MISSING AIR FORCE GENERAL 'PLANNED NOT TO BE FOUND' Wife Reveals In 911 Call
Retired Air Force Major General William Neil McCasland vanished last month—and the details surrounding his disappearance have left more questions than answers.
According to a 911 call placed on February 27 by his wife, Susan McCasland Wilkerson, there were signs that his disappearance may have been intentional.
In the call, she told the dispatcher she had “some indication that he planned not to be found.”
She explained that Neil had changed his clothes, turned off his phone, and left it behind—something she described as completely out of character. “He’s always got his phone,” she said, noting how deliberate it all felt.
Despite this, she struggled to believe he truly meant to leave for good.
Susan shared that her husband had recently been dealing with anxiety, memory issues, and trouble sleeping. At times, he had expressed fears about his health declining, saying he wouldn’t want to live if things got worse—but she never believed those words would turn into action.
“It seemed like one of those moments,” she said in the call. “Just frustration… not something real.”
On the day he disappeared, Susan left their home for a doctor’s appointment around 11:10 a.m. When she returned less than an hour later, he was gone.
Their cars and bikes were still in the garage, leading her to believe he may have left on foot. She wasn’t sure if he had taken his smartwatch, and when she checked his gun safe, she couldn’t immediately tell if anything was missing.
Later, the Bernalillo County Sheriff's Office confirmed that a .38-caliber revolver, along with his hiking boots and wallet, were gone.
What began as a quiet afternoon quickly turned into a deeply unsettling mystery—one shaped not just by a disappearance, but by the troubling possibility that it may have been planned.
The case remains under investigation.

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