Dr. James T. Ryder
Vice President of Lockheed Martin Space Systems Company who, according to DOPSR-cleared statements by Lue Elizondo and David Grusch, proposed transferring alleged UAP crash retrieval material from a Lockheed facility to the DIA's AAWSAP program. Died unexpectedly on May 28, 2018, in San Jose, California, at age 72. No obituary has been publicly located despite extensive searches by researchers.
| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Full Name | James Thomas Ryder |
| Born | August 13, 1945 (Chicago, Cook County, Illinois) |
| Died | May 28, 2018 |
| Age at Death | 72 |
| Location of Death | San Jose, Santa Clara County, California |
| Cause of Death | Unknown — described only as "died unexpectedly" |
| Official Ruling | Unknown — no obituary or death notice publicly located |
| Category | Government Contractor / Aerospace Executive |
Assessment: SUSPICIOUS
Dr. James T. Ryder spent 38 years at Lockheed Martin and retired as Vice President of Space Systems Company, overseeing the Advanced Technology Center and more than $9 billion annually in R&D. According to DOPSR-approved statements by Lue Elizondo and David Grusch, Ryder proposed transferring alleged UAP crash retrieval material — reportedly recovered since the 1950s — from a specific Lockheed facility to the DIA's AAWSAP program, a transfer that was allegedly blocked by CIA Science and Technology Director Glenn Gaffney. Ryder "died unexpectedly" in San Jose on May 28, 2018, at age 72. Despite extensive efforts by multiple researchers, no obituary, death notice, or cause of death has been publicly located — an unusual absence for a senior aerospace executive. The lack of any publicly available information about the circumstances of his death, combined with his alleged role as the key figure willing to divest Lockheed of UAP material, makes this case notable.
Circumstances of Death
On May 28, 2018, Dr. James T. Ryder died in San Jose, California. The only publicly available record of his death comes from Ancestry.com, which lists his birth date (August 13, 1945, Chicago) and death date but provides no cause of death or further details. The Institute for Venture Science, where Ryder served in a leadership role, described him as having "died unexpectedly."
No obituary has been publicly located. Multiple UFO researchers have attempted to find one without success. As one researcher noted on X (formerly Twitter): "Months of searching and still can't find even an obituary... what really happened to Dr. James T. Ryder, former VP of Lockheed Martin Space Systems?"
The absence of a publicly available obituary for a person of Ryder's stature — a 38-year Lockheed veteran who retired as Vice President of a major division — is unusual. Senior aerospace executives typically receive published obituaries, memorial notices, or tributes from their employers or professional organizations.
Background
James Thomas Ryder received a Ph.D. in Theoretical & Applied Mechanics, an M.S. in Engineering Mechanics, and a B.S. in Theoretical & Applied Mechanics, all from the University of Illinois. He was an Associate Fellow of the American Institute for Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA).
Ryder began his career at Lockheed Corporation (later Lockheed Martin) in approximately 1973 and worked there for 38 years until his retirement in February 2011. During his tenure he held positions including Vice President, Director, Manager, Program Manager, Principal Investigator, and scientist/engineer. He worked on the L-1011 aircraft, F-22 fighter, Fleet Ballistic Missiles (FBM), Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD), and NASA Space Shuttle main engines, as well as classified defense systems.
Vice President of Lockheed Martin Space Systems Company (2005-2011)
From May 2005 until his February 2011 retirement, Ryder served as Vice President of Lockheed Martin Space Systems Company in Palo Alto, California. He led the Advanced Technology Center (ATC, now STAR), the R&D organization for LMSSC and the broader Lockheed Martin Corporation. According to the Institute for Venture Science, his responsibilities encompassed "representing LMSSC and LMC to a wide range of customers and overseeing research and development for the Space Systems Company, including remote sensing and space science, telecommunications and space based navigation, defensive systems and strategic-systems." The ATC's R&D portfolio covered sensors, optics, telecommunications, guidance and navigation, materials and structures, nanotechnology, and space sciences — impacting programs totaling more than $9 billion annually.
Early Career and Wright-Patterson Connection
In 1980 and 1981, Ryder presented research at the Mechanics of Composites Review, a conference sponsored by the Air Force Materials Laboratory at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. Unclassified proceedings documents confirm his presentations were conducted under contract to the Air Force Materials Laboratory and NASA. Wright-Patterson AFB has historically been linked in UFO literature to the storage and study of recovered materials and craft.
Connections to UAP Research Community
Ryder personally knew Dr. Eric Davis and Dr. Hal Puthoff through their shared involvement in the SAFIRE project, which aimed to test the electric sun hypothesis and ultimately evolved into energy production technology research. Ryder founded the International Science Foundation to fund the SAFIRE project and other potentially breakthrough science. The International Science Foundation closed following Ryder's death in May 2018.
Ryder was notably gregarious about topics that most aerospace insiders keep strictly private. He gave at least four presentations at Lucis Trust conferences in London, New York, and Geneva, spoke at Electric Universe/Thunderbolts Project conferences (EU2012 and EU2017), and contributed to Science to Sage Magazine — openly discussing UAPs, consciousness, ESP, government suppression of exotic research, and exotic physics, all while being identified as a recently retired VP of Lockheed Martin Space Systems. These talks reveal a man deeply engaged with the intersection of frontier physics, consciousness research, and esoteric philosophy — and one who was comfortable publicly discussing topics that most aerospace executives would avoid entirely.
"The Soul Is Light. What Then Is Light?" — In this presentation, Ryder traced the history of humanity's understanding of light from the ancient Greek Empedocles (who described light as particles 2,500 years ago) through Newton, Maxwell, Einstein, and modern quantum mechanics. He discussed the wave-particle duality of light, the double-slit experiment, and the implications of quantum non-locality — where entangled particles respond instantaneously regardless of distance. He described experiments in which a photon was absorbed, destroyed, and then a new photon sent half an hour later was found to carry the exact properties and "memory" of the first — as if "everything exists simultaneously" across space and time. He discussed the cosmic web structure of the universe, dark matter and dark energy (noting that 95% of the universe's composition remains unexplained), and the IBEX spacecraft's discovery that the heliosphere has a completely unexpected shape — noting "we built it on what we believe we know... and because of that we miss what's there." He referenced Dr. David Bohm's work proposing there was no Big Bang, Hubble's repudiation of his own redshift theory, and Stephen Hawking's retraction of black hole theory. On gravity, he discussed proposals that gravity may be a form of electromagnetism — specifically citing Hal Puthoff's published theory of a "polarizable vacuum" that reproduces all four tests of general relativity to ten decimal places. He noted a gentleman who published this theory "died about two weeks later, so I guess we can't have an argument with him." He concluded by quoting Puthoff: "The manifest universe is instantly, intrinsically interconnected... an entangled cosmic matrix" and stated that multiple prominent philosophers and physicists now argue consciousness is fundamental and ubiquitous — not an epiphenomenon of the brain.
"The Garment of God" — In this presentation, Ryder argued that science is humanity's "collective meditation on truth" and presented evidence that the universe is fundamentally electrical. He discussed proposals that gravity is an electromagnetic dipole force, citing both Wal Thornhill's electric universe model and Hal Puthoff's polarizable vacuum theory. He presented research from Tufts University, UC Merced, UC Davis, the Karolinska Institute, and the Smithsonian that bioelectricity — not genes alone — shapes anatomical form, with genes serving as a "list of materials" while the electromagnetic field provides the "blueprint." He discussed how the body is a continuously regenerating electrical system (macula replaced every 48 hours, intestinal lining every 3 days, skin every 6 weeks, nervous system every 35 weeks) and referenced Dr. Jerry Tennant's "healing is voltage" framework. He stated directly: "If you wanted to study certain kinds of things related to what's called ESP in the United States, until very recently you had to hide it very carefully because you were crazy. And then the government didn't want people to think they're supporting crazy stuff. But if you wanted to do the work in Russia, go right ahead. Fine. Here's your money, because they're not caught in the religion that says it's not possible." He then revealed a personal detail: while still VP at Lockheed, a colleague had sent him a spiral-bound book titled ESP Wars, originally assembled circa 2009 with input from Dr. Russell Targ and Dr. Hal Puthoff. The book, written by senior Soviet and U.S. military generals, contained declassified data on decades of telepathic and psychic warfare research by both superpowers, released because "neither side can find a military advantage of this work, so there's no use keeping it secret." He cited Chinese experiments where entangled clocks were separated by 60,000 miles with zero time lag in state transfer, and stated that the electron "is now proposed to be aware of the rest of the universe and responding to the large environment all the time." He presented 13 lines of evidence for the existence of the soul — from ESP research to near-death experiences to reincarnation studies — and concluded that 9 of 13 predictions made in esoteric writings about how soul would be proven had now been verified by science.
"The Rending of the Veils" — This presentation directly addressed UFOs and how different cultures throughout history interpret and record UFO phenomena. Ryder discussed the different ways the phenomena presents itself, referencing Jacques Vallee's work at approximately the 50-minute mark.
These presentations demonstrate that Ryder was not merely a conventional aerospace executive. He was deeply conversant with frontier physics, consciousness research, ESP/remote viewing programs, and esoteric philosophy. His willingness to publicly discuss classified psychic research programs, cite Hal Puthoff's work on gravity and the vacuum, and present evidence for the soul's existence — all while identified as a Lockheed Martin VP — is extraordinary and consistent with someone who had direct knowledge of exotic phenomena through his classified work.
The AAWSAP Material Divestment Proposal
According to DOPSR-cleared statements by multiple officials:
Lue Elizondo stated on Coast to Coast AM with George Knapp (August 25, 2024): "The money that was allocated for DIA, AAWSAP after speaking to multiple individuals on the program was originally intended to skip out Bigelow Aerospace facilities in Las Vegas due to a UAP material divestment plan proposal to AAWSAP leadership by Lockheed Martin Space Systems Vice President, Dr. James Ryder. Now deceased, a specific facility known to me was described as having crash retrieval material from the 1950s and other historical operations."
David Grusch stated on the Joe Rogan Experience (November 2023): "Lockheed Martin wanted to divest itself from this material at a specific facility that's known to me that I provided to the Inspector General, like street address, all that shit... it was shit that they recovered from the fifties and stuff and it was like bits and pieces of hall structure, shit like that. And so they were going to tech transfer it, and the 21 or 22 million was actually for Bigelow Aerospace to build out facilities in Las Vegas and material analysis equipment."
Christopher Sharp of Liberation Times reported that the transfer was blocked by Glenn Gaffney, then Director for Science and Technology at the CIA. Sharp also reported that Ryder's motivation for initiating the transfer was recruitment challenges in engineering — Lockheed could not find sufficient specialized minds to make progress on the material.
Dr. Eric Davis, in a 2019 interview with journalist Alejandro Rojas, described how one comes to learn about the Legacy Program: "You find out they're the vice president or the president of one of the legacy aerospace corporations, and they happened to be a PhD of sort, of some discipline, a STEM discipline." Davis also confirmed in a 2024 Facebook comment that Lockheed conducted UFO work until 1989, when the program was "terminated for a lack of progress in reverse engineering."
Davis further stated in 2019: "The crash retrieval program is very small program. It is not a massive, huge government infrastructure. It's a very poorly funded program... The compartmentalization is a killer. Scientists cannot communicate with other scientists to get help."
This description of a PhD in a STEM discipline who served as vice president of a legacy aerospace corporation — matches Ryder precisely. The compartmentalization problem Davis describes is also consistent with Ryder's reported motivation for proposing the material transfer: Lockheed could not recruit sufficient specialized engineers to make progress on the material.
CIA Intimidation
According to multiple sources who spoke to journalists including Christopher Sharp of Liberation Times, Ryder reportedly felt threatened by the intensity of the exchanges with CIA officials during the material transfer negotiations. Gaffney's alleged interference in the transfer left those involved — including Ryder — describing the interactions as intimidating. The original government custodian, the CIA's Directorate of Science and Technology, disapproved the transfer during a meeting with Gaffney while he held the position of Director for Science and Technology.
Congressional Record (September 9, 2025)
On September 9, 2025, investigative journalist George Knapp testified under oath before the House Committee on Oversight and Accountability and named both James Ryder and Glenn Gaffney as figures in the legacy UAP program, entering their names into the Congressional Record. Knapp stated: "I have a name for you: Glenn Gaffney, CIA." He identified Gaffney as a direct contact and overseer with aerospace companies regarding UAP materials, and Ryder as the Lockheed VP who initiated the transfer attempt. Knapp testified that much of this material has been moved out of government and given to private contractors to avoid FOIA requests. Independent journalists Matt Ford and Christopher Sharp had previously identified Gaffney's role in 2024, and Ford submitted written and video statements to Congress supporting the claims.
Possible Connection to Major General Neil McCasland
Ryder's pattern of behavior — a senior insider with access to the most classified aerospace programs who became willing to talk and share information about UAP-related topics — parallels that of Major General William Neil McCasland, the former commander of the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) at Wright-Patterson AFB and executive secretary of the Special Access Program Oversight Committee, with purview of every SAP in the Department of Defense.
McCasland was identified in the 2016 WikiLeaks Podesta emails as a key adviser to Tom DeLonge's UAP disclosure initiative. DeLonge told Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta that he had been "working with [McCasland] for four months" and that the retired general was "very, very aware" of the material DeLonge was investigating because McCasland had previously been "in charge of the laboratory at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base where the Roswell wreckage was shipped." According to Ross Coulthart's book In Plain Sight, McCasland's connection to DeLonge was part of a broader pattern of senior military and aerospace figures quietly supporting disclosure efforts. The WikiLeaks emails also show coordination between McCasland, Podesta, and the head of Lockheed Martin's Skunk Works regarding a UAP disclosure meeting.
Both Ryder and McCasland occupied positions that gave them direct oversight of facilities and programs allegedly connected to recovered non-human materials — Ryder as VP of Lockheed Martin Space Systems overseeing $9B+ in R&D including the Advanced Technology Center, and McCasland as commander of the AFRL at Wright-Patterson and executive secretary of the SAP Oversight Committee. Both reportedly became willing to share information outside their official roles. Ryder did so through public Lucis Trust and Electric Universe conference presentations and through his divestment proposal to AAWSAP. McCasland allegedly did so through his advisory relationship with DeLonge.
McCasland disappeared on February 27, 2026, from his Albuquerque home near Kirtland Air Force Base. He was last seen by a repairman at approximately 11 a.m.; when his wife returned roughly an hour later, he had vanished. He left behind his phone, prescription glasses, and wearable devices. His hiking boots, wallet, and a .38-caliber revolver with a leather holster are reportedly missing. The FBI is involved in the search. Authorities flew helicopters with infrared cameras over nearby cliffs and canyons at night without locating him.
Investigative journalist Ross Coulthart stated: "We have to ask, now, about the possibility of foul play — is there somebody who has interceded to take the general out of the picture?" Coulthart noted that McCasland was never actually seen leaving his home of his own volition and described the disappearance as a "grave national security crisis," noting McCasland had been "working with a private military contractor that has been directly involved in particle beam technology research" and that "the idea that somehow his knowledge is dated or obsolescent doesn't hold. He is an extremely important military figure with incredibly important secrets inside his head."
The parallel is notable: Ryder, the Lockheed VP who allegedly tried to divest UAP crash retrieval materials and spoke openly about UAPs at public conferences, died unexpectedly in 2018 with no obituary. McCasland, the Wright-Patterson general who allegedly advised DeLonge on disclosure and oversaw SAP programs, vanished in 2026 with no trace. Both were senior figures at the nexus of the alleged legacy UAP programs. McCasland's wife has rejected suggestions that his disappearance is linked to UAP knowledge. As of March 2026, McCasland remains missing.
Why This Death Possibly Raises Questions
- Died "unexpectedly" at age 72 with no publicly available cause of death
- No obituary has been located despite months of searching by multiple researchers
- According to DOPSR-cleared statements, was the key Lockheed executive willing to transfer alleged UAP crash retrieval material to a government program
- The material transfer he allegedly proposed was blocked by the CIA
- His death in 2018 came seven years after retirement but during a period of increasing UAP disclosure momentum
- Karl Wolfe, another UAP-connected figure, was also killed in 2018
- As a materials engineer with a Ph.D. in Theoretical & Applied Mechanics, Ryder had the exact expertise needed to analyze exotic materials
- His 38-year career at Lockheed, culminating as VP overseeing $9B+ in R&D, gave him access to the most sensitive programs
- His early career work was contracted by the Air Force Materials Laboratory at Wright-Patterson AFB, the base most historically linked to recovered craft
- He personally knew Eric Davis, Hal Puthoff, and reportedly Jim Lacatski — key figures in government UAP investigation programs
- The absence of basic public death records for a person of his prominence is itself anomalous
- In Lucis Trust presentations, he publicly discussed classified ESP/remote viewing programs, cited Hal Puthoff's theories on gravity as electromagnetism, referenced a classified ESP Wars book assembled during his VP tenure, and presented evidence for consciousness and the soul — topics far outside normal aerospace executive discourse
- His remark about a scientist who published a theory linking gravity to electromagnetism and "died about two weeks later" suggests awareness of suspicious deaths in the field
- He personally oversaw construction of the IBEX spacecraft and other advanced space instruments at Lockheed's Advanced Technology Center
- According to sources who spoke to Liberation Times, Ryder reportedly felt threatened by the intensity of exchanges with CIA officials during the material transfer negotiations
- His name was entered into the Congressional Record on September 9, 2025, when George Knapp testified under oath and identified Ryder as a legacy program figure
- Major General Neil McCasland — another senior insider at the nexus of alleged UAP legacy programs who became willing to share information — disappeared under suspicious circumstances on February 27, 2026, deepening the pattern of harm to UAP insiders willing to talk
- Both Ryder and McCasland had direct Wright-Patterson AFB connections: Ryder through early career contract work at the Air Force Materials Laboratory, McCasland as former commander of the AFRL
The Counterargument
- Age 72 is within the range where unexpected natural deaths occur (heart attack, stroke, aneurysm)
- "Died unexpectedly" is language commonly used for sudden natural deaths, not necessarily suspicious ones
- The absence of an obituary, while unusual for someone of his stature, is not evidence of foul play — some families choose private arrangements
- Ryder had been retired for seven years by the time of his death; if silencing him was the goal, it would have been more urgent during his active career or immediately after retirement
- The DOPSR approval of Elizondo's and Grusch's statements about Ryder does not confirm the underlying claims — DOPSR reviews for classified information leaks, not factual accuracy
- His connections to Puthoff and Davis through the SAFIRE project demonstrate shared interests but do not prove he was part of a UAP crash retrieval program
- No family members, colleagues, or associates have publicly stated they believe his death was suspicious
- The McCasland parallel, while suggestive, involves a different person in a different organization at a different time; McCasland's wife has publicly rejected suggestions that his disappearance is linked to UAP knowledge
- Ryder's gregarious public speaking may reflect personal intellectual passion rather than insider disclosure — many retired executives become freer to discuss heterodox interests after leaving corporate positions
Key Quotes from Media Coverage
"The money that was allocated for DIA, AAWSAP... was originally intended to skip out Bigelow Aerospace facilities in Las Vegas due to a UAP material divestment plan proposal to AAWSAP leadership by Lockheed Martin Space Systems Vice President, Dr. James Ryder. Now deceased, a specific facility known to me was described as having crash retrieval material from the 1950s and other historical operations." — Lue Elizondo, Coast to Coast AM with George Knapp, August 25, 2024 (DOPSR-cleared)
"Lockheed Martin wanted to divest itself from this material at a specific facility that's known to me that I provided to the Inspector General, like street address, all that shit." — David Grusch, Joe Rogan Experience, November 2023 (DOPSR-cleared)
"You find out they're the vice president or the president of one of the legacy aerospace corporations, and they happened to be a PhD of sort, of some discipline, a STEM discipline, all in their own court. And it just so happens that they were a guy that worked on the crash retrieval program." — Dr. Eric Davis, interview with Alejandro Rojas, 2019
"Due to recruitment challenges in engineering, James Ryder, Vice President of Lockheed Martin Space Systems at the time, proposed transferring these materials to an external organization to drive new breakthroughs." — Christopher Sharp, Liberation Times
"Months of searching and still can't find even an obituary... what really happened to Dr. James T. Ryder, former VP of Lockheed Martin Space Systems?" — @burningrob on X (formerly Twitter)
"I have a name for you: Glenn Gaffney, CIA." — George Knapp, sworn testimony before House Committee on Oversight and Accountability, September 9, 2025
"We have to ask, now, about the possibility of foul play — is there somebody who has interceded to take the general out of the picture?" — Ross Coulthart, on the disappearance of Major General Neil McCasland, March 2026
"Jim Ryder was woo af; listen to this talk he gave in June 2017. He knew." — @uapdog (Pedro) on X, commenting on Ryder's Lucis Trust presentations
"It is very significant that a former VP of @LockheedMartin space systems is talking candidly about the significance of consciousness." — Ross Coulthart, on X/Twitter, commenting on Ryder's Lucis Trust presentations
"If you wanted to study certain kinds of things related to what's called ESP in the United States, until very recently you had to hide it very carefully because you were crazy. And then the government didn't want people to think they're supporting crazy stuff. But if you wanted to do the work in Russia, go right ahead. Fine. Here's your money, because they're not caught in the religion that says it's not possible." — Dr. James T. Ryder, "The Garment of God," Lucis Trust conference, 2018
"We do science because we don't know... we built it on what we believe we know, and that's how we build the instruments. But because of that, we miss what's there." — Dr. James T. Ryder, "The Soul Is Light. What Then Is Light?", Lucis Trust conference
"The manifest universe is instantly, intrinsically interconnected... an entangled cosmic matrix... all beings are an interpenetrating interdependent field at all times and are connected at all levels. This isn't coming out of any esoteric reading — this is coming out of science starting to face what's in the world." — Dr. James T. Ryder, quoting Dr. Hal Puthoff and adding his own commentary, Lucis Trust conference
"A gentleman who published [the theory that gravity is electromagnetic] died about two weeks later, so I guess we can't have an argument with him. But he's left his theory. If it's right, it means gravity is a form of electromagnetics, and that gravity can be repulsive." — Dr. James T. Ryder, "The Soul Is Light. What Then Is Light?", Lucis Trust conference
See Also
- Boyd Bushman — Another senior Lockheed Martin scientist who made deathbed UAP claims
- Karl Wolfe — Disclosure Project witness also killed in 2018
- Mark McCandlish — Disclosure witness who died under disputed circumstances
- Amy Eskridge — Antigravity researcher allegedly murdered by private aerospace company
- David Grusch — Whistleblower who provided DOPSR-cleared details about Ryder's material transfer proposal
- Lue Elizondo — Former AATIP director who named Ryder in DOPSR-cleared statements
- Bob Lazar — Claims to have reverse-engineered alien craft at facility near Area 51
- Neil McCasland — Retired USAF Major General, former AFRL commander at Wright-Patterson, DeLonge's UAP adviser; disappeared February 27, 2026 from Albuquerque
Other Shocking Stories
- Phil Schneider: Ex-government geologist who claimed involvement in underground bases found dead with catheter wrapped around his neck
- Dorothy Kilgallen: Star journalist investigating UFOs and JFK found dead; all her notes and files vanished overnight
- Felix Moncla: F-89 pilot scrambled to intercept UFO over Lake Superior; radar showed planes merge, then vanish forever
- Arie DeGeus: Zero-point energy battery inventor found slumped dead in car at airport en route to secure funding
Sources
- Was Dr. James T. Ryder a First-Hand Member of 'The Legacy Program'? — Halfway123 Substack
- James T. Ryder & Glenn Gaffney: A Battle Between UFO Morals — Halfway123 Substack
- James Thomas Ryder — Ancestry.com
- Institute for Venture Science — Leadership
- CIA and DOD Engaged in Decades-Long Retrieval, Tracking, and Exploitation of UFOs — Liberation Times
- Claim: The CIA Blocked the Transfer of Meta-materials From Crashed UFOs — Metabunk
- Proceedings of the Sixth Annual Mechanics of Composites Review — DTIC
- Proceedings of the Seventh Annual Mechanics of Composites Review — DTIC
- AIAA Associate Fellows Roster
- Kona Blue Program Documents — AARO/DHS
- Lucis Trust — 2017 London Conference (includes "The Rending of the Veils")
- Lucis Trust — 2018 New York Conference (includes "The Garment of God")
- Lucis Trust — 2017 Geneva World Goodwill Seminar (includes "The Soul Is Light. What Then Is Light?")
- The SAFIRE Project — Team Page
- Ross Coulthart on Ryder's consciousness presentations — X/Twitter
- Dr. Eric Davis interview with Alejandro Rojas (2019) — YouTube
- Glenn Gaffney and Jim Ryder Named in Congressional Record — Escape Velocity/Medium
- George Knapp Written Testimony — House Oversight Committee (September 2025)
- Top 10 Moments From The Sept 9 2025 UAP Hearing — WatchMojo
- WikiLeaks Podesta Email #3099 — General McCasland
- Retired Air Force Major General Missing — CNN (March 2026)
- Gen. McCasland Disappearance May Be 'Foul Play' — NewsNation/Coulthart
- McCasland Never Seen Leaving Home — NewsNation/Coulthart
- Ross Coulthart, In Plain Sight: An Investigation into UFOs and Impossible Science (2021)
- EU2017 Speakers — Thunderbolts Project
- EU2012 Speakers — Thunderbolts Project
- James Ryder — Science to Sage Magazine
- Pedro (@uapdog) on Ryder's Lucis Trust talks — X/Twitter
This information was built by Grok and Claude AI research.