UPDATE: Melissa Casias - podcast episode cover

UPDATE: Melissa Casias

Apr 29, 202615 min
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Summary

New information in the Melissa Casias case reveals escalating tensions, with FBI involvement sparked by media attention and a private investigator's aggressive public accusations against the Casillas family. The episode further explores a bizarre encounter involving a woman named Wendy, who delivered graduation money to Melissa's daughter but now denies knowing the family, leading to a confusing tangle of matching and mismatched identities. This investigation ultimately uncovers an unexpected link between a person tied to Wendy's number and a defense contractor, hinting that a subcontractor theory might be more plausible than initially thought.

Episode description

The Melissa Casias case keeps unraveling, and the more we learn, the less anything makes sense. New details have emerged about the strange woman who showed up at Sierra's job to deliver $50 in graduation money, and the trail leads to a confusing tangle of mismatched names. Meanwhile, the family fracture has only widened, with a private investigator turning up the heat and the FBI now stepping in. Was Mark's theory about a subcontractor closer to the truth than anyone realized? Or is this just another dead end in a case that refuses to stay still?

  • If you have any information about Melissa’s disappearance, please contact New Mexico State Police at 505-425-6771.

 

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Transcript

Intro / Opening

Every year, millions of people head into the wilderness searching for peace, beauty, and adventure. But hidden in those same scenic landscapes are stories of violence. Survival and lives cut short. I'm Dilia D'Ambra, and on my podcast Park Predators, I uncover the true crimes that happened in the Listen to Park Predators wherever you get your podcasts.

Case Developments and PI Aggression

What did I tell you, Crime Junkies? More answers in the Melissa Casillas case inevitably lead to more questions. But things are getting interesting. So I wanted to bring you some stuff hot off the press. I got a couple of things to hit on, and I'm gonna save the strangest for last. So stick with me. So update number one, public pressure and the PI.

There has been a ton of intensity heating up around this case. A lot has to do with the press attention resulting from Melissa being connected to these missing or dead scientists. Which, by the way, not sure if you clocked this, but at the time we recorded our episode, there was a list of eleven, if you included Melissa. Well, Fox News published an article April twenty first about a family who died in a plane crash just recently.

On board was a quote, decorated veteran pilot, aerospace engineer, and defense researcher, James Tony Moffitt. And also his son, who was up and coming in the field, Andrew Moffitt. Their plane crashed in South Carolina, but they were from Huntsville, Alabama, the same city that chemist and entrepreneur Amy S. Gridge called home. Now, Amy's 2022 death was ruled a suicide, but she has been grouped in with that list of scientists.

And before her death, she said in an interview that Huntsville was the biggest deal you've never heard of. It's home to NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, where Amy's father, Richard Eskridge, spent his career as an engineer. He and Amy co-founded a research institute together before she died. Now, it's worth saying though that he told NewsNation he does not believe that her death was suspicious.

Though an interview Amy gave a couple of years before her death, and texts that she supposedly sent in the weeks before she died make it clear that she felt targeted and that her life was in danger. So that is all blowing up, bringing more attention to Melissa's case. So much so that Agent Mata told us that the FBI had reached out to him, given the media attention, and he's working something out with them for assistance.

But at the same time, there are other driving forces stirring things up. Namely, the Mondragon family has a PI working on their behalf who they met through a missing person support event. This man, Thomas McNally, is licensed to practice in Arizona, but according to New Mexico's regulation and licensing department, he's not licensed in the state of New Mexico, where Melissa went missing. And McNally's tactics have been aggressive.

He has been making a series of strongly worded public Facebook posts calling for Mark to be investigated as a person of interest and naming other members of the Casillas family. And that's kind of putting it lightly. Now, because of the backlash, the Casillas family says that they have become worried for their own safety. And not just Mark, but his daughters as well.

Now we talked to Agent Mata about this and he was aware of the PI, but he had not heard anything about McNally's tactics being aggressive.

Rick Valerio and Unconfirmed Leads

Now on to update number two. Rick Valerio. Now remember, this is the guy who was sitting on his horse crying in front of a church. The one who told the tourist that he had just found his cousin decapitated in the mountains. Now, Mata confirmed more about that second interview he did with him after the body cam one that you saw in our episode. But there wasn't much more. He said that in that follow up, Valerio admitted that he is intoxicated every time he's on a horse.

But not much else came from the interview, other than Mata says he has not been able to establish any connection between Rick Valerio and Melissa. And as for it the blue truck that he had, in our episode we were interested to know if anyone had searched it, knowing that there was a sighting of a blue truck near Melissa when she was last seen walking down Highway five eighteen. And the answer is kind of.

So Monta told us he did look at it, but only visually, like he walked around it. And he noted old looking, rusty damage on it. Valerio said that the truck had been out of commission for several months and had not been driven, but I don't know if Mata managed to confirm that. He did confirm for us though that there were no license plate readers on the relevant stretch of Highway 518 to help him out in identifying whose blue truck that was that was seen near Melissa.

The Confusing Wendy Encounter

Now, update number three. And here's where you need to buckle up. So, toward the end of Melissa's episode, I told you about a strange encounter that Sierra had with a woman who came to her work not long after her mom went missing to give her$50 in graduation money. Supposedly, this woman was a longtime friend of Melissa's, so she drove 300 miles from where she lived in Colorado with her fiance or her husband to give her this fifty bucks, no card, that yes, she could have mailed.

There is something to this encounter that I believe is really important. need to get to the bottom of it. But that is somehow getting harder to do, even though I now have more details. So let me just kind of like retell you the story, filling in more information. So originally, when we talked to Sierra, she thought that that interaction happened in September, about three months after Melissa went missing. Mark, though, he remembered it happening in July.

Well, they were both slightly off, and Sierra confirmed for us that she checked the notes on her phone, and now she is confident that that interaction happened on exactly August eighth. Now Sierra had a note in her phone because this woman, Wendy, is her name, gave Sierra her phone number. Now, is it even weirder that this woman gave her her number then would go on to deny knowing her? Thank you for asking. Yes, it is, but let me keep going.

Sierra told us that it wasn't actually just Wendy and one man that showed up. Sierra recalls there being three people with Wendy when she came to her job. There was that man who was Wendy's husband or fiancé, and then another man and woman. Now when we originally talked to Mark and Sierra, they didn't give us the phone number that they had for Wendy. They just gave us her first name. And then when we pressed them for the last name, Sierra passed along from Mark the name that he thought it was.

So we were using public records to call a woman who matched that name in Colorado. Well, it turns out we were calling the wrong Wendy. Mark had the last name wrong by one letter, which would explain why that woman never called us back. Now remember, Mata is the one who said that he spoke with Wendy and she denied knowing Melissa or Sierra or Mark. Said that she hadn't driven to Taos, hadn't been there in years.

So at first, when I learned that we were contacting the wrong Wendy, I was like, oh crap, maybe he called the wrong person too. But no. We confirm Mata called the number Sierra got from the woman. He didn't find her by using the wrong last name, so he is confident he spoke to the right Wendy. So, for some reason, she gave her phone number to Sierra, but then is denying knowing the family.

It's not lost on anyone how weird this is, right? Like I mean, actually think about it. There is no way Sierra or Mark just pulled a name and matching phone number out of their hat. And I know you're probably like, oh, okay, well, you know, they could have found somebody who had their number published online and it was like some long con.

But you mean to tell me that they just randomly found someone who actually did have ties to Taos, New Mexico? I mean she admitted to Mata she had been to Taos, just not for years. And you can't even say like, oh, you know, hey, they just found some old name and number of a friend of Melissa's and then made up this encounter, because then why is this woman claiming not to know Melissa?

Mark says that he has known this woman for years, and Mata is clear that he absolutely believes Sierra is telling the truth. And he is just as shocked and can't explain why Wendy is denying knowing this. But still, it gets weirder. So when we finally got the real number for Wendy from Sierra, we did a reverse number search in some of the databases that we used.

The number does come back to Wendy, but it's also connected to another couple, which is very interesting, knowing that Sierra said that there was another couple with Wendy when she showed up, right? Well this is where you need to lock in or you might lose me. Are you ready? So working on these updates with me were my reporter, Nina, and our booking producer, Mara.

Marilyn is the one who finds out about the other couple tied to the phone number. Now this is all happening fast and in real time. So as this pops up, she tells Nina, like, oh weird, there's two more people. And I'm gonna call these people John and Jane Smith. So Nina just types John Smith Colorado into Google and starts seeing if she can find this guy. And one pops up. And he's pictured with a woman. So we shot that picture over to Sierra. Did this look like the couple you saw?

And she said she is 99% sure that the other man and woman who came with Wendy that day are these people that we sent her. So we thought we were one step closer. But we obviously have to check and recheck things, right, before we're gonna publish an update. And we quickly realized something. The phone number was connected to a John S. Smith. The picture that Nina found was for John A. Smith.

Nina was able to find pictures of John S. Smith, and they are not the same people. But she had Marilyn send those photos over to Sierra too of John S. Smith, and Sierra said that she didn't recognize him. And I don't know if your brain is breaking the way that mine was, but like this doesn't make sense. Wendy is real. Wendy is connected to John S. Smith, but Wendy showed up to visit Sierra in tandem with a completely different John A. Smith. What is happening in this case?

Defense Contracts and Subcontractor Theory

And you want to know the strangest part of all? John S. Smith, the one who is actually tied to the number connected to Wendy, he is connected to a company called Caterpillar Inc. According to their website, Caterpillar Inc. is shaping the future as the world's leading manufacturer of construction and mining equipment, off-highway diesel, and natural gas engines.

industrial gas turbines and diesel electric locomotives. Backed by one of the largest independent global dealer networks and financing services, through CAT Financial, the company's primary business segments Power and energy, construction industries, and resource industries are solving customers' toughest challenges through a commitment to commercial excellence and advanced technology. So are you ready for it? Caterpillar Inc. is has mad contracts with the Department of Defense.

On April 29th, 2025, Caterpillar got a one-year contract that totaled$83.4 million for earth moving and excavating equipment. On May 21st, 2025, they were awarded a contract that runs slightly over one year, that as of today has paid out 97.1 million for earthmoving and excavating equipment. Now, these are just two of the most recent contracts I found on a government website. There are more that go back even further. But again, John S. Smith is not who Sierra saw.

But he is the one connected to the phone number that is also connected to Wendy who showed up to give Sierra fifty bucks but now claims she doesn't know her. When we spoke to Mata, he did not remember hearing about the Smiths before we broke. He said that it might have popped up when he searched Wendy's number, but he wasn't at his desk when he called, and he couldn't check his notes. So he wrote it down during the call, and he sounded intrigued. We're intrigued too.

I found an old presentation from 2011 that was made by Los Alamos National Laboratory for its work with the National Nuclear Security Administration, and Caterpillar Inc. was a contributor on the study. So I know the twenty eleven connection between Los Alamos and Caterpillar was years before Melissa went missing. But maybe Mark's idea that Melissa got help from some subcontractor of the lab isn't that far fetched after all.

Or maybe there is still information to be found. So if you have anything you want to share with us, you can email us at tipsataudiochuck.com. Crime Junkie is an Audio Chuck production. I think Chuck would approve. Some cases fade from headlines. Some never made it there to begin with. I'm Ashley Flowers, and on my podcast, The Deck. I tell you the stories of cold cases featured on playing cards distributed in prisons designed to spark new leads and bring long overdue justice.

Because these stories deserve to be heard, and the loved ones of these victims still deserve answers. Are you ready to be dealt in? Listen to the deck now, wherever you get your podcast.

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