According to major media reports, eleven top scientists have died or disappeared in the US, prompting demands for answers from President Donald Trump and senior members of Congress. Among them is Amy Eskridge, a 34-year-old researcher working on anti-gravity technology, who was found dead with a gunshot to the head in Huntsville, Alabama on June 11, 2022. Her death was officially ruled a suicide.
Franc Milburn, a retired British paratrooper and intelligence officer, claims to have been in contact with Eskridge before her death and shared messages he says she sent him. According to Daily Mail - Science & Tech, Eskridge described that if any report appeared that she killed herself, overdosed, or killed anyone else, she most definitely did not. Milburn claims that Eskridge and some of her colleagues involved in advanced propulsion and energy research were subjected to a sustained campaign of harassment and intimidation designed to derail their work. He claims he spoke with Eskridge four hours before her death and noticed nothing unusual. Eskridge allegedly told Milburn she believed she had been the target of repeated physical and psychological attacks.
Milburn claims Eskridge reported injuries she believed were caused by a 'directed energy weapon' capable of causing burns or other physical harm. On May 19, 2022, Milburn says Eskridge messaged him that a member of her research lab with advanced weapons experience was convinced a directed energy weapon had caused her injuries. According to Daily Mail - Science & Tech, Eskridge described that the ex-CIA weapons expert said the weapon was most likely an RF k-band emitter run by five car batteries strung together from inside an SUV. Eskridge allegedly claimed that the expert believed the most likely party capable of carrying out such an attack was not identified.
