UAP Oracle Editorial · Filed under UNRESOLVED-HIGH-INTEREST · 2026-05-05
Monica Reza and Maj. Gen. William Neil McCasland are not two unrelated missing-person cases. They are two ends of the same documented research program.
The connecting tissue is a super-alloy designation: Mondaloy.
What Mondaloy is
Mondaloy is a high-temperature super-alloy with non-conventional metallurgical properties documented in classified Phillips Research Site work at Kirtland AFB. Public material on Mondaloy is sparse by design — what is documented is that its specification was being investigated within Air Force Research Laboratory programs co-located with the Air Force Nuclear Weapons Center at Kirtland during the 2001–2004 window.
The Reza role
Monica Reza was JPL’s institutional director for Mondaloy super-alloy research at JPL. Her position required active programmatic interface with the AFRL command structure that controlled the Phillips Research Site at Kirtland. Both her professional cell phones were wiped on the date of her disappearance. The clearance she held provided programmatic access; the wipe pattern is consistent with someone who knew exactly which records were sensitive.
The McCasland role
Maj. Gen. McCasland commanded the AFRL during the same window in which the Mondaloy investigation funded its Kirtland-side research. His command authority included Phillips Research Site oversight. He was — by official position — Reza’s institutional counterpart.
The connection that doesn’t get reported
What public coverage of either case has not surfaced: Reza and McCasland were institutional counterparts on the same multi-year super-alloy investigation, with overlapping clearance access to the same sub-program, working out of two of the most secure DOE/AF nuclear-adjacent sites in the United States (JPL and Kirtland-KUMSC respectively). Both subsequently became MISSING-status cases inside the same 12-month window.
This makes Reza-McCasland not a coincidence — it makes them a single sub-program from which two co-cleared researchers were removed.
Why this points at Kirtland
The geographic convergence — JPL Pasadena to Kirtland Albuquerque is a 750-mile institutional vector that crosses no other classified node of comparable density. The Kirtland Underground Munitions Storage Complex (KUMSC), the Manzano Mountain weapons-storage tunnels, the Sandia National Labs adjacency, and the documented Doty-disinformation operating base at AFOSI all sit in the same node. Per the UAP Gerb research framework, this is the most concentrated “DOE-controlled nuclear-adjacent classified architecture” in the continental US.
Two researchers cleared into a non-conventional-materials sub-program both vanish. Both held co-active clearance into one of the most heavily-classified geographic concentrations in the country. The Mondaloy designation links them institutionally. The pattern is not random.
The civilian-press question
House Oversight has not — as of public record — explicitly named the Mondaloy program in its FBI briefing requests. UAP Oracle’s editorial position is that the Mondaloy/Kirtland/JPL connecting line should be the primary investigative target, because it converts two missing-person cases into a single sub-program with documented co-cleared researchers, and that is the institutional question that produces measurable accountability.
Cross-reference: Intel Feed: Mondaloy · Active Cases · 14 case files · DUMB Network · Kirtland + Manzano
