Scientist Amy Catherine Eskridge was found dead at 34-years-old. She had publicly warned her life: as 11th mystery emerges
Published by RawNews1st
1:20 p.m ( April 18, 2025 )
Scientist Amy Catherine Eskridge was found dead at 34-years-old. She had publicly warned her life was in danger over groundbreaking work tied to UAP technology.
Her death has drawn renewed attention after at least 10 other recent cases involving individuals tied to U.S. military, nuclear and aerospace research have prompted questions about whether any pattern exists.
President Donald Trump said Thursday he had “just left a meeting” on the issue and vowed answers within days, calling the situation “pretty serious.”
She worked closely with her father, a former NASA employee who declined to be interviewed but said he does not think her death was suspicious.
“Scientists die also, just like other people,” he told NewsNation.
The theories linking the scientists have gotten attention at the highest levels of government, with President Donald Trump saying Thursday that he had been in a meeting on the issue and expects more will be known in a week and a half.
All the scientists have some connection to government research, including those who worked at NASA and Los Alamos National Laboratory. Some, including retired Air Force general William McCasland, have rumored ties to alleged UFO programs.
Some have linked Eskridge to the list because she reportedly expressed her life was in danger at the time.