Another NASA scientist’s brutal death sparks more demands for FBI probe

A NASA engineer’s death has been added to a growing list of suspicious cases federal officials want the FBI to investigate as fears of a ‘sinister’ plot grow. 

Joshua LeBlanc, 29, was a NASA nuclear engineer found burned beyond recognition in the wreckage of his Tesla on July 22 last year in Huntsville, Alabama.

A series of strange circumstances leading up to the fatal crash led his family to call LeBlanc’s behavior unusual, adding that law enforcement did not reach out to them during the investigation.

Now, three key members of the House Oversight Committee, the main investigative group probing government operations, have spoken out on the suspected connections between LeBlanc’s case and 11 other deaths and disappearances in recent years.

Congressman Eric Burlison of Missouri posted about LeBlanc’s death on X, saying: ‘This is not normal.’

‘America deserves to know what happened to Joshua,’ he added Wednesday morning.

Fellow member of the House Oversight Committee, Tim Burchett of Tennessee, also publicly challenged the FBI to step up their efforts regarding the concerning incidents centered around the US scientific and nuclear communities.

Burlison and Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer of Kentucky have officially requested that the FBI and the US Department of Energy, which oversees nuclear research, lead the federal probe, as national security experts fear a foreign power may be to blame.

Joshua LeBlanc's vehicle slammed into a guardrail and several trees before bursting into flames in Alabama on July 22, 2025

Joshua LeBlanc’s vehicle slammed into a guardrail and several trees before bursting into flames in Alabama on July 22, 2025

Congressman Eric Burlison has publicly stated that he believes the death of the NASA engineer appears 'not normal' and has called for a federal investigation

Congressman Eric Burlison has publicly stated that he believes the death of the NASA engineer appears ‘not normal’ and has called for a federal investigation

LeBlanc, who had been working as an aerospace technologies electrical engineer at NASA since October 2019, slammed into a guardrail and several trees before his 2021 Tesla Model 3 burst into flames.

However, Burlison pointed out that the 29-year-old allegedly went missing on the day of his death, only for authorities to find that the scientist had made a mysterious trip to the Huntsville airport for four hours. 

‘The Tesla then drives two hours into nowhere and crashes into a tree. Body unrecognizable,’ the congressman continued in an April 29 post on X

The engineer’s body was transported to the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences, which took three days to identify due to the severity of the burns.

Family members told Louisiana news site KLFY the sudden trip was never planned and that it was unlike LeBlanc to go silent without updating them.

His loved ones feared he had been abducted from his home, adding that his phone and wallet were still inside the house.

Brittany Fox, a friend of LeBlanc, told the Daily Mail last week that neither she nor his family has been contacted by investigators since the accident nine months ago.

‘How many more before @FBI looks at this?’ Burchett asked in a Tuesday morning social media post.

Pictured is LeBlanc (left) with his mother and brother

Pictured is LeBlanc (left) with his mother and brother 

House Oversight Chairman James Comer (Pictured) has said he feared the strong of deaths and disappearances throughout the US was part of a 'sinister' plot

House Oversight Chairman James Comer (Pictured) has said he feared the strong of deaths and disappearances throughout the US was part of a ‘sinister’ plot

Burlison pointed out that LeBlanc strangely visited Huntsville Airport before driving for two hours and crashing into trees and being burned beyond recognition

Burlison pointed out that LeBlanc strangely visited Huntsville Airport before driving for two hours and crashing into trees and being burned beyond recognition

Comer told Fox News last week: ‘It does appear that there’s a high possibility that something sinister is taking place here.’

‘Congress is very concerned about this. Our committee is making this one of our priorities now because we view this as a national security threat.’

The Daily Mail previously spoke to former FBI assistant director Chris Swecker, who feared that the growing number of suspicious cases involving high-profile scientists, workers at nuclear research labs and a retired Air Force general was an organized operation by a foreign intelligence group.

Swecker, who was in charge of the bureau’s Criminal Investigative Division during his 24-year career, has been particularly outspoken about the mysterious disappearances of General William Neil McCasland, NASA scientist Monica Reza, nuclear weapons official Steven Garcia and nuclear lab employees Melissa Casias and Anthony Chavez.

‘The missing [and] disappearance thing is suspicious inherently,’ Swecker said in a statement to Fox News on Sunday. ‘What they were working on would certainly, without a doubt, be a target of a hostile foreign intelligence service like Russia or China. It could be Iran, could be Pakistan.’

LeBlanc’s death last year marked the second scientist tied to Huntsville, Alabama to die under controversial circumstances. 

Burlison has also raised serious concerns about the alleged suicide of 34-year-old aerospace engineer Amy Eskridge, who reportedly died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head in Huntsville in 2022.

The Alabama resident was the daughter of a former NASA scientist and had publicly claimed that she was being threatened and attacked because of her work with advanced propulsion technology – including anti-gravity engines.

Joshua LeBlanc, 29, had been working as an aerospace technologies electrical engineer at NASA since October 2019

Joshua LeBlanc, 29, had been working as an aerospace technologies electrical engineer at NASA since October 2019

Amy Eskridge (Pictured) allegedly died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head on June 11, 2022 in Huntsville. A former British intelligence officer has claimed she was murdered

Amy Eskridge (Pictured) allegedly died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head on June 11, 2022 in Huntsville. A former British intelligence officer has claimed she was murdered

On Tuesday, FBI Director Kash Patel revealed that the intelligence community was actively chasing down leads that might connect any or all of these incidents.

‘Those investigations are collectively being looked at by the FBI pursuant to (the) President, the White House’s request,’ Patel said in an interview with Fox News Digital.

‘So, we’re reaching out. We’ve already done it, we’re engaged. They’re all state cases, but we’re looking to see if there’s any connections, and we’re going to have a final report here in short order.’

On April 16, President Trump had hoped that the probe into the string of cases would be over by now, but White House officials told the Daily Mail on Friday that ‘we will not get ahead of the investigation.’

Patel said a final report on the case would be coming ‘in short order.’ 

Source link

Related Posts

Load More Posts Loading...No More Posts.