Missing Scientist Was Working on Secret ‘Teleportation’ Project Before Vanishing

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Missing Scientist Was Working on Secret ‘Teleportation’ Project Before Vanishing
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Article By Frank Bergman

Alarming new police records have revealed that a missing scientist who worked at the UFO-linked Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico was reportedly connected to a secret quantum project involving technology that could allow matter to exist “in two places at once.”

Anthony Chavez, 78, vanished without a trace from his Los Alamos, New Mexico, home on May 4, 2025. Of course, we’re just now hearing about it.

Like several other top scientists who mysteriously vanished, he walked out and left behind his newly purchased car, keys, wallet, cigarettes, and identification.

Chavez also had no cellphone, making it almost impossible for investigators to track his movements digitally.

Now, a police report obtained by Los Angeles Magazine journalist Lauren Conlin has revealed that Chavez may have been tied to one of the most advanced and closely guarded fields of research on Earth.

A friend of Chavez told police that the retired Los Alamos worker had been collaborating with an unnamed scientist at the nuclear lab on the idea of being “in two places at once.”

The concept is directly linked to quantum superposition, the foundation of quantum computing and teleportation experiments.

Chavez Vanished Without His Car, Keys, Wallet, or ID

Chavez worked as an HVAC technician at Los Alamos National Laboratory until retiring in 2017.

Los Alamos is one of America’s key nuclear research facilities and has long been connected to some of the most sensitive government science programs in the country.

During an interview with NewsNation’s Jesse Weber, Conlin said Chavez had recently purchased a silver Acura before he disappeared.

Police found the vehicle parked in his driveway.

His keys were left inside his locked house.

The former lab worker also left behind his cigarettes, despite being known as a regular smoker.

He left without identification and had no phone.

Friends described Chavez as an avid hiker.

However, investigators noted that he was not dressed for a long outdoor walk and took no way to call for help in an emergency.

The details make the disappearance even more disturbing.

A retired worker tied to America’s nuclear research world allegedly walks out of his home without the basic items any person would take before leaving for the day.

Then he simply disappears.

Police Report Reveals Quantum Project Link

According to the police report, Chavez had been working with a Los Alamos scientist on a project involving the possibility of being “in two places at once.”

That idea is tied to quantum superposition.

In quantum physics, particles can exist in multiple states at the same time.

The principle is central to quantum computing and research into quantum teleportation, a field with the potential to revolutionize computing, communications, and national security.

How Chavez was connected to the project remains unclear.

But his background may offer a clue.

Quantum computers require extremely cold environments to preserve fragile quantum states.

Those systems can require temperatures approaching -459.65 degrees Fahrenheit.

That kind of environment depends on advanced cooling and cryogenic systems.

Chavez was an HVAC specialist.

Boston-based quantum computer builder QuEra Computing has stated that cooling is essential to the field.

“In the realm of quantum computing, cryogenic cooling is essential for achieving the ultra-low temperatures required to isolate and control qubits,” the company said.

Qubits, or quantum bits, are the building blocks of quantum computers.

Unlike traditional computer bits, which operate in one state at a time, qubits can exist in multiple states.

That is what makes quantum systems so powerful.

It is also what makes them strategically valuable.

WATCH:

Los Alamos Refuses to Confirm Details

Los Alamos National Laboratory has not publicly confirmed Chavez’s duties at the facility.

The name of the Los Alamos physicist Chavez was reportedly working with has not been revealed.

If the police report is accurate, Chavez’s disappearance places another person with ties to sensitive U.S. research inside a chilling pattern of unexplained disappearances and deaths.

The missing former lab worker may have been connected to a field that foreign adversaries would desperately want to penetrate.

Quantum technology is not just theoretical science.

It has enormous implications for encryption, cyberwarfare, military communications, surveillance, and weapons systems.

A breakthrough in the field could reshape the global balance of power.

Former FBI Official Warns of Espionage Plot

Former FBI official Chris Swecker has already warned that foreign powers could be targeting Americans who hold national security secrets.

Swecker spent 24 years at the FBI and served as assistant director in charge of the bureau’s Criminal Investigative Division.

“The first thing you go to is its potential espionage,” Swecker told the Daily Mail in April.

“Our scientists have been targeted for a long time, especially in the rocket propulsion area, by hostile foreign intelligence services,” he added.

Swecker warned that enemy intelligence agencies have spent decades trying to derail top-secret U.S. programs.

They do it by stealing information.

Or they do it by eliminating the people who know too much.

“It’s been happening since the Cold War,” Swecker said.

“Especially when nuclear technology and missile technology were first coming to the forefront.”

“I think we’ve even seen instances where nuclear scientists have been taken out,” he added.

“They’ve been assassinated.”

Those warnings now loom over the Chavez case.

Five People with Ties to Secretive Research Have Vanished

Chavez is one of five individuals who have vanished without a trace over the last year.

All had ties to secretive research areas, including nuclear weapons, advanced rocket propulsion, and alleged UFO recovery programs.

Another Los Alamos employee, Melissa Casias, disappeared just seven weeks after Chavez.

Casias, 53, was an administrative assistant at Los Alamos National Laboratory.

She vanished in almost the same disturbing fashion, leaving behind her belongings and identification at her New Mexico home.

Casias was found dead on May 28 in New Mexico’s Carson National Forest.

Her remains were reportedly found in suspicious circumstances next to a handgun.

Authorities still have not released a cause of death more than a month later.

Intelligence officials have warned that Casias may have been in a position to access sensitive nuclear research information through her superiors.

The FBI is also investigating the disappearance of retired Air Force Gen. William Neil McCasland.

McCasland, often referred to as the “UFO general” or “UFO gatekeeper,” walked out of his New Mexico home on February 27 without keys, phone, or wallet.

The retired general had been in charge of the UFO-linked Air Force Research Laboratory.

He was deeply tied to nuclear research at multiple U.S. facilities, including Los Alamos.

He was also connected to alleged government activity involving extraterrestrial technology.

Pattern Is Too Alarming to Ignore

Swecker said there is enough evidence to suspect foul play in several of the disappearances and deaths.

He said the pattern is especially concerning among people tied to advanced research and rocket technology.

“I think there’s enough of a pattern, even if it’s a small group, I think there’s a smaller group of missing people that warrants an investigation by the FBI, which is the lead agency in counter-espionage, counterintelligence,” Swecker said.

“I would be looking for that, unless we show something points to another direction,” he added.

The Chavez case now adds a disturbing new layer.

A former Los Alamos worker reportedly linked to quantum teleportation research disappears without his car, keys, wallet, phone, cigarettes, or ID.

Weeks later, another Los Alamos worker vanishes and is found dead in a forest.

A retired Air Force general tied to nuclear and advanced aerospace programs also disappears without his essentials.

Authorities have not confirmed that the cases are connected.

But the pattern is impossible to dismiss.

America’s nuclear scientists, aerospace insiders, and advanced research workers are disappearing under bizarre circumstances.

Some are tied to the most sensitive technologies on Earth.

If hostile foreign intelligence services are targeting them, the American people deserve the truth.

And if U.S. officials already know more than they are admitting, then the silence is becoming as disturbing as the disappearances themselves.

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