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Off Air with Ron Chapman

Off Air with Ron Chapman

By: Ron Chapman
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Summary

Off Air explores the nation’s most important legal headlines with depth and context you won’t find in mainstream media.


Hosted by Attorney and TV news analyst Ron Chapman, Off Air brings real courtroom experience to the stories shaping the country. Neil Cavuto has called Chapman an “attorney extraordinaire,” and a federal judge described him as “one of the best attorneys I’ve seen in my 20 years on the bench.”


With more than 175 acquitted counts in federal cases, Chapman delivers real-world insight and rigorous legal analysis on the cases that matter most.

© 2026 Off Air with Ron Chapman
Political Science Politics & Government True Crime
Episodes
  • Missing Air Force General: Who Took Neal McCasland?
    May 13 2026

    A two-star Air Force general walked out of his Albuquerque home on February 27, 2026 and vanished inside a 54-minute window. His phone, his glasses, and his wearable devices were all left behind.

    Federal criminal defense attorney Ron Chapman investigates the disappearance of General Neal McCasland. McCasland's career placed him at the center of America's most sensitive aerospace programs. He served as chief engineer for NavStar GPS, worked on space-based laser research, and commanded the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson. The man who spent decades designing systems to make the world visible vanished into a gap no one has publicly closed.

    Ron walks through the timeline, the items left behind, the items still missing, and a search effort that came up empty despite drones, helicopters, dogs, and infrared. He examines each of the public theories, including the UAP angle that pushed this case across the internet. Then he names who he believes investigators should actually be looking at first.

    This episode explores:

    • The 54-minute disappearance and what McCasland left behind
    • His classified aerospace career and what made him valuable
    • The massive search effort and why it came up empty
    • The theories the sheriff's office has publicly dismissed
    • Where the real investigative attention should be

    The story is not where Neal McCasland went. The story is who decided to take him.

    Additional Resources:

    Official website: https://ronaldwchapman.com/

    ✍️ Subscribe to Ron’s Substack for deeper investigations
    https://ronaldwchapman.substack.com/

    💡 Free sample of Truth and Persuasion
    https://ronaldwchapman.substack.com/p/truth-and-persuasion-free-sample

    📲 Follow Ron
    X (Twitter): https://x.com/RonChapman
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ron_chapman
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ronaldwchapmanII/
    Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/c-7867522

    🔔 Hit the bell so you never miss an Off Air episode.

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    32 mins
  • The "11 Missing Scientists" Story Is Hiding 2 Real Cases
    May 9 2026

    An aerospace engineer vanished hiking in California in June 2025. Eight months later, a retired Air Force Major General disappeared from Albuquerque. Both vanished without bodies, without resolution. Both share an institutional thread that connects them when nothing else does.


    None of that made it into the viral "11 missing scientists" story now dominating headlines. Mainstream media has covered it. Trump has commented on it. Matt Walsh ran a full video. The list bundles those two cases inside nine others that don't share fact patterns, timelines, or investigative red flags. Identified suspects. Documented medical issues. Private sector work with no classified component. Geographic proximity rather than operational ties. The viral framing collapsed eleven unrelated cases into one ominous pattern that doesn't survive scrutiny.


    In Episode 33 of Off Air, Ron Chapman, federal criminal defense attorney, isolates the cases that hold up under serious review. Monica Reza is tied through public patent records to AFRL-linked rocket propulsion materials. She vanished while hiking near Mount Waterman in June 2025. William Neil McCaslin commanded the Air Force Research Laboratory and served as Director of Special Programs. He disappeared from Albuquerque in February 2026. His phone, glasses, and wearable devices were left behind. His boots, wallet, and a 38 revolver were missing.


    This episode separates noise from signal. Ron walks through the cases that fall apart on basic review, the pattern matching that turned a cluster of unrelated events into a national headline, and what makes Reza and McCaslin different from the rest.


    You'll hear:

    • Why "11 missing scientists" went viral and what made it so easy to manufacture
    • The two disappearances that actually warrant serious investigative scrutiny
    • Reza's documented connection to specific Air Force-funded propulsion materials
    • What McCaslin's career inside AFRL and special programs tells you about the disappearance
    • What the FBI, White House, and House Oversight Committee said publicly
    • The pattern that emerges when you isolate the only two cases worth investigating

    Ron will follow up with separate episodes on Reza and McCaslin. Subscribe so you don't miss them.


    Additional Resources:

    Official website: https://ronaldwchapman.com/

    ✍️ Subscribe to Ron’s Substack for deeper investigations
    https://ronaldwchapman.substack.com/

    💡 Free sample of Truth and Persuasion
    https://ronaldwchapman.substack.com/p/truth-and-persuasion-free-sample

    📲 Follow Ron
    X (Twitter): https://x.com/RonChapman
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ron_chapman
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ronaldwchapmanII/
    Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/c-7867522


    🔔 Hit the bell so you never miss an Off Air episode.

    Send us Fan Mail

    Show More Show Less
    23 mins
  • The 6-3 Supreme Court Ruling on Louisiana's Voting Rights Act Case
    May 6 2026

    A 6-3 Supreme Court decision out of Louisiana just changed how voting districts can be drawn, and the legal and political consequences are already moving fast.


    Federal criminal defense attorney Ron Chapman breaks down the majority opinion authored by Justice Alito, walking through what the ruling actually says about race-based redistricting, why District 6 was struck down, and how the Court has now closed off the exceptions some states relied on to justify race-based maps.


    He also takes on Justice Kagan's heated dissent, including her claim that the majority rewrote Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act and undermined a vital tool against minority dilution. Ron explains why that argument depends on an assumption about voter behavior that the data does not support.


    This episode covers:

    • What the 6-3 majority opinion actually says
    • Why Louisiana's District 6 violated the Voting Rights Act
    • The Gingles precedent and why the Court closed the door on race-based exceptions
    • Why governors are already suspending primaries to redraw districts
    • How this ruling could shift House seats in Louisiana, Alabama, and other southern states
    • The downstream impact on the 2026 midterms and the 2028 presidential field
    • Why Justice Kagan's dissent misses the legal mark

    If you want a clear legal walkthrough of one of the most consequential voting rights decisions in years, this episode is for you.

    Tune in.

    Additional Resources:

    Official website: https://ronaldwchapman.com/

    ✍️ Subscribe to Ron’s Substack for deeper investigations
    https://ronaldwchapman.substack.com/

    💡 Free sample of Truth and Persuasion
    https://ronaldwchapman.substack.com/p/truth-and-persuasion-free-sample

    📲 Follow Ron
    X (Twitter): https://x.com/RonChapman
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ron_chapman
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ronaldwchapmanII/
    Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/c-7867522

    🔔 Hit the bell so you never miss an Off Air episode.

    Send us Fan Mail

    Show More Show Less
    8 mins
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