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Amy Eskridge Predicted Her Own Death – Before Becoming 1 of 11 Scientists Now Dead or Missing

New York Post April 27, 2026 5m 924 words
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About this transcript: This is a full AI-generated transcript of Amy Eskridge Predicted Her Own Death – Before Becoming 1 of 11 Scientists Now Dead or Missing from New York Post, published April 27, 2026. The transcript contains 924 words with timestamps and was generated using Whisper AI.

"Newly revealed messages have drawn even more suspicion about the resurfaced death of one of 11 scientists, with ties to America's space and nuclear secrets, who have mysteriously died or disappeared. Anti-gravity researcher Amy Eskridge allegedly died from a self-inflicted gunshot in June of 2022,..."

[0:00] Newly revealed messages have drawn even more suspicion about the resurfaced death of one of [0:04] 11 scientists, with ties to America's space and nuclear secrets, who have mysteriously died or [0:10] disappeared. Anti-gravity researcher Amy Eskridge allegedly died from a self-inflicted gunshot [0:17] in June of 2022, when she was just 34 years old, according to the Daily Mail. However, [0:23] Franck Milburn, a retired British paratrooper and intelligence officer who says he was in [0:28] contact with Eskridge before her death, shared shocking messages with the outlet. One dated May [0:33] 13, 2022, read, If you see any report that I killed myself, I most definitely did not. [0:40] If you see any report that I overdosed myself, I most definitely did not. If you see any report that [0:46] I killed anyone else, I most definitely did not. Milburn says Eskridge told him that she had been [0:51] the target of repeated physical and psychological attacks, including from a directed energy weapon, [0:57] a device said to emit focused energy capable of causing burns or other physical harm. The [1:04] researcher specializing in anti-gravity, which is a staple topic among UFO enthusiasts, [1:09] also mysteriously warned in a 2020 interview that her life might be in danger while discussing her [1:15] research company, the Institute for Exotics. I started the Institute for one reason, one reason, [1:22] the Institute. I started it as a public-facing persona to disclose anti-gravity technology [1:31] through because, I told Mark this, if you stick your neck out in public, at least someone notices [1:37] if your head gets chopped off. Eskridge also revealed that she had been receiving threats and [1:43] that she had plans to disclose information about UFOs and extraterrestrials to the public. Her death was [1:49] ruled a suicide, and neither the police nor the medical examiners have publicly released any details [1:54] of an investigation into her death. Eskridge's death was unearthed after an already growing web of [2:00] concerning deaths and disappearances of NASA scientists and individuals with ties to U.S. [2:05] space and nuclear secrets. House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer warned Fox News that [2:12] something sinister could be happening, and that the matter raises urgent national security concerns. [2:17] Yeah, when I first heard about this, I thought, well, that can't be true. That sounds like some kind of [2:23] crazy conspiracy theory. But once you see the facts, it would suggest that something sinister [2:30] could be happening, and it would be a national security concern. The disturbing cases have since [2:35] sent internet sleuths into a frenzy, searching for answers about the unsettling pattern. Michael David Hicks, [2:42] who worked at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Flintridge, California as a research assistant, [2:47] passed away at the age of 59, in July of 2023. However, there is no public cause of death or [2:53] autopsy for Hicks passing, nor any mention of how he died in his obituary, although it does ask for [2:59] donations in his memory to go to Alcoholics Anonymous. Three other scientists with ties to NASA's Jet [3:05] Propulsion Lab, or JPL, have either gone missing or died over the past few years, even as recently as [3:12] February. On February 16th, 2026, renowned astrophysicist Carl Grillmayer, who worked on [3:19] NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope, was suddenly and shockingly shot dead on the porch of his home in [3:25] California. His shooter, Freddy Snyder, was arrested and is currently in jail. However, a clear motive has [3:31] yet to be established. Another researcher at NASA's JPL, Frank Mywald, died in July 2024 at the age of 61. [3:39] Like Hicks, there's little to no public information about how he died. [3:44] JPL's former newly appointed director of its materials processing group, Monica Reza, mysteriously [3:50] went missing in June of 2025, while hiking with friends in the Angeles National Forest in California, [3:56] and hasn't been seen since. Reza's research in materials science was funded by the Air Force [4:02] Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson Base in Ohio, which is long rumored to hold extraterrestrial [4:07] debris tied to the famous 1947 Roswell crash. The Air Force Research Lab was headed up by retired [4:14] Air Force General William McCaslin, who also has shockingly gone missing. McCaslin mysteriously [4:20] vanished on February 27th, 2026 from his Albuquerque, New Mexico home, along with a pair [4:26] of hiking boots and a .38 caliber revolver. McCaslin was also the former research commander at [4:33] Kirtland Air Force Base in New Mexico, which works closely on national security projects with Los [4:38] Alamos National Laboratory, famous for developing nuclear weapons during the Manhattan Project. [4:44] In June of 2025, two workers from Los Alamos, Anthony Chavez and Melissa Casillas, vanished from their [4:51] homes in eerily similar circumstances. Chavez, age 79, was last seen leaving his New Mexico home on foot, [4:58] leaving behind his car, wallet, phone, and keys. Casillas, age 54, was last seen on camera walking [5:05] alone on a highway, also without her wallet, phone, or keys, after telling family members she would be [5:11] working from home, Dateline reported. Other dead or missing scientists include Jason Thomas, who led the [5:17] chemical biology team at Novartis and was found dead in a lake this past March. Famous MIT physicist Nuno [5:24] Larrero, who was shot and killed last December, and Steven Garcia, who worked on security for a [5:29] producer of non-nuclear components in American-made nukes and went missing in August of last year. [5:35] As of now, no federal agency has publicly acknowledged any connection between the cases. [5:40] Comer shared he plans to bring the leaders of several federal agencies' offices before Congress [5:45] and asks that anyone affiliated with America's nuclear program should be on alert given the possible [5:51] security risks to the nation.

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