Amy Eskridge Death Mystery, UFO Expert’s Final Texts Revealed Death Threats, Predicted Suicide Plot

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Amy Eskridge Death Mystery, UFO Expert’s Final Texts Revealed Death Threats, Predicted Suicide Plot





Amy Eskridge’s death mystery has intensified after UFO scientist David Wilcock’s death under similar circumstances. Who was Amy, and what did she say before her alleged suicide?



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The mystery surrounding David Wilcock’s reported death from suicide has intensified the longstanding debate surrounding the death of Amy Eskridge, the UFO researcher and NASA scientist. The 34-year-old was found dead in June 2022 in Huntsville, Alabama, and her death was ruled a suicide. Just days before Wilcock was found unresponsive near his Boulder County home, newly resurfaced messages and claims from associates raised fresh questions about Eskridge’s death.

Earlier this month, Amy Eskridge officially became the 11th UFO-linked scientist to have died under mysterious circumstances. With Wilcock’s death, it remains to be seen whether he becomes the next on the list. Nevertheless, with the back-to-back deaths of Nick Pope and, now, David Wilcock, the probe has intensified about what really happened to Amy Eskridge.

Who was Amy Eskridge, and how did she die?

amy-eskridge

Amy Eskridge was a brilliant scientist based in Huntsville, Alabama, often labelled a “Rocket City” for its ties to aerospace research. She was a plasma physicist known for her work on advanced propulsion concepts, including anti-gravity technology, and co-founded the Institute for Exotic Science. Eskridge also spoke publicly about her research, including a 2018 HAL5 presentation where she explored unconventional physics ideas alongside her father, Richard Eskridge, a NASA engineer.

amy-eskridge

Beyond her work, Amy Eskridge was popularly regarded as someone who pushed for greater transparency around emerging technologies, even once warning publicly that “disclosure is coming out of Huntsville” before she died from apparent suicide. Before her death, she launched The Institute for Exotic Science to “disclose anti-gravity technology” to the public. The Daily Mail reported that Eskridge had been attempting to develop a technology to manipulate or offset the effects of gravity.

eskridge
Source: YouTube

On June 11, 2022, Eskridge was found dead from a “self-inflicted gunshot wound” to the head. Authorities ruled her death a suicide, but her death has continued to draw attention immediately after the reports surfaced, and the speculation has only intensified since. While Amy’s family, including her scientist father, Richard, denied any mystery, her death story has not quite sat well over the years.

Continue reading below

amy-eskridge

Source: The Daily Mail

Almost immediately, doubts began to circulate, and none of Amy’s close ones was ready to believe the suicide story. Now, the doubts have resurfaced with new evidence, as the Daily Mail identifies her as the “eleventh” UFO-linked scientist who has died under mysterious circumstances.

Amy Eskridge predicted her death could be reported as a ‘suicide’ in final text messages

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What’s fueling the current wave of speculation is messages Eskridge allegedly sent shortly before her death. The late scientist’s friend, former British intelligence officer Franc Milburn, shared a series of texts to The Daily Mail, where Eskridge discussed the possibility of her dying. In one particular text, dated May 13, 2022, has grabbed attention, wherein Eskridge said:

“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.”

amy-eskridge

Source: The Daily Mail

Milburn alleged that Eskridge and her colleagues faced a sustained campaign of harassment tied to their research. Among his claims were attacks using so-called directed energy weapons. Eskridge reportedly shared images of burns and lesions on her body, writing that a colleague believed her injuries were caused by “an RF k-band emitter.” She reportedly warned others to treat any claims of suicide or accidental death as suspicious. Milburn revealed that the late UFO expert had revealed escalating threats tied to her work. In one message, she allegedly wrote: 

“FYI, I’ve been getting death threats everyday repeatedly for the past week or so for my most recent work. Like I finally crossed some line with my own independently developed theory, and it got surveilled. It tipped me over onto some f***ked up kill list… The past week has been absolutely horrible. I don’t even know how to explain it, the most heinous death threats you can imagine.”

texts

Source: The Daily Mail

In the chilling Signal text message, apparently sent weeks before she died, Eskridge shared how she repeatedly kept telling her closest ones that she “absolutely did not kill [herself], no matter what you heard.” Another highlighted text that Milburn shared with the outlet, the late physicist again said, “Hey, if anyone reports that I killed myself, I f***ing did not.”

amy-texts

Source: The Daily Mail

In another exchange, Eskridge described disturbing anonymous messages that deeply disturbed her. Some messages suggest she believed she was even being psychologically targeted, “Offering advice on how to kill myself… phrased as these crazy, creepy rhymes.” And in a separate note, Amy described some repeated real-world encounters, including alleged stalking by unknown people. The note reads:

“A group of anywhere between 2–6 people will walk into a location, usually about 30 mins after I sit down. Then the whole group will take turns one at a time rotating through the empty seat next to me, repeatedly asking me the same questions over and over again. I deflect one, then the next one sits down. They even all use the same opening line between them all, as if they all read the same briefing materials.”

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While none of these claims have been independently verified by authorities, they are now a central talking point with the renewed attention around Amy Eskridge’s death, especially after David Wilcock’s similar death ruling from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Is David Wilcock’s death part of a wider pattern, or is it just online speculation?

david-wilcock

Similar to Amy Eskridge’s suicide ruling, the internet is not buying the suicide narrative around David Wilcock’s sudden death, given his positive nature and previous claims that he was “not suicidal at all.” The late UFO researcher’s close friends have also mentioned that Wilcock had been receiving death threats and was being cyberstalked and bullied.

Right now, there is no official confirmation linking David Wilcock to any broader investigation or the mysterious deaths of UFO scientists over the years.

Read Next: David Wilcock’s Death Linked To Nick Pope, Erich Von Daniken? Theories Point To A Shocking Pattern


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