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A chilling case resurfaces involving NASA-linked scientist Amy Eskridge, who reportedly sent a message denying any possibility of suicide just one month before her death. Her work in advanced propulsion and alleged antigravity research has fueled intense speculation online, with questions surrounding classified programs, defense contractors, and the circumstances of her passing. While officially ruled as suicide, the lack of publicly released investigative details has led to ongoing debate, further amplified by claims from independent journalists and researchers questioning the official narrative.

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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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