
Amy Eskridge warned friends she would never commit suicide—yet authorities ruled her 2022 death a self-inflicted gunshot, now resurfacing amid claims of 11 dead or missing scientists tied to sensitive U.S. space tech.
Eskridge’s Final Warnings
On May 13, 2022, Amy Eskridge texted retired British intelligence officer Franc Milburn: “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.” Weeks earlier, she described daily death threats, groups of stalkers using scripted questions, psychological torment with rhymes urging suicide, and physical burns from an RF k-band emitter or directed energy weapon. These claims tied directly to her work on advanced propulsion.
Researcher Background and Risks
Amy Eskridge, 34, co-founded the Institute for Exotic Science in Huntsville, Alabama, near NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center. Daughter of retired NASA engineer Richard Eskridge, she pursued anti-gravity technology and UFO disclosure. In a 2020 interview, she stated, “If you stick your neck out in public, at least someone notices if your head gets chopped off,” acknowledging threats from revealing suppressed tech. Her efforts aimed to bring exotic science to public awareness, echoing long-standing concerns over government or defense suppression of breakthroughs that could upend energy and defense monopolies.
Official Ruling and Family Response
Police found Eskridge dead June 11, 2022, from a self-inflicted head wound, ruling suicide. Her body underwent cremation days later, with no public autopsy or investigation details released. Richard Eskridge rejects conspiracy theories, insisting no foul play. Franc Milburn shared the texts with media, alleging a harassment campaign. The case links to David Wilcock’s similar ruled suicide and unverified claims of 10 other space or nuclear scientists dead or missing, highlighting opacity in official probes.
Under President Trump’s second term, demands grow for transparency in space research deaths, as patriots question if deep-state holdovers protect classified black projects from exposure. Limited details on the “11 scientists” prevent full verification, but Eskridge’s texts demand scrutiny to safeguard American innovators.
Amy Eskridge predicted her own death – before becoming 1 of 11 scientists now dead or missing Newly revealed messages have drawn even more suspicion about the resurfaced death of one of eleven scientists with ties to America’s space and nuclear secrets w… https://t.co/8DpASUGw57 pic.twitter.com/rx5eWJm8Os
— UnfilteredAmerica (@NahBabyNahNah) April 23, 2026
Broader Implications for Innovation
Huntsville’s aerospace hub amplifies suspicions, as independent researchers near federal facilities face potential chilling effects. Conspiracy narratives portray Eskridge’s death as a “perfect crime” due to rapid cremation and absent forensics, fueling distrust in opaque rulings. No mainstream NASA or expert rebuttals exist; fringe amplification persists online. For conservatives valuing limited government and individual liberty, such cases underscore risks when powerful entities allegedly silence tech threatening establishments. Official opacity erodes faith in institutions, urging Trump’s administration to probe for truth.
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Amy Eskridge death mystery: Final texts revealed, death threats, suicide plot













