Another top astrophysicist killed 'randomly'

Ca.

The Living Force
FOTCM Member
This is becoming unsettling as the Deep State controllers seem to be trying once more to send a message to the scientific community, provided HOUSE INABIT's speculation proves correct. The shooting took place in the unincorporated community of Llano, 75 miles north of LA.

But admittedly, Los Angeles is known for confrontational home robberies. So, with that said, the next follow-up read by KTLA should provide more clues, or by other, more newsworthy publications.

Caltech scientist identified as victim in Antelope Valley homicide

KTLA Updated: Feb 19, 2026 / 01:07 PM PST

A Caltech research scientist known for groundbreaking discoveries in astronomy has been identified as the victim of a fatal shooting under investigation in the Antelope Valley, officials confirmed on Thursday.

The Los Angeles County Medical Examiner identified the victim as Carl Grillmair, 67, a resident of Llano who died Feb. 16 from a gunshot wound to the torso. His death was ruled a homicide.

Caltech confirmed to KTLA that Grillmair worked as a research scientist at the institute’s Infrared Processing and Analysis Center, commonly known as IPAC.

“Thank you for your condolences — yes, we can confirm that Carl was employed by Caltech,” Senior Media Relations Manager Robert Perkins said, adding that the institute is working to determine whether an official statement will be released.


According to the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, deputies responded around 6:10 a.m. Monday to the 30700 block of 165th Street East in Llano following reports of a shooting.

The victim was pronounced dead at the scene.

Screenshot 2026-02-20 111056.png


Authorities have not released any suspect information, and investigators have not disclosed what may have led to the killing.

Grillmair was widely respected in the astronomy community for his work analyzing data from NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope, the school says. Colleagues say his research helped scientists identify water signatures on planets beyond our solar system and better understand distant worlds by studying infrared light.

He was also known for discovering stellar streams — faint trails of stars left behind by disrupted star clusters and dwarf galaxies — research that provided important insight into how the Milky Way formed and evolved.

Fellow scientist Fajardo-Acosta described Grillmair as both a mentor and close friend, calling his death a profound loss to the scientific community.

“He was a great friend and will be missed dearly,” Fajardo-Acosta said, adding that Grillmair “takes knowledge with him that will be irreplaceable.”

Outside of his professional work, Grillmair maintained a personal observatory at his home and was an avid pilot and outdoorsman, according to colleagues.

Sheriff’s homicide detectives continue investigating the shooting, which occurred at Grillmair’s residence. No arrests have been announced.

Anyone with information is urged to contact the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department Homicide Bureau at 323-890-5500. Anonymous tips can be submitted through L.A. Regional Crime Stoppers at 800-222-TIPS (8477), via the P3 Tips mobile app, or online at lacrimestoppers.org.

Reaction By (Substract) HOUSE INHABIT
Jessica Reed Kraus Feb 20, 2026

Astrophysicist Carl Grillmair was shot dead at his home in the California desert this week. He was studying comets and asteroids that pose a threat to Earth. Three months ago, Nuno Loureiro— a plasma specialist and professor at MIT, suffered the same fate.

“Something is up with the Brown shooting,” a friend told me weeks ago, flagging it as one of those high-interest stories that slipped beneath the national radar without ever fully surfacing.

He was talking about the university slaying that left a renowned physicist dead inside his own home. Nuno Filipe Gomes Loureiro was a professor and research director steering serious scientific inquiry. At first glance, it looked to be an isolated act of senseless violence. Possibly targeted, but it barely registered beyond a passing headline.

Eight weeks later, we have another headline with eerily similar contours: an early-morning call at the private residence or another scientist. This time in California’s high desert.

Just after 6 a.m. Monday, detectives with the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department responded to reports of an assault with a deadly weapon in Llano, a remote stretch of northern Los Angeles County. On his front porch they found 67-year-old astrophysicist Carl Grillmair suffering from a gunshot wound. Paramedics attempted life-saving measures. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

Colleagues were quick to stress that Grillmair was no obscure academic. His work was described as ingenious and foundational. He contributed to the discovery of water on a distant planet — a finding often cited as a telltale sign that conditions there may be hospitable to life. Another collaborator said he would be remembered for identifying galactic streams that reshaped how scientists map and understand the structure of the cosmos.

While homicide detectives processed the scene, deputies from the Palmdale Sheriff’s Station responded to a nearby carjacking and arrested 29-year-old Freddy Snyder. He was later named a person of interest in Grillmair’s killing and formally charged with murder, carjacking, and burglary. He remains in custody on $2 million bail. No motive has been released. Authorities have not said the men knew each other, nor have they characterized the shooting as targeted.

Still, those tracking it are rightfully skeptical over coincidence— the fact that two respected scientists versed in planetary catastrophes were shot at their homes within weeks of each other, and media just scraped right over it.

Carl Grillmair

Was a Caltech astrophysicist at the Infrared Processing and Analysis Center, specializing in galactic astronomy, dark matter, stellar streams, galactic structure, and exoplanets. He led projects on Hubble and Spitzer telescopes, discovered multiple stellar streams in the Milky Way, and earned a NASA Exceptional Scientific Achievement Medal.

Eight weeks earlier— nearly 3,000 miles away— 47-year-old Dr. Nuno Loureiro, director of MIT’s Plasma Science and Fusion Center and a leading expert in plasma physics, was killed inside his Brookline, Massachusetts home.

On the morning of December 15, Valente parked a gray Nissan Sentra on Babcock Street and lingered in the neighborhood for hours. Surveillance footage showed him walking along Commonwealth Avenue, stepping into shops and buying food with cash. Nothing about his behavior raised alarm. Meanwhile, Loureiro spent the day at MIT overseeing PhD qualifying exams, moving between research meetings and signing routine paperwork, the steady rhythm of academic life.

By early evening, Valente began what police later described as “preoperational surveillance,” circling Loureiro’s neighborhood repeatedly. At 8:22 p.m., a neighbor’s Ring camera captured him wearing a yellow reflective safety vest and carrying a box marked with a barcode, convincing enough that Loureiro’s daughter assumed he was a delivery driver when he rang the bell.

According to reports, Loureiro and his wife were making dinner in the kitchen while their daughters played cards in the living room. Around 8:30 p.m., one of the girls heard the doorbell. Loureiro’s 12-year-old daughter ran to answer it.

“She got up to check who it was, which was when her dad followed behind her and told her to come back into the house,” the report states.

She encountered a man in the lobby who appeared to be holding a package. He was not wearing gloves. She went back inside and then heard three or four gunshots.

When she ran back to the entry foyer, she found her father lying on the ground in a pool of blood.

Valente fled with his headlights off, disappearing into the night. Only later did investigators link him to a mass shooting days earlier inside a Brown University building, where 11 students were wounded and two were killed. After five days on the run, he died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound inside a storage unit in Salem, New Hampshire.

Authorities later identified the suspect as Claudio Manuel Neves Valente, a Portuguese physics graduate who had attended the same university program as Loureiro in Portugal between 1995 and 2000.

Who sent him? His motive? How long this was in planning?

We know none of this.

Tech With Eray & @AIMevzulari

“2.5 months ago, in the United States, an attacker who was a Green Card holder first killed two students at Brown University.

Then, his next target was Nuno Loureiro-one of the world’s most respected names in the field of plasma physics and fusion—and he killed him as well.

Loureiro was a critical scientist working at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) on magnetic reconnection, high-energy plasmas, and fusion theory.

It later emerged that the attacker had obtained his Green Card through the Diversity Visa program.

Following the incident, the U.S. administration indefinitely suspended the Diversity Visa, also known as the Green Card lottery program...”

Screenshot 2026-02-20 113018.png

News of both cases rattled the scientific community. Loureiro was remembered as brilliant and generous, a mentor who invested deeply in young researchers. Grillmair’s colleagues described discoveries that altered how we map the galaxy and search for signs of life beyond our own planet.

In California, the motive remains undisclosed. In Massachusetts and Rhode Island, the suspect is dead, and whatever grievance or fixation drove him is sealed with him. Investigators have drawn no link between the cases. Officially, they are framed as separate acts of violence.

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It may be a coincidence. Two scientists. Two private residences. Two fields pushing at the edges of planetary science and fusion research, disciplines that increasingly sit at the center of global competition, technological ambition, and a public newly fascinated with space, energy, and the possibility of life beyond Earth. It may be nothing more than the tragic mathematics of random violence in a restless era. But as we stand on the verge of a president potentially disclosing life on other planets, as breakthroughs accelerate and attention intensifies, as science moves from academic journals into headlines and geopolitical strategy, I’d argue the slaying of two men respected in these fields probably deserves a closer look.

What People Are Saying:

“Nuno Loureiro (MIT plasma physicist, fusion research) was shot dead Dec 2025; case unsolved, no motive identified. Carl Grillmair (Caltech astrophysicist, galactic astronomy/exoplanets) shot dead Feb 2026; suspect Freddy Snyder arrested, possible carjacking link. No shared projects, funding, or Epstein ties found in sources like Wikipedia, news reports.”

“Being a scientist is more dangerous than being a rapper in 2026.”

“Was he working on fusion?”

“Now Carl Grillmair?”


Are you kidding me? The quantum wars escalate.

“Look into who will get his job. Academia is a killer for grants.”

“REMINDER: Everyone who has built a free energy device has been killed.”
 
Still, those tracking it are rightfully skeptical over coincidence— the fact that two respected scientists versed in planetary catastrophes were shot at their homes within weeks of each other, and media just scraped right over it.

Here's more details of what he was working on:


An accomplished Caltech astrophysicist with more than four decades of research contributions in galactic astronomy and the study of distant planets was fatally shot in a rural area of the Antelope Valley on Monday morning. A suspect in the shooting has been charged with murder.

Deputies responded to a 911 call for an assault with a deadly weapon in the unincorporated community of Llano at 6:10 a.m. and found a man suffering from a gunshot wound on the front porch of a home, according to the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department. Paramedics pronounced him dead at the scene.

The victim was later identified as Carl Grillmair, 67, according to the L.A. County medical examiner. His death was ruled a homicide caused by a gunshot wound to the torso.

“He was very famous in astronomy and a very renowned scientist,” said astronomer Sergio Fajardo-Acosta, who worked alongside Grillmair at Caltech for 26 years. “His legacy will live on forever.”

While investigating the shooting, deputies arrested a suspect in a carjacking that took place nearby, according to the Sheriff’s Department.

That suspect was later identified as Freddy Snyder, 29. He was charged Wednesday with the murder of Grillmair and carjacking. He was also charged with first-degree burglary related to a Dec. 28 incident, according to court records.

He is being held in lieu of $2 million. It is unclear what relation, if any, Snyder had with Grillmair.

A spokesperson for Caltech confirmed that Grillmair was employed as a research scientist at the university. He worked at the university’s Infrared Processing and Analysis Center, which partners with NASA, the U.S. National Science Foundation and researchers around the world to advance the exploration of the universe.

Grillmair enjoyed living in a remote area of the Antelope Valley because it allowed him to observe bright stars in the dark night sky, and he even built an at-home astronomical observatory outfitted with several telescopes, Fajardo-Acosta said. When he wasn’t studying outer space, he enjoyed flying airplanes over the desert and working on home improvement projects.

Fajardo-Acosta described him as an extremely serious person who also possessed a good sense of humor, spoke very eloquently and read all the time.

Grillmair’s work had focused on uncovering the structure of the Milky Way, identifying faint stellar streams and substructures that make up the galactic halo surrounding our spiral galaxy, and helping reshape our understanding of how galaxies evolve, according to his website.

One of his most notable accomplishments was a paper published in 2007 about the presence of water on a distant planet outside our solar system. Fajardo-Acosta described this as a “very ingenious discovery,” noting that Grillmair’s research was “extremely important because water is a telltale sign the conditions of the planet are auspicious for life.”

Grillmair also had the privilege of naming several galactic streams that he discovered, which are a relic of the collision of the Milky Way with another galaxy.

“He is immortalized because the discovery of those galactic streams is attributed to him,” Fajardo-Acosta said.

Grillmair had been awarded substantial observation time as a principal investigator on the Hubble Space Telescope and the Spitzer Space Telescope, and his research earned him numerous accolades, including a NASA Exceptional Scientific Achievement Medal.

At the time of his death, he was focused on studying comets and astroids that could pose a hazard to Earth.
 
356 of his publications :



Carl J. Grillmair is affiliated with the California Institute of Technology in the United States and works primarily in the field of Physics and Astronomy.

Their work has led to publications across several main research topics, including:
  • Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
  • Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
  • Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
  • Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
  • Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
  • Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
  • Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations

The subfields of study covered in their research encompass:
  • Astronomy and Astrophysics
  • Instrumentation
  • General Health Professions
  • Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
  • Philosophy

The scientist has contributed to various publications. Notable recent papers include:
  • Properties of globular cluster systems in nearby early-type galaxies (2024), OPAL (Open@LaTrobe) (La Trobe University)
  • HST imaging of the globular clusters in the Fornax cluster: NGC 1399 and NGC 1404 (2024), OPAL (Open@LaTrobe) (La Trobe University)
  • Hubble Space Telescope Imaging of Antlia B: Star Formation History and a New Tip of the Red Giant Branch Distance (2020), The Astrophysical Journal
  • Spitzer IRAC Photometry of JWST Calibration Stars (2021), The Astronomical Journal
  • The Extended Tidal Tails of NGC 7089 (M2) (2022), The Astrophysical Journal

Their research has been published most frequently in the following venues:

  • The Astrophysical Journal
  • arXiv (Cornell University)
  • OPAL (Open@LaTrobe) (La Trobe University)
  • The Astronomical Journal
  • Bern Open Repository and Information System (University of Bern)
Carl J. Grillmair has collaborated with several coauthors on multiple occasions, including:
  • Schuyler D. Van Dyk
  • R. M. Cutri
  • S. B. Fajardo-Acosta
  • J. Masiero
  • Jean P. Brodie
 
These recent assassinations are an indication that the PTB are anticipating powerful cosmic phenomena in the near future, and that they want to absolutely control the narrative before the next major crisis. Can't let the truth slip away and let a renowned scientist say that "comets have a recurring cleansing effect on Earth!"

Remember, just before Covid or, at least, before the mass rollout of the vaxx, some outspoken scientists (Brandy Vaughan, Andrew Moulden, etc) were also targeted and assassinated. Heck, even Kary Mullis, the PCR inventor, passed away two months before Event 201 (the infamous pandemic simulation exercise in October 2019). It's the same pattern... the cycle of evil!
 
Caltech is where all of the US infrared surveys of space are first "processed", so it is probably at the center of the various space-related coverups, such as the incoming comet cluster and the brown dwarf, as well as probably extraterrestrial archaeological sites or active "alien" presence. The C's have said that 30% of space images are faked.
 
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