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Chilling video shows UFO-linked scientist revealing disturbing encounters before her death fueling questions over suicide ruling

by LJ News Opinions
April 24, 2026
in Technology
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A young scientist researching technology that could revolutionize space travel and energy production reported being harassed for government secrets before her death. 

Amy Eskridge, 34, was found dead on June 11, 2022, with a gunshot wound to the head. While her death was ruled a suicide, a resurfaced video has raised chilling questions about what may have really happened.

Speaking to fellow researchers in May 2020, Eskridge said: ‘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.’

Eskridge added that she was afraid to continue her research in public due to what she described as a ‘social engineering’ campaign, in which strangers approached her with detailed knowledge of her life and questioned her about her work. 

‘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.”‘ 

Franc Milburn, a retired British paratrooper and intelligence officer who claimed to have been in contact with Eskridge before her death, shared messages he said she sent him.

One dated May 13, 2022, read: ‘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 after her death, individuals who said they knew Eskridge contacted him anonymously, claiming they had also been targeted, including reports of suspected drink spiking, break-ins and slashed tires. 

Amy Eskridge was a scientist researching anti-gravity technology before her death in 2022 at age 34

Former intelligence officer Franc Milburn shared disturbing messages he said he received from Eskridge, claiming she had been targeted by people in public

Former intelligence officer Franc Milburn shared disturbing messages he said he received from Eskridge, claiming she had been targeted by people in public

Eskridge, a graduate of the University of Alabama in Huntsville, had co-founded The Institute for Exotic Science with her father, Richard Eskridge, in 2018, a company focused on ‘speculative research,’ including the creation of gravity-defying engines.

This technology has been linked to extraterrestrials by UFO researchers who claim anti-gravity propulsion has been responsible for the unexplainable sightings of aircraft moving at incredible speeds and in ways that defy the laws of physics.

Her father, a former NASA scientist, has refuted claims that his daughter’s death was suspicious. The Daily Mail has attempted to contact Richard for comment.

Eskridge claimed during her 2020 interview that she may have been drugged after feeling extremely drunk at a bar near her Alabama residence, despite just arriving.

‘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?’ Eskridge recounted.

‘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? What do you do? You’re sitting there at your laptop, it looks cool, tell us what you’re doing.”‘

Eskridge claimed that she had been experiencing acts of intimidation and harassment for four to five years.

She would reveal in 2020 that over the previous year, the incidents had reportedly escalated to the point where she could no longer go to bars alone out of fear for her safety.

Eskridge, a graduate of the University of Alabama in Huntsville, had co-founded The Institute for Exotic Science with her father, Richard Eskridge, in 2018, a company focused on 'speculative research,' including the creation of gravity-defying engines

Eskridge, a graduate of the University of Alabama in Huntsville, had co-founded The Institute for Exotic Science with her father, Richard Eskridge, in 2018, a company focused on ‘speculative research,’ including the creation of gravity-defying engines 

‘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?”‘

‘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 said.

Eskridge added that she was coming up with a plan to effectively disclose the existence of UFOs to the public, fearing that she needed to move quickly due to the growing number of threats allegedly sent to her and break-ins at her home.

‘Over the past 12 months, it’s been escalating, like more aggressive, more invasive digging through my underwear drawer and sexual threats.’

In 2018, Eskridge and her father delivered a presentation on behalf of their company, HoloChron Engineering, describing both historical and modern experiments related to gravity modification, including alleged black projects said to be developing triangular anti-gravity craft known as the ‘TR3B.’

It was during this time that Eskridge alleged she and her colleagues had become the targets of repeated physical and psychological attacks, reportedly aimed at isolating the 34-year-old from her staff.

Milburn told the Daily Mail: ‘After she died, her co-workers and her friends, people she’d worked with, they came forward anonymously and said to me, “yeah, look, we were attacked, we were roofied, my house was broken into, my car tires were slashed.”‘ 

The intelligence officer claimed that some of her co-workers said their food had also been poisoned, making their entire families sick.

‘It had “Amy Eskridge” written on the bag, and [these are] people who are living hundreds of [miles] away out of state from Amy Eskridge. So this wasn’t just random events, this was happening to her and people around her,’ Milburn claimed.

According to documents shared online, Eskridge's now-closed research company was working on anti-gravity technology they claimed had been used in UFO-inspired aircraft

According to documents shared online, Eskridge’s now-closed research company was working on anti-gravity technology they claimed had been used in UFO-inspired aircraft

Milburn shared a picture he said showed Eskridge sitting in her home - near the window which she claimed was scorched by an 'energy weapon'

Milburn shared a picture he said showed Eskridge sitting in her home – near the window which she claimed was scorched by an ‘energy weapon’

In 2022, Eskridge reportedly told Milburn, whom she had befriended online and had asked for help regarding the alleged harassment, that she was working on a highly sensitive project for Homeland Security when the attacks against her turned physical.

Eskridge was reportedly working from home on a project designed to detect chemical or biological threats in the nation’s subway systems when she was struck by a directed energy weapon, a device that fires rays of energy, such as microwaves, at a target.

Eskridge shared images with Milburn, apparently showing her hands, feet, neck and back with burns and lesions after the alleged attack by this weapon.

Milburn told the Daily Mail the images even appeared to show a scorch mark on Eskridge’s home window, where the ‘energy weapon’ allegedly passed and struck her in the hands and head while she was working on her laptop.

Milburn shared a picture, which he claims shows Eskridge's hands burned and discolored after allegedly being struck by an 'energy weapon'

Milburn shared a picture, which he claims shows Eskridge’s hands burned and discolored after allegedly being struck by an ‘energy weapon’

On May 19, 2022, Milburn said Eskridge messaged him to report that a member of her research lab with advanced weapons experience was convinced a directed energy weapon had caused her injuries.

‘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,’ she wrote.

‘He said he had built things like that, and that it was most likely an RF k-band emitter run by five car batteries strung together from inside an SUV.’

Less than a month later, the 34-year-old was dead, reportedly by her own hand.

Milburn has disputed the report and conducted his own investigation into the case, concluding that Eskridge was ‘murdered by a “private aerospace company” in the US because she was involved in the UAP conversation.’

While the claims have not been proven to be true, Milburn’s findings were presented to Congress in 2023, and Representative Eric Burlison has noted that he and other lawmakers consider the case suspicious.

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