Reed NewsReed News

Trump demands answers on scientists' mysterious deaths

Crime & justiceCrime
Trump demands answers on scientists' mysterious deaths
Key Points
  • Eleven top scientists have died or disappeared, prompting demands for investigation from Trump and Congress.
  • Amy Eskridge, a researcher found dead in Alabama, had sent text messages denying suicide and alleging attacks.
  • Franc Milburn claims Eskridge reported being targeted by a directed energy weapon, with an ex-CIA expert identifying a possible device.

Among the cases 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 ruled a suicide, but newly uncovered text messages raise questions about that conclusion.

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 in a text message dated May 13, 2022 that if any report said she killed herself, she most definitely did not; if any report said she overdosed, she most definitely did not; and if any report said she killed anyone else, she most definitely did not. Milburn claims he spoke with Eskridge four hours before her death and noticed nothing unusual.

Milburn claims Eskridge and her colleagues involved in advanced propulsion and energy research were subjected to a sustained campaign of harassment and intimidation designed to derail their work. Eskridge 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'. According to Daily Mail - Science & Tech, Eskridge described that her ex-CIA weapons expert on her team saw her hands when they were burned badly a couple months earlier, and saw the window pane in person; he said he had built things like that, and that it was most likely an RF k-band emitter run by five car batteries strung together from inside an SUV. Milburn claims images showed a scorch mark on Eskridge's home window where the 'energy weapon' allegedly passed and struck her.

Eskridge claimed the expert believed the most likely party capable of carrying out such an attack was [cut off]. The identity of the ex-CIA weapons expert remains unknown, as does the specific nature of the research Eskridge and her colleagues were conducting. It is unclear whether the deaths of the other ten scientists are connected to Eskridge's case, and what evidence exists to support or refute the directed energy weapon claims. The current status of any official investigation into Eskridge's death has not been disclosed.

Tags
Corroborated
Daily Mail - HomeDaily Mirror - Main
2 publications · 4 sources
View transparency reportReport inaccuracy
Trump demands answers on scientists' mysterious deaths | Reed News