A scientist experimenting with anti-gravity technology who warned that her life was in danger before she was found dead has been added to a growing tally of mysterious deaths and disappearances involving experts connected to America’s most sensitive programs.
Amy Eskridge, 34, was found dead in Huntsville, Alabama, on June 11, 2022. Authorities ruled her death a self-inflicted gunshot wound, but neither police nor medical examiners have publicly released details of any investigation.
Her case is now being described as the eleventh such incident involving individuals with ties to space or nuclear secrets.
Fox News is now reporting on the death of anti gravity researcher Amy Eskridge
— Red Panda Koala (@RedPandaKoala) April 17, 2026
“A researcher named Amy Eskridge was found dead in Alabama in 2022 after she warned her life could be in danger.
She was reportedly working on antigravity technology.” pic.twitter.com/nMSrHvP31Q
Eskridge co-founded the Institute for Exotic Science in Huntsville with her father, retired NASA engineer Richard Eskridge, who specialized in plasma physics and fusion technology.
The institute focused on anti-gravity propulsion — technology that could revolutionize space travel and energy production and has long been discussed in UFO research circles as potentially explaining advanced craft maneuvers.
UFO-linked scientist who warned 'my life is in danger' before she was found dead at 34 becomes ELEVENTH mysterious case https://t.co/JZc9Ya0Mm4
— Daily Mail (@DailyMail) April 17, 2026
In a 2020 podcast interview, Eskridge outlined plans for public disclosure of her work, including a presentation on novel foundational antigravity research that required NASA approval.
She also described creating a “public-facing persona to disclose anti-gravity technology.” The institute’s website is now offline, and the organization appears to have closed following her death.
Before her death, Eskridge reported escalating harassment and intimidation, including what she described as directed energy weapon attacks causing burns.
— Red Panda Koala (@RedPandaKoala) August 9, 2025
She reached out to retired British intelligence officer Franc Milburn for assistance.
Milburn later concluded her death was not a suicide and submitted findings to Congress in 2023. He stated on Coast to Coast AM: “Somebody was after her work. It was either one of two main objectives. One, trying to get her to desist from doing the work, and two, with these attacks, with the harassment, and the directed energy weapon attacks, to actually stop her, to debilitate her so she was unable to do the work.”
Amy Eskridge Mystery
— redpillbot (@redpillb0t) December 4, 2025
Amy was a young scientist researching advanced propulsion who died in 2022 under unknown circumstances. In this clip she talks about how antigravity has been independently discovered multiple times. pic.twitter.com/j3wWsaq2eq
Journalist Michael Shellenberger testified before a public hearing on Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP) that Eskridge was “murdered by a ‘private aerospace company’ in the US because she was involved in the UAP conversation.”
link to the full shellenberger UFO timeline submitted into the congressional record https://t.co/KztjycRR1q
— Red Panda Koala (@RedPandaKoala) June 15, 2025
This latest reporting ties Eskridge’s case to a broader pattern. Since her 2022 death, at least five other prominent researchers in related fields have died, with additional disappearances noted among individuals linked to nuclear and aerospace programs.
Recent cases include the assassination of nuclear fusion expert Nuno Loureiro in 2025, the shooting of astrophysicist Carl Grillmair in February 2026, and the vanishings of several scientists connected to retired Air Force General William Neil McCasland — described by Congressman Tim Burchett as “the guy that had a lot of nuclear secrets” and a “gatekeeper for the UFO stuff.”
The White House was asked directly about the ten missing and dead scientists earlier this week:
President Trump also spoke about the missing and dead scientists:
As these cases draw fresh scrutiny, online discussions and X commentary have increasingly framed the timing and coordination of the reporting as potentially deliberate.
Some observers suggest the revival of older cases like Eskridge’s — alongside recent incidents — could represent a psy-op linked to a broader move toward ‘disclosure’ of extraterrestrial intelligence and advanced technologies.
Others note the pattern raises legitimate national security questions, especially given the classified nature of anti-gravity, propulsion, and UAP research.
Huntsville, home to NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center and Redstone Arsenal, has long been a hub for advanced aerospace work. Eskridge’s research aligned with decades of speculation about reverse-engineered or exotic propulsion systems allegedly studied in black projects.
No official connection between the cases has been confirmed by authorities, and investigations into individual deaths have not publicly ruled out personal circumstances. However, the lack of detailed public records in Eskridge’s case and others continues to fuel debate.
As more details emerge and officials review the full scope of these incidents, the scientific community and public alike are watching closely for any further developments.
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