Amy Eskridge, a NASA scientist working on Unidentified flying object (UFO), who was found dead in Huntsville, Alabama, on June 11, 2022, with her official cause of death revealed as a self-inflicted gunshot wound, is now again creating headlines after her old text to her friend emerges.

The death of a UFO researcher continued to be under doubt, which raised doubts about a larger conspiracy. The recent case of UFO researchers dying or going missing has resurfaced the case of Eskridge, after her text was sent to a friend just a month before her death, according to The Daily Mail report.

The texts have created doubts in people’s minds that the cause of death is not a suicide or self gun inflicted wounds. She texted her friend, identified as Frac Milburn, in May 2022, just a few weeks before her death. 

🇺🇸 Anti-gravity researcher Amy Eskridge was found shot dead… ruled a suicide.

One month earlier, she texted a friend: “If you see any report that I killed myself, I most definitely did not.”

She also said she was being hit with “energy weapons” and needed to “disclose soon.”… https://t.co/tL3cUI06dipic.twitter.com/wLFHbQZPZh

— Mario Nawfal (@MarioNawfal) April 22, 2026

“If you see any report that I killed myself, I most definitely did not. If you see any report that I overdosed, I most definitely did not. If you see any report that I killed anyone else, I most definitely did not,” Eskridge texted to Milburn on May 13, 2022.

Milburn also opened about how Eskrisdge had spoken about how she was being harassed and intimidated with the objective of “derailing their work.” What’s more, Milburn claims that he spoke with Eskridge over the phone just hours before her death and noticed that there was nothing unusual.

Milburn also allegedly claimed that Amy Eskridge had been filming evidence that she was being harassed and intimidated and had planned to make the public aware. “Everything’s fine, Franc, I’m feeling okay. If anything happens to me – suicide or an accident – it wasn’t, it’s suspicious, treat it as such,” she reportedly told Milburn.

Also Read | US Navy Secretary John C Phelan exits Trump administration amid West Asia conflict.

Among the evidence of the intimidation, she reportedly shared images with Milburn about which showed burn/ red marks on her hands, purportedly from a directed energy weapon.

Newly uncovered video shows anti gravity propulsion researcher Amy Eskridge in a state of panic, claiming her hands were being targeted by a “direct energy weapon” just one month before she was found dead from a gunshot wound to the head. pic.twitter.com/ayQAzTmTLf

— Right Angle News Network (@Rightanglenews) April 22, 2026

‘My ex-CIA weapons guy on my team saw my hands when they were burned really badly a couple months ago, and he saw that window pane in person,’ Eskridge had said in a text, per Daily Mail.

Who Was Amy Eskridge?

Amy Eskridge was a US-based independent researcher known for her interest in unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP), often referred to as UFOs. She was part of a small but active community of researchers exploring unconventional aerospace ideas, including anti-gravity concepts and advanced propulsion systems.

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