Hiker discovers body of missing New Mexico nuclear lab worker, police say

In a separate development, an Iranian national has been detained on charges of trafficking drones and weaponry for Iran. This arrest underscores significant national security concerns for both the White House and NASA, adding another layer of complexity to the unfolding narrative.

Amid these troubling events, a hiker made a grim discovery in a national forest in New Mexico — the body of one of the 11 scientists potentially connected to U.S. nuclear secrets or advanced rocket technology.

The remains have been identified as those of Melissa Casias, a 54-year-old employee of the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL). Her disappearance had previously fueled speculative connections between missing or deceased scientists and sensitive government research, capturing the attention of former President Donald Trump and prompting an investigation by the House Oversight Committee.

According to the New Mexico State Police Investigations Bureau, Casias was found in the McGaffey Ridge area of the Carson National Forest. A handgun was discovered beside her remains, as noted in a late Saturday report on their Facebook page.

Authorities have yet to determine the cause and manner of her death. The Office of the Medical Investigator (OMI) has confirmed Casias’s identity and is conducting a “further anthropological examination” to gather more information.

Casias, from Taos, New Mexico, and Anthony Chavez worked at LANL, a leading nuclear research facility in New Mexico, and both were among those marked as suspiciously missing by FBI and House Oversight investigations.

“The New Mexico State Police extend their deepest condolences to the Casias and Mondragon families during this difficult time,” the agency wrote in its release.

Casias was reported missing June 25, 2025, after she failed to arrive at work and did not return home after visiting her daughter at work, police said. Her family later found that her purse, identification and cellphones had been left behind, prompting concern for her welfare and a missing person investigation.

State police said the investigation remains active and ongoing.

In an April 20 letter to FBI Direct Kash Patel, the House Oversight Committee said it was investigating “recent unconfirmed public reporting” alleging that people connected to “U.S. nuclear secrets or rocket technology” had died or vanished in recent years.

“Public reports raise questions about a possible sinister connection between a string of mysterious deaths and disappearances which began in 2023,” House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., and Rep. Eric Burlison, R-Mo., wrote in a release seeking information from federal agencies.

The committee’s release said the reported cases included the two LANL, two affiliated with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, an MIT scientist who worked on nuclear fusion – shot by the Brown University mass shooter – a pharmaceutical researcher and a government contractor who worked at a nuclear weapons component production facility.

Authorities have not announced any link between Casias’ death and the other cases and speculated they were not linked. The House letters also described the reporting under review as unconfirmed.

Casias’ disappearance had prompted a Missing Endangered Advisory from New Mexico authorities after she was last seen in the Taos area. She was 53 years old at the time.

The discovery in Carson National Forest now closes the search for Casias, but not the investigation into how she died and whose handgun was found beside her.

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