Resurfaced video challenges official suicide ruling in death of scientist Amy Eskridge
Amy Eskridge, a 34-year-old scientist, was found dead on June 11, 2022, with a gunshot wound to her head. Authorities ruled the incident a suicide, yet a resurfaced video now casts doubt on that conclusion. She had been researching technology capable of revolutionizing space travel and energy production.
Just months before her death, Eskridge spoke to fellow researchers about severe harassment she faced regarding government secrets. In May 2020, she told colleagues, "I've been roofied multiple times. Like my extended team has been roofied multiple times, like it's the f***ing roofie party over here."
She described a "social engineering" campaign where strangers approached her with detailed knowledge of her personal life. These individuals questioned her work and demanded to know if she employed the government. "Then all of a sudden the people in the bar around me are like, 'What do you do for a living? Tell us, do you work for the government... you're sitting there at your laptop, it looks cool, tell us what you're doing,'" she recounted.

Eskridge claimed she felt extremely drunk at a bar near her Alabama home despite having arrived recently. "Like twice or three times it's like I'm really f****** drunk, I shouldn't be this drunk, I didn't drink enough to be this drunk, what's happening? Why am I so messed up?" she said.
Franc Milburn, a retired British paratrooper and intelligence officer, said he received messages from Eskridge after she died. One message dated May 13, 2022, stated, "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."

Milburn told the Daily Mail that anonymous contacts claimed they too were targeted following her death. These reports included suspected drink spiking, break-ins, and slashed tires.
Eskridge was a graduate of the University of Alabama in Huntsville. She co-founded The Institute for Exotic Science with her father, Richard Eskridge, in 2018. The company focused on speculative research, including the creation of gravity-defying engines.
UFO researchers have linked this technology to extraterrestrials, claiming anti-gravity propulsion explains aircraft moving at incredible speeds. This technology defies known laws of physics.

Richard Eskridge, a former NASA scientist, has refuted claims that his daughter's death was suspicious. The Daily Mail has attempted to contact him for comment.
Sitting at her laptop, Eskridge described a chilling reality where intimidation and harassment had plagued her for four to five years. By 2020, the situation had deteriorated so severely that she could no longer visit bars alone, fearing for her safety. "I don't go to bars by myself anymore, even though it's my most productive zone because in the past 12 months, if I sit down at a bar by myself, some dude will come, like some 50-year-old dude will come and sit next to me and turn to me and say 'do you want one roofie in your drink or two?'" she stated.

The threats escalated into invasive attacks on her personal space, including break-ins at her home and aggressive sexual threats. "Then he'll like drop buzzwords that are relevant to my life, and I'll be like I'm getting the f*** out of here," the scientist recounted. "Over the past 12 months, it's been escalating, like more aggressive, more invasive digging through my underwear drawer and sexual threats." These incidents forced her to consider a rapid disclosure of UFOs to the public, fearing she needed to act quickly before the threats worsened.
Eskridge, a graduate of the University of Alabama in Huntsville, co-founded The Institute for Exotic Science with her father, Richard Eskridge, in 2018. Their company, later referred to as HoloChron Engineering, focused on speculative research, including the development of gravity-defying engines. In 2018, they presented on historical and modern experiments in gravity modification, alleging black projects were developing triangular anti-gravity craft known as the 'TR3B.' During this period, Eskridge claimed she and her colleagues became targets of repeated physical and psychological attacks, allegedly designed to isolate the 34-year-old from her staff.
The gravity of the situation was underscored by reports from colleagues who came forward anonymously after her death. Milburn told the Daily Mail that coworkers and friends revealed they had been attacked, roofied, and suffered home and vehicle vandalism. "My house was broken into, my car tires were slashed," they reported. The scope of the alleged conspiracy extended beyond direct attacks on Eskridge; coworkers claimed their food had been poisoned, making their entire families sick. One bag was marked with "Amy Eskridge" written on it, implicating individuals living hundreds of miles away out of state in a coordinated campaign of harassment.

Former intelligence officer David Milburn has asserted that the tragic events surrounding the life and death of researcher Sarah Eskridge were not a series of isolated incidents, but a calculated campaign targeting her and her associates. Documents made public reveal that Eskridge's research firm, which has since closed, was developing anti-gravity technology allegedly derived from unidentified aerial phenomena.
The situation escalated in May 2022, when Eskridge contacted Milburn, whom she had befriended online, to report physical attacks. She claimed she was working on a highly sensitive project for Homeland Security designed to detect chemical and biological threats in subway systems. During this work, she stated she was struck by a directed energy weapon. Milburn shared images purportedly showing scorch marks on her home window and severe burns on her hands, feet, neck, and back, which she attributed to the weapon firing microwave-like rays.

On May 19, 2022, Eskridge messaged Milburn with a specific assessment from a former member of her lab. She wrote, "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." He reportedly told her the injuries were consistent with an RF k-band emitter, potentially powered by five car batteries housed inside an SUV.
Tragically, less than a month after these attacks, the 34-year-old researcher died by her own hand. Despite Milburn's subsequent investigation disputing the initial reports of suicide, he maintains that Eskridge was murdered by a private aerospace company in the United States due to her involvement in discussions regarding UAP.
While these claims remain unproven, the implications for national security and public safety are significant. In 2023, Milburn presented his findings to Congress. Representative Eric Burlison and other lawmakers have since noted that the case warrants serious suspicion, highlighting how government directives and private sector research on advanced weaponry can directly impact the lives of individuals working on classified projects.
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