The question relates to a scientist named Dr Amy Eskridge. She was working on anti-gravity technology in the private sector. She was preparing to publish what was rumored to be some breakthrough findings, prior to her untimely passing. Amy believed that zero point energy technology (which is a gateway to free energy) should be made public rather than be held for private entities.
Amy passed in what some people believe were suspicious circumstances. It was deemed a suicide, however there is someone very close to Amy who spoke with her 4 hours prior to her passing and does not believe she committed suicide. Her family however, has deemed it to be suicide.
It goes without saying, that it was a tragic loss, regardless of the circumstances. I am hoping you can shed some light on this.
What was her mental state on the day which she passed?
On the day she passed I sense she felt a mix of emotions - excitement, fear, and worry. It seemed like she was thrilled about a big discovery but also stressed about keeping it safe, as if she’d found something amazing and didn’t know what to do next.
Did she take her own life?
My instinct leans toward no, she didn’t end her own life. I will say in thinking about this question out of nowhere, a curious idea struck me. There might be a way for autopsy experts to tell what happen. It’s just a hunch, but when someone chooses to die (suicide), they’re often overwhelmed by emotions, yet in that final moment, a certain primal fear seems to fade away. BUT if it’s a forced suicide or outright murder there’s a different barrage of emotions in the body. A surge of specific hormones floods the system which would leave a chemical signature of struggle or shock. If scientists could analyze blood samples and pinpoint those hormonal queues, it might unlock the truth in cases like hers, keeping investigations open instead of closing them too soon.
If there were hired (hit man), then their motives would probably be just to complete a job, but why?
Most likely a hitman was involved and the motive would be to finish the job, steal the evidence/documentation and collect the paycheck. [Ironically, remember Tesla - same thing, different decade]. Amy was on the verge of cracking zero-point energy which was a discovery so groundbreaking it could rattle the foundations of power and profit. Water-powered cars were silenced just as researchers on the cusp of curing diseases. Those with money and control don’t surrender it without a fight. Amy knew this all too well, which is why she raced to publish her work. It wasn’t just about sharing knowledge. It was a desperate bid to protect something revolutionary from being buried by those who feared its light.
In closing, one final thought: I sense that before she left, she passed much of her work to a colleague, feeling someone was after her.
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