🛸 UFO/UAP News Digest — May 4, 2026
Tonight’s top stories: Newly-released phone calls from anti-gravity scientist Amy Eskridge reveal a thwarted kidnapping attempt at the airport. Veteran disclosure advocate Stephen Bassett analyzes three forces converging to push UFO disclosure forward. Daily Mail traces a chilling pattern of UFO researcher deaths back to 1947.
📞 Amy Eskridge: New Phone Calls Expose Kidnapping Attempt
Source: Daily Mail (May 4, 2026)
Newly-obtained phone recordings from the late Amy Eskridge, a 34-year-old anti-gravity scientist found dead in 2022, have revealed an alleged kidnapping attempt that was thwarted by U.S. military personnel.
Eskridge was found dead at her home in Huntsville, Alabama on June 11, 2022, with a gunshot wound to the head. Her death was officially ruled a suicide, but her father — a former NASA scientist — and multiple associates have long disputed this conclusion.
Key revelations from the recordings:
A voice identified as Eskridge detailed how, after flying home from Virginia following Thanksgiving 2021:
- Airport staff waved her through security without any checks — “Leave your shoes on, don’t take your bag off, just walk through the scanner”
- Returning to Huntsville, her car had its battery drained and pepper spray emptied
- A U.S. Air Force colonel — with no luggage or ticket — walked out of the Huntsville airport and offered to jump-start her car
- Eskridge believed this was a kidnap attempt that military and airport officials intervened to prevent across two states
Former British paratrooper and intelligence officer Franc Milburn — who reportedly stayed in contact with Eskridge before her death — provided the recordings and messages to Daily Mail.
Milburn said: “Going through messages and imagery and voice media from late 2021 Amy sent to me, it is clear that she was concerned for her safety and that there was malign activity occurring at her home and at locations she was visiting.”
Eskridge’s background:
A graduate of the University of Alabama in Huntsville, Eskridge co-founded The Institute for Exotic Science in 2018 with her father, focusing on speculative research including anti-gravity propulsion — technology that UFO researchers claim has been used by extraterrestrial craft.
She also developed next-generation security scanners for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, claiming this work triggered a campaign of harassment and intimidation including:
- Multiple home break-ins
- Attempts to drug her and colleagues
- Car sabotage
- Threatening voicemails with sexual violence
- Claims of being attacked with a directed energy weapon, leaving her hands burned
Milburn called on the FBI to conduct “a thorough investigation of all the incidents leading up to her death, wherever the investigation may lead.”
🔗 Daily Mail — Amy Eskridge chilling phone calls expose kidnapping attempt
🏛️ Bassett: Three Forces Converging to Drive UFO Disclosure
Source: Daily Mail (May 4, 2026)
Veteran UFO disclosure advocate Stephen Bassett told the Daily Mail that three powerful forces are converging to push UFO disclosure to a tipping point, which he believes could be the most significant moment in human history.
Bassett, who has been lobbying for disclosure for nearly 30 years, cited President Trump’s announcement to direct the Secretary of War and relevant agencies to identify and release UFO files as evidence of this momentum.
Force 1: Public Pressure
Over the past decade, UFOs have moved from fringe to mainstream. Bassett noted that mainstream media has published over 10,000 UFO-related articles in the past nine years.
“It’s not just credible, it’s massive. Eighty years of buildup has created a platform where the President could step out tomorrow and confirm the non-human presence — we have the tech, we have the bodies, we have the craft — and I don’t think anybody would be particularly shocked.”
Force 2: Political Turmoil
Bassett argued that successive presidents have known about extraterrestrial activity but chose not to disclose. Jimmy Carter promised to release all UFO information but refused once in office. Barack Obama asked about aliens and was told there was “no evidence.”
However, Rep. Thomas Massie expressed skepticism, calling the push to release UFO files “the ultimate weapon of mass distraction” — “The Epstein files aren’t going away… even for aliens.”
Force 3: Global Conflict & Nuclear Threat
Bassett believes humanity’s history with nuclear weapons is inseparable from the extraterrestrial phenomenon: “It’s not a coincidence that engagement by non-humans exploded after the bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.”
He cited multiple instances of UFOs hovering over nuclear bases and disabling ICBMs in both the U.S. and Russia: “The evidence for that is finally coming.”
Bassett warned the world is heading toward another nuclear weapons use, and that extraterrestrial intelligence may be pushing disclosure to prevent irreversible damage: “They’re not opposing it. They’ve been helping to advance it under their own agenda.”
🔗 Daily Mail — Three key forces driving UFO disclosure
🔍 UFO Researcher Deaths: A Pattern Dating Back to 1947
Source: Daily Mail (May 4, 2026)
With at least 11 prominent scientists, nuclear officials, and UFO-linked experts disappearing or dying since 2022, Daily Mail investigates a pattern of suspicious deaths among UFO researchers stretching back to 1947.
UFO researcher Timothy Hood and author Nigel Watson point to cases from the very dawn of the “flying saucer” era.
The Maury Island Incident (1947)
Harold Dahl, his son, and two crewmen on a tugboat in Puget Sound, Washington, witnessed six golden and silver doughnut-shaped objects — one “wobbled” and released a rain of metal fragments and black lumps that struck and burned the boy’s arm, killing their dog.
Dahl was then confronted by a dark-suited man in a black sedan who drove him to a diner and warned him to stay silent. Captain William Davidson and Lieutenant Frank M Brown of Air Force Intelligence were dispatched to investigate but died when their B-25 crashed en route back to base. An anonymous caller named the victims before the crash was made public, claiming the aircraft was shot down because it carried flying saucer fragments.
Witness Kenneth Arnold barely survived — his engine failed on takeoff and he crash-landed, later finding his fuel valve had been turned off. Reporter Paul Lance, who covered the story, died suddenly of meningitis two weeks later.
Other cases:
- Philip Schneider (1996): UFO researcher who claimed he was followed by “government vans.” Found dead in his Oregon apartment with rubber tubing wrapped around his neck. Officially ruled suicide, but his ex-wife and friends rejected this conclusion
- Peter Stevens: Husband of a New York UFO researcher, warned by a mysterious man that “people who look for UFOs should be very careful” — died suddenly shortly after
- Researcher Otto Binder claimed in 1971 that 137 UFO investigators had died under mysterious circumstances during the 1960s
Nigel Watson noted: “Many of these cases could be coincidences or people trying to make something out of nothing. There are certainly some strange incidents.”
🔗 Daily Mail — Mysterious deaths of UFO researchers stretch back decades
📌 Summary Table
| Event | Status | Key Figures |
|---|---|---|
| 📞 Amy Eskridge kidnapping recordings | 🔍 New evidence | Eskridge, Milburn, FBI |
| 🏛️ Bassett’s three disclosure forces | 📄 Analysis | Stephen Bassett, Trump, Massie |
| 🔍 UFO researcher deaths reviewed | 📄 Historical | Hood, Watson, Kenneth Arnold |
| 🎙️ Trump preparing UFO file release | ⏳ In progress | Trump, War Department |
🤖 AI-curated and compiled 🕐 Updated: May 4, 2026 22:00 HKT 📋 Sources: Daily Mail, The Debrief, Liberation Times
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