00:20She sent a text message one month before she died.
00:24If you see any report that I killed myself, I most definitely did not.
00:30She was 34, a scientist working on technology that certain powerful people desperately needed
00:36to stay secret.
00:38Amy Eskridge, Huntsville, Alabama, co-founder of the Institute for Exotic Science, daughter
00:45of a retired NASA engineer.
00:47Her work?
00:48Anti-gravity technology, propulsion concepts so advanced, so threatening to the defense
00:55establishment that she believed they had been discovered before and suppressed every single
01:01time.
01:02By early 2022, Amy was scared.
01:06She had been deep inside the world of Pentagon-connected UAP researchers, black budget programs, advanced
01:13propulsion secrets, and she had turned on them.
01:16She called the most powerful figures in that world evil.
01:21Men connected to the Pentagon's most classified aerospace programs, men who had dangled funding
01:27in front of her, promised to protect her research from foreign hands.
01:31She rejected them.
01:33She went public with her findings instead.
01:35And then she sent that text, June 11, 2022, found dead, gunshot wound to the head, ruled suicide.
01:46No autopsy, no public investigative report, no toxicology results released, cremated within
01:53days.
01:54Every piece of physical evidence destroyed permanently.
01:58Award-winning journalist Ross Coulthart reviewed her communications and stated publicly, I don't
02:05think she killed herself.
02:07So what exactly did Amy Eskridge know that was worth silencing?
02:12She had cracked foundational principles of anti-gravity propulsion, technology that overlaps
02:18directly with how certain unidentified aerial phenomena are believed to move.
02:24Technology worth hundreds of billions in defense contracts.
02:28Technology that, if released publicly, would have upended Lockheed, Boeing, Raytheon, and
02:34every major aerospace contractor in the military-industrial complex.
02:39She wanted to give it to everyone.
02:42They wanted to keep it for themselves.
02:45Amy is now the 11th scientist on a list that has triggered a full FBI investigation.
02:51MIT physicists shot at their doors, NASA engineers found dead, Caltech astrophysicists shot on their
03:00porches, rocket scientists vanishing on hiking trails, a four-star Air Force general walking
03:07out of his home without his phone or glasses, never seen again.
03:11All of them connected to classified programs, all of them dead or missing.
03:17The FBI says it is investigating foreign actors, but researchers who knew Amy point closer to
03:24home, to the Pentagon, to the contractors, to the men she called evil.
03:29No autopsy, no report, cremated within days.
03:34The perfect crime if it was one.
03:37Amy Eskridge said one month before she died that she would never kill herself.
03:43The question now is, who did?
03:45And how many others on that list of 11 knew exactly the same secrets?
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