Mystery surrounding the death of UFO-linked scientist – her last messages published

mystery

Express newspaper
22/04/2026 21:21

A new wave of claims has revived debates surrounding the death of Amy Eskridge, a 34-year-old researcher from Alabama who worked on developing “antigravity” technologies.

She was found dead on June 11, 2022, with a gunshot wound to the head, and her death was classified as a suicide.

But four years later, new published messages have raised strong doubts about this conclusion.

Amy Eskridge reportedly took her own life on June 11, 2022. However, the scientist had claimed that her life was constantly threatened due to her work with antigravity technology.

Milburn published several messages that he said he had exchanged with Eskridge, in which she expressed concern that she was being targeted for her work.

Former British intelligence officer, Franc Milburn, made public messages that he says Eskridge sent him about a month before her death.

According to Franc Milburn, a former paratrooper and British intelligence officer who says he was in contact with the scientist before her death, Eskridge had sent her disturbing messages. In one of them, dated May 13, 2022, she wrote:

“If you see any reports that I committed suicide, it’s not true. If it says I overdosed, it’s not true. If it says I killed someone else, it’s not true.”

Milburn claims that the scientist had expressed fears of a campaign of harassment and pressure against her and her colleagues, who were working on advanced energy and propulsion projects. He says he spoke to her only a few hours before her death and had not noticed anything unusual.

Before his death, Eskridge was working on research into a way to control or neutralize gravity, a technology that could revolutionize space travel and energy production.

Milburn published messages that he said Eskridge had sent him before his death, which contain disturbing claims.

Eskridge wrote to Milburn that a member of her lab, experienced in advanced weapons, was convinced that her injuries had been caused by a “directed energy weapon.”

Milburn published a photo that, according to him, shows Eskridge’s hands burned and discolored after an alleged attack by an “energy weapon.”

She, according to him, had also sent him other messages warning that any of her deaths – whether called suicide or an accident – should be treated as suspicious.

In several published claims, Eskridge allegedly spoke of physical and psychological attacks, which she linked to a “directed energy weapon,” a device that supposedly causes damage from a distance. She also sent photos that she said showed burns to the body and similar injuries.

He also posted an image that he said shows a burn mark on Eskridge’s window.

Other images sent by Eskridge showed unusual injuries, including burned and discolored hands and bleeding skin.

Eskridge claimed that the attacks had also caused burns under the skin, filled with fluid.

In another message, she claimed that a weapons expert within her team believed that her injuries could have been caused by a powerful radio-frequency device placed in a vehicle.

Eskridge had co-founded a private research institute aimed at developing antigravity technology – a concept that, in theory, could change the way we travel in space and produce energy.

Her father, a former NASA scientist, has dismissed the idea that the death was suspicious, stating that “scientists die like everyone else.” The family has also stressed that she suffered from chronic pain and that exaggerated conclusions should not be drawn.

She also said that she had developed lesions after an alleged hit by a directed energy weapon.

Milburn said Eskridge told him he had received: “A large amount of anonymous messages. With advice on how to kill myself, phrased in strange and disturbing rhymes.”

However, Milburn and several of her associates claim that she had faced repeated disturbing incidents: unauthorized entry into the apartment, stalking, anonymous messages urging her to self-harm, and attempts to drug her.

Some of these claims are independently unverified, and authorities have not provided public evidence supporting the theory of a crime.

Eskridge had also expressed fears that her scientific activity on UFOs and advanced technologies was placing her in increasing danger.

Milburn published disturbing messages that he said he had received from Eskridge, where she claimed she had been harassed in public.

Milburn also published a photo that, according to him, showed Eskridge sitting in her home next to the window that she claimed was burned by an “energy weapon.”

After her death, Milburn launched a private investigation and claimed to have uncovered a series of similar incidents within her professional circle, but none of these claims have been officially confirmed by US authorities.

The case has also been mentioned in several discussions in the US Congress on unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP), but so far there has been no public investigation that would change the authorities’ official conclusion.

The issue remains open between two narratives: one based on the official suicide investigation, and the other on unverified claims of external interference and pressure on a scientist working in highly sensitive research fields. /GazetaExpress/

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