Published April 23, 2026
Chilling texts of a UFO-linked U.S. scientist before her death has deepened the mystery surrounding deaths and disappearance of top space and nuclear scientists.
The White House has recently vowed to get to the bottom of mysterious circumstances under which 11 U.S. scientists have died or disappeared. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is probing the matter.
A 34-year-old researcher on anti-gravity technology, Amy Eskridge, who authorities said died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound on June 11, 2022, had previously told her friend that she would never commit suicide.
A retired British paratrooper and intelligence officer Franc Milburn, who was in contact with the late researcher, released some part of his conversation with Amy.
A text dated May 13, 2022, reads: “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.”
In conversation with the Daily Mail, the intelligence officer claimed that Amy and her colleagues were subjected to a targeted harassment and intimidation campaign to derail their work by hostile actors.
Milburn shared another text by Amy which reads, “'If anything happens to me - suicide or an accident - it wasn't, it's suspicious, treat it as such.”
Amy founded her own lab and she was working on an experimental research to find a way to control or cancel gravity, a research with the potential of revolutionising space travel and energy production.
The FBI investigation is ongoing and President Trump has vowed to find whether there is any pattern behind the cases or if they are unrelated.