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🚨NASA nuclear engineer found dead in burned Tesla after vanishing…
Joshua LeBlanc, a 29 year old aerospace engineer working on nuclear propulsion systems at NASA, died in a car crash in Huntsville, Alabama on July 22, 2025.
LeBlanc was reported missing by his family at 4:32 a.m. after failing to show up for work. That wasn't normal behavior. He left behind his phone and wallet, which makes even less sense if this was just someone heading out for the day.
Hours later, his Tesla was found destroyed after colliding with a guardrail and multiple trees before catching fire. The damage was severe enough that his body couldn't be identified immediately. It took three days and forensic confirmation to officially confirm it was him.
There's another detail that complicates this even further. Tesla data showed the vehicle had been sitting at Huntsville airport for around four hours earlier that day. That wasn't part of his known plans, and there's no clear explanation for why he was there or what he was doing during that window.
LeBlanc was working directly on nuclear propulsion systems, including NASA's Space Nuclear Propulsion program and the DRACO project, which is focused on nuclear thermal engines for deep space missions.
Now put that alongside a growing list of individuals tied to aerospace, defense, and nuclear related work who have died or disappeared over the past few years. Names like Monica Reza, Melissa Casias, Anthony Chavez, Steven Garcia, and retired Air Force Major General William Neil McCasland have all surfaced under different circumstances, but within the same narrow band of expertise.
That obviously doesn't automatically mean connection, but it does mean you have to stop looking at each case as unrelated because once you start lining them all up, the overlap becomes pretty obvious.
#UFO #UAP #NASA #Aerospace #Disclosure #UAPTwitter
https://x.com/UAPWatchers/status/2047082618156712027