
Scientist Amy Eskridge, who died at the age of 34, is now the eleventh person with connections to secret U.S. research to mysteriously go missing or pass away.
Authorities found Eskridge dead after she warned that her life could be in danger. She was experimenting with anti-gravity technology and conducting research on UFOs and extraterrestrial life at the time of her death, according to DailyMail.com.
In 2020, she announced that she intended to present her groundbreaking anti-gravity research, but first required NASA approval. She never got that far.
On June 11, 2022, Eskridge allegedly shot herself in the head in Huntsville, Alabama. However, police and medical examiners have never made any information about an investigation public.
Supporters claim someone killed her as part of a conspiracy
After her death, her supporters contested the official ruling of suicide. They claimed that new evidence, including an interview that has not yet been made public and independent findings, constituted a “murder” conspiracy, which they presented to Congress.
Eskridge started a research firm called The Institute for Exotic Science prior to her alleged suicide with the goal of developing a “public-facing persona to disclose anti-gravity technology.” Her father, Richard Eskridge, a retired NASA engineer who specialized in plasma physics and fusion technology, founded the institute with her and served as the company’s Chief Technology Officer.
She stated that she started the company because “If you stick your neck out in private… they will bury you, they will burn down your house while you’re sleeping in your bed and it won’t even make the news. That’s why the institute exists.”
Files containing her company’s records have surfaced, including images of alleged UFO-inspired aircraft and in-depth analyses of anti-gravity propulsion.
Eskridge and her father gave a presentation in 2018 detailing both historical and contemporary gravity modification experiments, including purported black projects that were creating the “TR3B,” a triangular anti-gravity craft.
Before her death, she claimed someone was attacking and harassing her
Prior to her passing, Amy Eskridge asked retired British intelligence officer Franc Milburn for assistance in looking into the instances of harassment and intimidation she claimed to have experienced. Milburn eventually came to the conclusion that Eskridge had not committed suicide.
Eskridge and Milburn both recorded numerous alleged instances in which an unidentified suspect physically and psychologically attacked her, including when the suspect fired a “directed energy weapon” at her, using strong microwaves to cause burns all over her body.
In 2023, independent investigators presented Milburn’s findings to Congress. In a public hearing on Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena, journalist Michael Shellenberger claimed that a ‘private aerospace company’ murdered Eskridge “because she was involved in the UAP [Unidentified Aerial Phenomena] conversation.”
She now joins a list that includes Steven Garcia, a government contractor who worked for the Kansas City National Security Campus; Anthony Chavez, a former Los Alamos National Laboratory employee; Melissa Casias, who authorities believe had security clearance for sensitive data at Los Alamos National Laboratory; Monica Reza, the Director of the Materials Processing Group at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory; retired U.S. Air Force Major General William Neil McCasland; Michael David Hicks, a research scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory; Frank Maiwald, a NASA scientist employed at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory; and three other researchers – Jason Thomas, Carl Grillmair, and Nuno Loureiro, who have vanished without a trace or passed away inexplicably.