The emergence of a previously unseen video of late UFO scientist Amy Eskridge has unsettled those closely following the case ofeleven US scientistslinked to sensitive research who have either gone missing or died, prompting a federal investigation.
In the footage, Eskridge claims she was being targeted by a 'direct energy weapon' prior to her death. At the same time, resurfaced text messages have raised fresh questions about her cause of death, which was officially ruled a suicide in 2022.
In the video circulating online, believed to be newly uncovered footage of Eskridge, the scientist explains that a 'direct energy weapon' is targeting her hand. She shows visible redness and apparent burns. 'My hands have been burned to hell and back as I've been typing. Because you can beam me through there or through there (pointing at the windows).'
Newly uncovered video shows anti gravity propulsion researcher Amy Eskridge in a state of panic, claiming her hands were being targeted by a “direct energy weapon” just one month before she was found dead from a gunshot wound to the head.pic.twitter.com/ayQAzTmTLf
She added, 'You can get a 3D image of what I'm typing. Because this computer doesn't have a Wi-Fi card. You can't hack it. But you can maybe get a 3D image of me typing. So like we just did that. And did that, as an act of pure desperation,' as she pans the camera on her blocked window.
Eskridge said that she felt better immediately after blocking the window, 'My hands still burn because there's damage. But it's like my body relaxed when we barricaded. And it was like [a] relief. Like immediately,' she said.
This video was echoed by a text she sent to Frac Milburn, a British paratrooper. Eskridge shared images with Milburn, where she showed burn/red marks on her hands, purportedly from a directed energy weapon.
'My ex-CIA weapons guy on my team saw my hands when they were burned really badly a couple months ago, and he saw that window pane in person,' Eskridge had said in a text as perDaily Mail.
While her official cause of death on 11 June 2022 was ruled a self-inflicted gunshot wound, the emergence of a 'death warning' sent just weeks prior has cast a shadow of doubt over the original findings. In a text dated 13 May 2022, Eskridge was explicit in her instructions to her inner circle.
In 2022,News Nationreported that Eskridge sent a message to Milburn, 'If you see any report that I killed myself, I most definitely did not,' she wrote. 'If you see any report that I overdosed myself, I most definitely did not. If you see any report that I killed anyone else, I most definitely did not.'
Source: International Business Times UK