zero nag-retweet

She texted "I did not kill myself" one month before she died.
Amy Eskridge. 34 years old. A plasma physicist working on antigravity propulsion in Huntsville, Alabama.
On June 11, 2022, she was found dead in her home from a single gunshot wound to the head.
Officially ruled a suicide.
But that text she sent her business partner Samuel Reed? It's haunting investigators all over again.
Weeks before her death, Amy claimed she was being attacked by a directed energy weapon. She showed burn marks on her hands. A colleague with weapons experience told her the device was an "RF k-band emitter" hidden inside an SUV, powered by five car batteries.
She co-founded the Institute for Exotic Science. She believed she was on the brink of a breakthrough that could force the disclosure of classified anti-gravity tech.
Then she warned in a 2020 podcast: stick your neck out in this field, and they'll bury you before the news ever catches wind.
Now her name has resurfaced as the 11th case in a chilling pattern.
The FBI is investigating. Congress is investigating. The White House is investigating. Trump himself said this week the situation is "pretty serious."
The list keeps growing. A retired Air Force major general, vanished. An MIT fusion physicist, shot dead at home. An aerospace engineer, gone on a hike and never found. Los Alamos employees. NASA scientists. A whistleblower who died before he could testify about UFOs.
Her family insists she suffered from chronic pain and that her death was exactly what it looked like.
Skeptics call the whole thing "patterns in random noise."
But Congressman Eric Burlison says there is "SIGNIFICANT evidence" Amy was targeted with microwave energy.
Eleven names. One question nobody can answer yet.
Source: Newsweek, Fox News, CNN, Cybernews

English




















