What to know about the missing scientists alarming Congress

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The disappearances and https://www.axios.com/2025/12/17/police-mit-professor-shooting-brookline-ma-nuno-loureiro" target="_blank">deaths of at least 10 scientists, researchers and staffers who worked on nuclear and space programs are raising alarms on Capitol Hill.

The big picture: The cases date back to at least 2023, but national security concerns prompted a https://www.axios.com/2026/04/08/pam-bondi-epstein-house-oversight-subpoena" target="_blank">House Oversight Committee investigation.


What prompted the probe?

The committee's letter did not cite a specific reason for the investigation, but referenced "unconfirmed public reporting" on the cases, including the recent disappearance of retired Air Force Maj. Gen. https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/17/us/fbi-search-william-mccasland-general-missing" target="_blank">William Neil McCasland.

Who is among the missing or deceased?

All the missing or deceased have connections to the U.S. nuclear and aerospace systems or laboratories.

  • Deepening the mystery are the locations where the deaths or disappearances occurred.

    Four cases are in California, four in New Mexico, and two in Massachusetts.

Zoom in: Michael Hicks, Frank Maiwald, and Monica Reza were all scientists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California.

There is no indication that they worked on the same projects.

In New Mexico, Anthony Chavez, Melissa Casias, and Steven Garcia all disappeared within four months of one another in 2025.

MIT professor https://www.axios.com/2025/12/19/brown-university-shooting-suspect-dead" target="_blank">Nuno Loureiro was killed outside his home in Brookline, Mass., in December 2025.

Pharmaceutical scientist Jason Thomas disappeared the same month, though his https://www.facebook.com/wakefieldpd/posts/pfbid0obx9z1w2fc2bwMJVAdxAncf3KgGRvNu4Kx4cRu2muCiCbpc2CPbJfr9PDqCiGBGl?rdid=jbmWp9NVFvfrqMin" target="_blank">body was found in March.

Was foul play involved?

Despite allegations from online sleuths and some media reports, several of the deaths don't appear to have any connection to their careers.

What happens next

Speculation continues, but even Comer is on the fence about what this all means.

  • Speaking to https://x.com/atrupar/status/2046928979492221248" target="_blank">NewsNation, Comer said the cases could be connected and the "usual suspects" like China, Iran, Russia, and North Korea were all under scrutiny.
  • "But there are a lot of, you know, Eastern European countries and other countries that could be involved as well, or it could be a coincidence," he added.

The Oversight Committee asked for briefings by Patel, Hegseth, Wright, and Isaacman no later than April 27.

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