The Mystery of Amy Eskridge. The Mysterious Death of the UFO Researcher is Being Discussed in the U.S. 0

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The Mystery of Amy Eskridge. The Mysterious Death of the UFO Researcher is Being Discussed in the U.S.

American and British media are discussing the released messages of physicist Amy Eskridge, who mysteriously died four years ago. They are filled with ominous predictions.

The scientist who worked on UFOs warned friends about being followed and threats, and a month later her body was found with a bullet in her head. Investigators quickly reported it as a suicide.

The Last Conversation and the Fatal Shot

34-year-old Amy Eskridge from Alabama was researching anti-gravity propulsion systems and was interested in UFOs. Almost four years after her tragic death, the story has taken an unexpected turn. The British tabloid Daily Mail obtained a shocking archive of correspondence — the deceased instructed that it be opened "in case of any suspicious outcome."

According to the data that has come into the possession of the press, a key witness is retired British special forces and intelligence officer Frank Milburn, who described himself as Eskridge's business partner. He provided journalists with screenshots of correspondence with Amy Eskridge. A month before her death, she sent him a chilling message: "If they say I committed suicide, don’t believe it. I definitely didn’t do that."

Following were equally alarming lines about poisoning and possible fabricated murder charges: "If you see a message that I died of an overdose, I definitely didn’t do that. If you see a message that I killed someone else, I definitely didn’t do that."

Milburn claims he spoke with Amy Eskridge just hours before the tragedy, and nothing indicated that she was ready to take her own life. The next day, June 11, 2022, she was found dead with a gunshot wound to the head.

The Hunt for the Cutting Edge of Science

Why has the death of this provincial physicist only now come to light? Everything changed after a series of similar incidents that swept across the United States. Federal channels are competing to report losses among scientists: since 2023, some have gone missing under mysterious circumstances, some have been found shot in their own homes, and some have died under unexplained circumstances. According to Fox News, at least eight specialists in narrow fields — nuclear scientists, astrophysicists, engineers of classified projects related to the study of the UFO phenomenon — are involved.

This ominous list also includes recently disappeared Major General William McCasland, a retired Air Force officer who had access to highly classified government data. There is discussion on Capitol Hill about the possibility of involving the FBI in a centralized investigation.

The Ghost of the 'Havana Syndrome'

The deceased Amy Eskridge, who died in 2022, headed a small private Institute of Exotic Sciences, where a team of enthusiasts was working on a groundbreaking idea of anti-gravity propulsion — a technology capable of turning any aircraft into alien ships from sci-fi blockbusters. In recent years, the researcher claimed that she and her colleagues working on this project were subjected to a "targeted campaign of intimidation and harassment."

Eskridge complained that she was being "burned remotely." In her messages to Frank Milburn, the scientist detailed an examination by an allegedly assigned "CIA weapons specialist": he recorded burns on her hands, damage in her home, and concluded that the remote impact was produced by a transmitter hidden in a vehicle.

In this context, Daily Mail mentions the so-called Havana Syndrome — a series of complaints from American officials working abroad about dizziness, nausea, headaches, and hearing problems. The nature of this phenomenon, observed in November 2016, remains a subject of debate. The White House once believed it was a targeted attack on U.S. diplomats using "microwave weapons."

Not everyone is ready to see the hand of liquidators associated with secret UFO-related themes in the tragedy of Amy Eskridge. The scientist's father, Richard Eskridge, a former NASA engineer, asked journalists to temper their enthusiasm. His argument is simple: scientists die every day, and his daughter had serious chronic ailments, so not every death of an ordinary researcher should be woven into a conspiracy narrative.

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