
A scientist working on classified propulsion technology sent a haunting text message one month before her death declaring “I most definitely did not” kill herself—yet authorities rushed to rule her death a suicide without releasing an autopsy, toxicology report, or any investigative findings while cremating her body within days.
Prophetic Warning Goes Ignored by Authorities
Amy Eskridge sent a chilling message to contacts in May 2022 that now reads like a cry for help from beyond the grave. The 34-year-old scientist, working on advanced antigravity and propulsion technologies in Huntsville, Alabama, explicitly stated: “If you see any report that I killed myself, I most definitely did not.” Just weeks later, on June 11, 2022, she was found dead from a gunshot wound to the head. Local authorities swiftly ruled it suicide without releasing any autopsy findings, toxicology results, or public investigative documentation. Her body was cremated within days, permanently destroying physical evidence that could have validated or refuted the official conclusion.
Dangerous Propulsion Research and Pentagon Connections
Eskridge co-founded the Institute for Exotic Science in Huntsville, a major aerospace hub home to NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center and defense contractors like Lockheed Martin. Her research focused on exotic propulsion concepts and antigravity technologies she believed had been systematically suppressed to protect defense industry interests. By early 2022, Eskridge had immersed herself in UAP research circles tied to Pentagon black-budget programs. She received funding offers from figures connected to classified aerospace projects but rejected them, choosing instead to publicly disclose her findings. This decision, she told contacts, endangered her life due to threats from what she called “evil” powerful figures in the military-industrial complex.
Pattern of Suspicious Deaths Raises Red Flags
Eskridge’s death fits a disturbing pattern that has triggered FBI scrutiny. She is cited as the 11th scientist in a series of suspicious deaths or disappearances linked to similar classified research. These cases share common characteristics: rapid official rulings of suicide, minimal investigation, and destruction of evidence through quick cremation. Award-winning journalist Ross Coulthart reviewed Eskridge’s communications and publicly questioned the suicide determination, stating plainly, “I don’t think she killed herself.” The FBI has opened an investigation into the scientist list, officially focusing on potential foreign actors, though researchers familiar with Eskridge’s case point to domestic Pentagon and defense contractor involvement as more plausible given her explicit fears of suppression by powerful domestic interests in classified aerospace programs.
Government Secrecy Undermines Public Trust
The complete absence of transparent investigation into Eskridge’s death exemplifies government overreach and secrecy that conservatives have long warned erodes constitutional accountability. No coroner’s report, no toxicology screen, no ballistics analysis—just an official pronouncement of suicide and immediate cremation that conveniently eliminated any possibility of independent verification. This is precisely the type of unaccountable government behavior that threatens individual liberty and rule of law. When a citizen explicitly warns she will not commit suicide, then dies under circumstances authorities refuse to examine publicly, the government’s credibility disintegrates. The story has resurfaced in 2026 as part of broader scrutiny of missing scientists and UAP disclosure efforts, yet authorities continue stonewalling requests for basic investigative transparency.
Read the chilling texts UFO-linked scientist sent before being found dead that raise major questions over suicide ruling https://t.co/u3Qcu09FwX
— Daily Mail Australia (@DailyMailAU) April 22, 2026
The chilling effect on researchers cannot be overstated. Scientists working in sensitive aerospace and propulsion fields now face an impossible choice: accept Pentagon funding with strings attached, or go public and potentially face the same fate as Eskridge and ten others. This suppression of scientific inquiry and technological advancement serves entrenched defense contractors while potentially keeping breakthrough technologies from the American people. The lack of answers four years after Eskridge’s death, combined with the FBI’s classified probe focusing on foreign rather than domestic threats, suggests a cover-up that demands congressional oversight. Americans deserve transparency when a scientist predicts her own murder and authorities respond by destroying evidence and closing the case without public accountability.
Sources:
Chilling texts from dead UFO-linked scientist raise questions – ABDPost










