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Home ยป “I Most Definitely Did Not” What Amy Eskridge Said Weeks Before She Died
Health April 26, 2026

“I Most Definitely Did Not” What Amy Eskridge Said Weeks Before She Died

April 26, 2026
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All of this revolves on a text message. It reads like something you would write if you were truly terrified or perhaps if you wanted someone to remember precisely what you said in case it came to that. It was sent in May 2022 roughly one month before she passed away. It most definitely did not commit suicide notwithstanding any reports to the contrary. It most definitely did not overdose myself despite reports to the contrary. It most certainly did not kill anyone else regardless of whatever reports you may come across.

The author is Amy Eskridge. She forwarded it to Franc Milburn a former British soldier she had gotten in touch with on X back when the site was still known as Twitter and who she gradually came to trust enough to consider her friend. She was discovered dead a few weeks later in Huntsville Alabama on June 11 2022. Suicide by selfinflicted gunshot wounds was the official verdict. Thirtyfour was her age.

CategoryDetails
Full NameAmy Eskridge
Date of DeathJune 11, 2022
Age at Death34
Location of DeathHuntsville, Alabama, USA
Official Cause of Death Suicide – self-inflicted gunshot wound
OccupationResearcher, Scientist, Co-Founder
OrganizationInstitute for Exotic Science, Huntsville, AL
Research FocusAnti-gravity propulsion, electrostatic propulsion, gravity-modification
Father’s BackgroundFormer NASA employee
Investigation StatusFBI investigating possible links to broader pattern of missing/deceased scientists
ReferenceNewsNation Report

The official cause of death for Amy Eskridge which was discreetly put away for almost four years has recently emerged as one of the more troubling issues in an expanding national dialogue. Congress the FBI and ultimately the White House have taken notice of the circumstances surrounding the deaths or disappearances of at least eleven American scientists connected to defense technology aerospace or nuclear research over the last few months.

Although Eskridge’s case had been making the rounds in more obscure online forums since 2022 her name was only recently added to that list. According to those who knew her she was a genius who questioned the conventional wisdom on everything from the universe to the nanoparticles of the atom according to her obituary. Typically such descriptions are written down and then forgotten. It keeps coming up in her situation.

Even among specialized groups interested in unconventional physics Eskridge’s work was what set her apart. She concentrated on experimental propulsion concepts particularly electrostatic propulsion and antigravity research when she cofounded the Institute for Exotic Science in Huntsville. She candidly discussed what she said transpired following her team’s success in a YouTube interview from 2020.

We discovered antigravity she replied and our lives went to hell and people started sabotaging us. She was not using ambiguous language. She talked of being watched and sabotaged threats and harassment. Two years before she passed away she cautioned that her only defense was to remain visible in public. If you stick your neck out in private she stated they will burn down your house while you’re sleeping in your bed.

According to Milburn she told him that a focused energy weapon had physically harmed her. She allegedly emailed him pictures of her hands with burned discolored flesh pointing to markings that she said were caused by an energy gadget that was pointed at her via a window. It is still hard to independently verify whether any of that is true. She could have been suffering from paranoid delusions. Maybe she wasn’t too. Depending on who is telling it this ambiguity is exactly what makes the story so hard to ignore and so simple to manipulate.

Her father Richard Eskridge a former NASA employee who worked with his daughter has publicly stated that he does not believe her death to be suspicious. He said to NewsNation Scientists die also just like other people. It’s heartbreaking to say that about your child and there’s a plainness about it that should be respected. No podcaster or intelligence analyst would ever know her as well as he did.

Eetired FBI special agentincharge Andrew Black has made an important observation: the acceptance of the suicide ruling by her family does not imply that all of the information she provided before to her death was false. Maybe these things contributed to her taking her life Black stated. We are unsure. It’s excellent that the FBI is looking into this because of this.

It’s difficult to ignore how swiftly Amy Eskridge’s story has become part of a far more expansive and messy conspiracy ecosystem. Her story along with a dozen others has been pieced together by UFO researchers congressional Republicans podcast hosts and social media accounts into a tale about mysterious powers removing overly knowledgeable academics.

Heart disease a murder committed in retaliation by a former classmate or a hiker who strayed off a track in an area where people go missing annually are some of the common explanations for those other cases. According to FBI statistics around 50000 Americans commit suicide each year and over 500000 people go missing each year. Scientists including bright young idealistic ones are not immune to any of these statistics.

A month before to her passing. It was direct precise and directed to a reliable person. Milburn claims that just hours before she passed away he spoke with her over the phone and found nothing out of the ordinary in her tone of voice or disposition. Depending on your interpretation of what was going on in her life during those last few weeks that may or may not have significance.

The FBI is currently investigating potential links among the larger number of instances. Whether the probe will yield anything beyond what the initial rulings already found is still up in the air. It’s evident that Amy Eskridge a 34 year old researcher from Huntsville Alabama who devoted her career to exploring concepts that the majority of the scientific establishment would not touch left enough unanswered questions that people are still reading her writings and pondering four years after her passing.

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