewash trailhead sighting. An unconfirmed report from the Albuquerque Trail Running Crew’s Facebook group — someone matching McCasland’s description at the Whitewash trailhead in Piedra Lisa Canyon. BCSO has not confirmed.
The search technology. BCSO says they are “utilizing all possible resources, including advanced technologies.” In the context of a former AFRL commander with directed-energy and space surveillance expertise, that phrase carries a different weight. What technologies? Deployed by whom?
The continuing silence. Day 12. FBI integrated. Kirtland coordinating. “No evidence of foul play.” “All possible scenarios.” And a man whose career was defined by managing what the public was allowed to know is simply gone.
The Ghost General documented who McCasland was and what the public record shows. This briefing documents a two-page artifact — observation on one side, reverse-engineered hardware on the other — posted by an account that went silent the day the General vanished. The account attribution is probable, not confirmed. The component list is technically coherent and maps directly to the visual observation. We publish what we find — including the limits of what we can prove.
This is an active case involving a real person with a family who wants him found. If you have information, contact BCSO at (505) 468-7070 or text BCSO to 847411.
Keep looking up.
— The Sentinel Network
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Previous briefings: The Ghost General | Forensic Audit: The Covert Space Force Mobilization | The Ignition Sequence | The Ghost Coma | The Heartbeat | The Surge | The Silent Edit | The Glomar Confirmation | The Sentinel Dossier












Really enjoying your reporting on this. Keep up the great work. On the notebook page image, the item in the top left is a holiday gift sticker that was published in Highlights Magazine, a children’s magazine. Not sure which year, but it caught my attention as an oddity.
Thank you for confirming that someone I know was actually interacting with the general on X! His analysis of timing etc and scope of work posted, left little room to speculate but ya'll just destroyed whatever doubt remained!