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News Release 99-06
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Prize Bull Mutilations Leave Texas Ranchers Guessing
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UFO Agency
to Help in Cattle Mutilation Investigations
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Cattle Mutilations Back - Ranchers, Lawmen Baffled by Crime Wave By KATIE OYAN Tribune Staff Writer -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CONRAD -- This is the kind of déja vu Everett King could do without. About 15 years ago, he discovered the grisly remains of one of his cattle that had died mysteriously. In October, it happened again. King said it looked as though a surgeon had sliced into his 7-year-old Charolais, the way its right eye and ear were cut off -- not to mention the way its reproductive organs had been cored. What King finds most unusual, however, is that two months later the carcass lies right where he found it, untouched. "Predators won't eat it," said King, who ranches outside Valier, south of Lake Frances. "It should have been cleaned up and gone a long time ago." Ranchers reported four mutilations between June and August. Since then, there have been 11 more, and investigators are still searching for answers. The same bizarre circumstances haunted area ranchers and baffled law enforcement 20 years ago, sparking rumors about UFOs, cults and government conspiracies. The mutilations went away in the '90s but began again this summer. The most recent victim -- a 12-year-old Hereford -- turned up earlier this month on a ranch northwest of Conrad. "They skinned off the belly from her front legs to her back legs all the way around," Pondera County Sheriff's Deputy Dan Campbell said. "The complete bag was removed." The last few mutilations occurred within three miles of each other in the Dry Forks area, about 10 or 15 miles west of Conrad. In October, members of the New Miami Colony, 18 miles west of Conrad, discovered two mutilated cows at the same time, about 30 yards apart. The scenes were remarkably similar to mutilations ranchers reported here more than a decade ago, Campbell said. Most of the cows had the skin scraped off their faces. Often, the tongue, one eye and all or part of an ear had been removed. Part of the udder usually was cut off, as well as the genitals. And in most cases, the anus had been cored. A majority of the cows were 4 or 5; one was missing its teeth. In the late '70s, a high volume of alleged mutilations in southwestern states prompted a federally funded investigation. The resulting 300-page report concluded that animal predators were responsible. Although some dismiss the Pondera County deaths as a hoax or chalk them up to natural causes and predators, Campbell and fellow investigator Sheriff's Deputy Dick Dailey say they aren't convinced. Cuts on the cows are often circular or oval and -- as with Everett King's Charolais -- seem to be made with surgical precision. The animals seem to bloat faster than normal, and their missing hide doesn't reflect the work of predators, Campbell said. "I've never seen an animal eat just the face off a cow when there's lots of other stuff to go after," he said. One mutilated cow looked like it had been burned. Another seemed to have bruises around its neck as though it had been strangled. One had a long cut with a perfectly ridged edge, as though the hide had been sliced with a tool similar to pinking shears. Also strange is that in most cases, no tracks or footprints were detected around the animals' bodies, even in mud or snow. A misconception is that the cows have been drained of blood. Natural coagulation only makes it look like the creatures' fluids have been drained, Dailey said. Dailey, who lives in Dupuyer, spent several nights this fall camped out in dark fields, trying to catch the culprit in the act. He has reviewed all the facts and checked out dozens of Web sites looking for answers. Still, nothing. "I've read everything I can read on it, and I really don't know what in the heck it is," he said. Ranchers aren't sure what to think, either. In September, Jim VandenBos discovered the body of one of his $850 2-year-old Angus lying dead in his pasture. The right side of its face was skinned, and the exposed jawbone was so smooth it looked like it had been polished, VandenBos said. Its tongue was cut off along with its right ear, eye and reproductive organs. A tennis-ball-sized patch of skin on its shoulder was hard like plastic. Again, coyotes -- even other cattle -- steered clear. VandenBos has been ranching southwest of Valier for more than 30 years and remembers the last wave of mutilations well. "It's kind of a spooky thing," he said. "I haven't worried about it too much because it's something I can't control - but I'd like to find an explanation." Toward the end of October, a neighbor found the 750-pound steer that died in Glen and Ruby Bouma's dry creek bed, three miles west of Conrad. "There was a little trail of grass pushed up like it was shoved up underneath it," Ruby Bouma said. The hide was missing from the calf's stomach and its reproductive organs were gone, but there were no tracks, no bullet holes and no claw marks. The calf, No. 55, was almost a year old and was worth about $600. It was one of the friendliest animals the Boumas owned. A local vet said it died of dust pneumonia, but Glen and Ruby have their doubts. "That's possible, because it's so dry," Ruby Bouma said. "But I think we would have known if it was sick. We took special notice because it was one of two calves that were like pets to us. It would come up and smell your hand or your pant leg." The whole thing is peculiar, if you ask the Boumas. When a cow dies of natural causes, for instance, predators will usually chew into its flesh. Glen and Ruby's calf was missing only its hide. And when they checked on Thanksgiving Day, predators still were keeping their distance. Some folks in the area think the U.S. Air Force or aliens are behind the mutilations, but not Ruby. "I'm sorry, but I personally think it's somebody local ... that's doing it for kicks," she said. One difficulty local investigators have encountered in cracking the case is gathering evidence. After two or three days, collecting evidence becomes a lost cause because the cattle are so badly decomposed. And in the summer, carcasses rot faster and often go undiscovered for weeks. "We have to fight time," Campbell said. "We're hoping that this time of year, ranchers are gathering and feeding every day so we'll get a better jump on them and come up with some more clues." Pondera sheriff's deputies also are hoping a Nevada laboratory will answer some of their questions. This fall, Campbell and Dailey chopped the head off a mutilated cow, packed it in dry ice and shipped it to the National Institute for Discovery Science in Las Vegas. The privately funded institute pays scientists and retired police officers to investigate bizarre phenomena including mutilations and UFO sightings. A spokesman from the institute said researchers are nearly finished with their study and will be sending a copy of the report to the Pondera County sheriff's office in a couple of weeks. "If they could come up with something, that would really help us," Dailey said. Until investigators reach a satisfactory conclusion, theories continue to spread through local coffee shops and bars. Some say the mutilations are a government ploy to get Montanans' minds off global issues. Others finger satanic cults or spaceships. Most say they don't believe in all that eerie X-Files stuff. But even some of the staunchest skeptics are beginning to wonder. "I just can't believe little men are coming from outer space," said Conrad resident Jack Rowekamp, a retired bus driver and custodian. "But I guess you never know." |
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Five More Cattle
Mutilations In Argentina Scott Corrales 6-11-2002 Source 'La Arena' (La Pampa, Argentina) GENERAL ACHA (DNA) -- Five cows were found dead this past weekend in a field of the Cuchillo-Co region. The animals' lifeless bodies were missing organs and their mysterious deaths were added to the more than ten cases that still perplex police officers and veterinarians involved in investigating these events. The Aberdeen Angus cows were found at the "La Sierra" rural establishment, owned by Gregoria Echávez, located on Lot 24 some 150 kilometers west of General Acha. Police sources informed LA ARENA on Sunday that Maria Alejandra Veralli had filed a complaint after receiving a telephone call from her sister, discussing the fact that the deaths of five bovines had been ascertained, and some of them were missing vital organs. The police undertook the pertinent action and reported the event to the 2nd Duty Court. Subsequently, for reasons of jurisdiction, the police report was forwarded to the Cuchillo-Co sheriff's office, given that the field is located on Routes 28 and 13. This weekend's finds were added to the rest of the cases which have kept police and veterinarians on edge. Readers will recall that cows slain under strange circumstances were found in the fields of Macachín, Salliqueló (province of Buenos Aires), Bernasconi, Jacinto Arauz, Villa Iris and the General Acha region. In all of these cases, the animals had been rendered bloodless and presented incisions made by high-precision instruments which are unknown to the parties conducting the investigation. The shroud of mystery is further thickened by the fact that in the hours prior to one of these discoveries, strange lights were seen in the vicinity. The authorities are already researching these cases, but no answers have been found up to now. Translation (C) 2002. Scott Corrales Institute of Hispanic Ufology Special thanks to Gloria Coluchi |
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MYSTERY WITH MASS OF 30 YEARS ARRIVES At The ARGENTINE FIELDS
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| Argentina
Sends Scientists to Probe Cattle Mutilations
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina, June 19 — Argentina is sending its own “X-Files”
scientists to probe strange deaths of farm animals found dissected,
mutilated and drained of blood on remote Pampa plains, killings some have
blamed on aliens. At least 70 animals were reported killed in recent weeks,
some with their genitals and tongues pulled out with surgical precision
surrounded by charred grass with no signs of blood stains. One horse’s hoof
had a circle drawn into it. |
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Subject:
Argentine University Leaves Bull Mute Unsolved SOURCE: Servicio Informativo Ovnilogico (Rio Cuarto) DATE: August 22, 2002 U.N.R.C. HAS YET TO SOLVE BULL MUTILATION AT BERROTARAN. Knowledgeable sources informed this service that in spite of the best efforts made in the agencies of the School of Agronomy and Veterinary Medicine of the National University of Rio Cuarto, the case involving the dead male bovine mutilated in the vicinity of Berrotarán, 75 km north of Rio Cuarto on Rt. 36, has yet to be solved. As will be remembered, this was the first mutilation case in which the center of higher learning of Rio Cuarto became involved, with the Vice Dean of said school heading a team that analyzed the animal on the spot and later transferred it to Rio Cuarto for the respective analyses. Dr. Bessone had said at the time that "the necropsy had shed contradictory information" among which can be highlighted: * The animal had subcutaneous lesions in its thorax and ribs. * Had lesions around the extracted eye, as though a device had been rested on it. * Its rumen did no contain remains of corn chaff, the type of nourishment found in the lot where the animal was discovered. * The internal organs were absorbed through the rectum and cut, apparently in a single motion and using the same tool. * There was no blood in the heart. The animal did not die from a heart attack or from electric shock. The fact that the situation has not been resolved should not be construed as impugning the capabilities of local scientists. They simply found themselves in an apparent dead end--a similar experience to that of hundreds of their colleagues in the great Argentinean region affected by these manifestations. Unfortunately, the scientists--in spite of their advanced methods and devices--are unable to unlock "mysteries", and can merely "investigate methodically." And that is what they are doing these days, without forgetting that this is not the only case under study at the School of Agronomy of Rio Cuarto. |
10 Cats, Squirrel, Rabbit Killed In Denver, AuroraExperts: Surgical Precision Of Cat Mutilations Worrisome November 12, 2002 DENVER -- The person or persons who are mutilating pets in Denver and Aurora are killing them with an almost surgical precision and that is worrisome to psychologists and animal lovers, 7NEWS reported.
So far there have been 10 cats, a squirrel and a rabbit that have been killed and left out for viewing since July 19, authorities said. All were dissected in a surgically precise way, and some had their organs removed and their bloodless carcasses left near their homes, pet owners and neighbors said. Investigators don't have any suspects, but they are looking to build a profile of such a person, 7NEWS reported. Cherry Creek schools psychologist Bill Porter said authorities have consulted with him about the killings. "The precision and the frequency have everyone most concerned," Porter said. "They're doing surgery on these animals." Such cases are worrisome because, frequently, people who show such severe cruelty to animals go on to commit violent crimes against people, said an investigator with the Denver Dumb Friends League. That is little consolation to an Aurora woman whose cat was among those that were killed. Two weeks ago, Carol De Young's 13-year-old tabby cat, Mozart, vanished from her home. She didn't know what had happened until she received a call from Aurora animal control. "They didn't really want me to see his body, so what they did was show me a picture of his head, and it was Mozart," De Young said. She said her cat had slipped through a pet door, which it often did, and had been killed and mutilated. De Young said she cannot imagine the type of person who would do such a cruel thing. "No more than I could imagine what went into Klebold and Harris and all the other serial killers because that's what this is like," De Young said. "His loss has been like a big hole 'cause he was my only pet, and he was my good friend ... I feel like I've lost a relative." The Denver Dumb Friends League has posted an $8,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of the animal killer, or killers. They would also like to hear of anyone in the within the last 6months to a year who has had a similar experience. The city of Denver and Aurora are on the lookout as well. "We want to be able to identify our perpetrators and get them some prevention and intervention and appropriate treatment before it escalates," said City of Aurora spokeswoman Cheryl Conway. "Obviously, we're going to advocate that people keep their pets indoors, particularly their cats." Mozart's owner has learned that lesson painfully. The city asks people who find bodies of animals to report that immediately, since there may be more victims that authorities don't even know about. Copyright 2002 by TheDenverChannel.com. |
Third Cat Found Decapitated, With Front Legs RemovedCat Mutilations In Parker May Be Linked To Aurora'sDecember 10, 2002 PARKER, Colo. -- For the third time in a month, a cat has been found mutilated and dumped in a yard, and police asked for the public's help to find the killer. A couple living in the Clark Farms subdivision was doing yard work when they found the body of the black, white and gray female cat lying under a pile of leaves in a flower bed Friday morning. The cat had been decapitated and its front legs had been removed, Parker police said. Authorities said the cat had been dead for at least a week. Investigators were trying to determine whether the three killings were connected to a rash of cat, rabbit and squirrel mutilations in Denver and Aurora that began in July. "It's the same kind of activity, but we don't have information that positively connects them," said Parker police Capt. Ron Combs. There had been 10 cats, a squirrel and a rabbit that have been killed and left out for viewing in Aurora and Denver since July 19, authorities said. Whoever was mutilating pets in that area were killing them with an almost surgical precision, police said. All were dissected in a surgically precise way, and some animals had their organs removed and their bloodless carcasses left near people's homes, police said. And now, the trend may be happening in Parker. A couple raking leaves in their back yard discovered the first dead cat in Parker on Nov. 9. Eleven days later, a teacher at the Primrose School found the front half of a large black cat lying in a ditch near a fence. In each case, the cats were dismembered with a sharp object or tool, and the rest of the body was missing. Unlike the cases in Denver and Aurora, the cats apparently did not belong to anyone in the neighborhoods where they were found, Parker police said. The Denver Dumb Friends League has offered an $11,500 reward for information leading to the arrest of a suspect. The police are asking people who find bodies of animals to report that immediately, since there may be more victims that authorities don't even know about. An Aurora woman whose cat was among those that were killed, said that what the suspect did to her beloved pet, Mozart (pictured above), was so gruesome that police only showed her a picture. "They didn't really want me to see his body, so what they did was show me a picture of his head, and it was Mozart," Carol De Young said. Copyright 2002 by TheDenverChannel.com. |
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Coyotes, foxes, owls could be responsible Expert: Wildlife the likely culprit
By Brian D. Crecente, Rocky Mountain News The nation's leading expert in animal mutilations said he'd be shocked if humans are responsible for recent cat mutilations - saying wildlife is the likely culprit. "We have a database that has several thousand animal-cruelty cases, and frankly, we have never identified a case in which one or two or three people sequentially kill a large number of animals, or specifically cats," said Dr. Randall Lockwood, Humane Society of the United States vice president of research and educational outreach and co-author of a book on animal forensics. "When we do see cases of someone breaking into a house or going after a cat in a yard, they are usually kicked, shot, stabbed, bludgeoned but not chopped or anything like that." Instead, Lockwood points to Colorado's abundant urban wildlife - coyotes, foxes and owls. Investigators in Salt Lake City appear to be taking a similar view of their recent series of cat killings. On Wednesday, investigators discovered an animal den at the top of a street where half the killings and mutilations occurred, said Temma Martin, spokeswoman for Salt Lake County Animal Services. She said investigators are trying to determine what animal lives or lived in the den and if it is connected to the case. "We are constantly back and forth between looking at humans and animals," she said. If animals were the cause of the cat killings, there would be telltale signs of which animal is responsible, said Jim Goodyear, assistant regional manager for the Colorado Division of Wildlife. "Predators have signature ways of killing," he said. "Cougars go for the throat, coyotes will hamstring an animal before killing it, raptors will pick them up and may kill them by dropping them." Goodyear said that if all the cats are killed in a nearly identical manner, then it's probably caused by a human. Martin says that while there are similarities, the mutilations fall into different categories: cats cut in half; cats with holes cut in their sides; cats decapitated. She added that in one Denver case, a cat's paws were cut off and in another, the backbone was removed. Lockwood says that a sort of "mass hysteria" often pervades cases such as this, with people wanting to believe a person rather than another animal is responsible for the deaths. In the summer of 1989, the residents of Tustin, Calif., worried that a roving band of Satanists were abducting cats, dismembering them with surgical precision, removing their blood and organs and returning them to owners' lawns. In a three-month period, 67 mutilated cats were discovered, but months later, an Orange County veterinarian announced that the deaths were likely caused by animals. Many owners of the dead cats refused to believe it. "People, for some reason, wanted to believe they had Satanists roaming their neighborhood rather than recognizing that they were living in an urban environment that houses a large wildlife population," Lockwood said. "Maybe it takes some of the burden off the owner who is letting their cat out." In Salt Lake City, the Humane Society of Utah sent a letter to the city's police chief in March urging that he have investigators question accused Elizabeth Smart kidnapper Brian David Mitchell about a string of cat killings. The letter cited Mitchell's proximity to the neighborhood where some of the killings took place, the fact that the mutilations "indicated a ritualistic or cultlike motivation" and Mitchell's alleged past cruelty to animals. The theory proved wrong when investigators discovered Mitchell was out of the state when three of the cats were killed. Despite his skepticism, Lockwood said it is possible a person or people are responsible for the cat mutilations. "I wouldn't rule it out," he said. "I think it is possible that some of these are attributable to people. I think it is extremely unlikely that an individual or a group of individuals are cruising between Denver and Aurora and Salt Lake in search of cats - that's extremely unlikely."
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Pet abuse termed unintentional Neglect is common problem and mostly benign, expert says
By Ann Depperschmidt, Rocky Mountain News Cat mutilations in metro Denver have made headlines worldwide, but the vast majority of animal abuse cases are far less gruesome. "There's a lot more benign neglect than mutilation," said Joey Wolf, a specialist who works with animal abusers at Aurora Center for Treatment. "People forget to water and feed them, they don't get them to the vet, they let the shots lapse, that kind of thing." Animal abuse is serious in any case, but most of the time it's unintentional, she said. In 2002, officials in unincorporated Jefferson County investigated 376 reports of abuse, neglect and abandonment, said Carla Zinanti, animal control manager for Jefferson County. Fifteen citations were issued for animal cruelty. "Most cases are resolved through a warning process," said Zinanti. Robin Kee, animal control supervisor for Westminster, said roughly 20 of the 317 cases of animal abuse and neglect her office investigated in 2002 resulted in a citation. Citations generally are given when animals are beaten or burned or found with severely matted hair, she said. But in most cases, calls are placed by well-meaning pet lovers hoping to avert abuse, Kee said. For example, many callers report pet owners who take their pets shopping because they consider it a form of abuse, she said. "People who call in are very upset, but the person who took their dog shopping truly loves their dog; they just weren't thinking it through." Others call because they haven't seen their neighbor in a while and worry the neighbor's dog doesn't have water and shelter, she said. But when an abuser does strike on purpose, abuse specialist Wolf said the person tends to be a man in his 40s. "We used to think it was just a teenage thing, and it really isn't," she said. "It's not uncommon for adult males threatening the family pet as a way to control their family." She said animal abusers enjoy inflicting pain. "A lot of people think animal abusers are easy to identify and they're not," Wolf said. "They look just like you and me." In some cases, a child who's been bullied by older siblings will turn on the pet. "Sometimes a kid is the last on the pecking order, so they pull the dog's whiskers out." Wolf said it's hard to say whether the number of animal abuse cases has risen in recent years. In the past, "We didn't look at it and give it the value we do now," she said. Animal abuse and violence became much more of a social issue in the mid-'80s, when laws to protect animals came about, she said. Wolf worked with lawmakers on the so-called Westy law, named after the Westminster cat who was set on fire and thrown out of a moving car by two teens in May 2001. The law, attached to an omnibus criminal bill, made animal cruelty a felony on first offense. Westy survived and is doing fine in his adopted home, but the owner Tuesday declined an interview. The teens spent a night in jail, paid a $500 fine and were charged with a misdemeanor. State Sen. Deanna Hanna, D-Lakewood, who led the fight for the Westy law, said Tuesday she doesn't know if anybody has been prosecuted under it. District attorneys offices in Arapahoe and Denver counties say they have not used the law. Hanna noted the link between animal torture and murder. Killers Ted Bundy, Jeffrey Dahmer and the Son of Sam "all abused animals as young children," she said. "In fact, a vast majority of mass murderers have tortured animals as young children." "Really, it is designed to keep the public safe just as much as anything else," Hanna said. "When people find out I was involved in getting the Westy law passed, they're so happy. Pets are such a significant part of our lives." |
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Salt Lake City's Cat mutilation Cases: July 3, 2003
• Early July 2002 Head and organs missing • July 17, 2002 Hole cut in left side, organs missing • July 18, 2002 Hole cut in right side, organs missing • July 21, 2002 Front half found, organs missing • Oct. 28, 2002 Back half found, organs missing • Nov. 7, 2002 Front half found, organs missing • April 23 Back half found, all upper organs missing • June 20 Back half found, most organs missing • June 22 Hole cut in right side, organs missing • June 30 Front half found, organs missing
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Police
Will No Longer Report Details Of Cat Mutilations Officials Fear Media Coverage Provokes More Mutilations July 1, 2003 Aurora police will hold a news conference on Wednesday to announce that they will no longer release details on the cat mutilation cases that have plagued the metro area because they believe that media coverage may actually provoke more mutilations. At the conference, police
will also introduce the members of the multi-city task force created last
month to crack the case. Officers will also explain how the public can help
in the investigation, and how pet owners can keep |
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Cat Mutilation Reward Fund
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NEW CATTLE
MUTILATIONS IN THE PROVINCE OF CORDOBA
AN INTERVIEW WITH MR. BERARDO |
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Portsmouth
HeraldLink Sought in Seal Deaths
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Farnam Cow Found Mutilated
Nebraska, USA |
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Wave of Cat Killings Sparks Fear, Anxiety WebPosted Aug 27 2004KELOWNA, B.C. - Another cat has been killed in Kelowna. It's the sixth in a series of grisly cat killings and mutilations in the past month, and the second in as many days. The latest cat had been cut in half and the hindquarters were left in a front yard in the Rutland area of the city early Friday morning. Police say someone is taking cats from their yards to another location, killing them and dismembering the bodies. The cats' remains are then set up where they will be found by their owners the next morning.Two Mounties have been assigned to the investigation, animal rights' groups have offered a $5,000-reward and the SPCA is doing nightly patrols in the neighbourhood.
"I'm just appalled. The whole community is upset. It's just unimaginable to think someone could do something like that to an innocent little creature," says Kelowna SPCA director Dianne McKeown. And McKeown says the level of violence is raising fears that the cat killer could escalate his activity. "People are getting concerned about their kids, thinking possibly that someone who could do this to a cat could possibly do it to a child or to someone else in the community," she says.
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Authorities Investigating Mutilated
Cattle SANDIA - Authorities are investigating a case of livestock mutilation. An Orange Grove man made the discovery. He said from the looks of it the two cows died under some bizarre circumstances. Cattle deaths are like those of any other animal, but every once in awhile cattle carcasses are found with strange cuts and all their organs removed. Cattle mutilation is a worldwide mystery. James Lund and his nephew noticed a dead cow lying in a pasture while driving down a highway near Sandia this week. He didn't think much of it, but later on took a closer look and found two dead cattle. They weren't just dead - they were mutilated. "We noticed they had some really, really strange cuts on them," said Lund. The animals eyes, ears, tongue, udders, and reproductive organs both were missing. Their carcasses had large circles carved out with surgical precision. "It looked like it was cauterized as it was cut." He said both animals were in the same position about 150 yards apart. The Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association has said most of these peculiar deaths can be chalked up to possums, skunks and other varmints that pray on animals that die of natural causes. That's it. But others believe the circumstances surrounding theses deaths are so mysterious, it could be something else." "I'd say it was pretty weird. I've read about, I've heard about it on TV, about these weird mutilations of cattle, but I never thought I'd see one." Even the buzzards have been staying away from the cattle, a strange behavior that's been reported in other cases of cattle mutilations from around the world. James Lund contacted officials about his discovery. 6News attempted to contact the owner of the land and the cattle, but were unsuccessful in doing so. Online Reporter: Aaron Drawhorn 1.7.05 by JAC |
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Dead Cats Known Worldwide By Jessie Stensland July, 23 2005 |
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Was it UFOs?
Mystery Haunts Eastern Plains
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'I've got to think it's UFOs'
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Coyote, cougar, bear or dogs. What is mutilating Bethany animals? Terri Miles, Editor November 02, 2005 |
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Kitty Killer Still at
Large in Hollywood Posted by Joe Schnaidt on Nov 6, 2005 |
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Unexplained
Dog Mutilations Prompt Investigation
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Forensic Vet,
Police Join Animal Abuse Case
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No Answers Yet in Mutilated Cats Case; Three half-bodies have
been found Wednesday, September 05, 2007 |
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Cat Killer's Behaviour Sinister, warns psychologist
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Cat
Killer Strikes Again? |
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Slaughter of Pet Piglets May Be Work of Serial Animal Killer
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Killer Perplexes Neighbors IAN DEMSKY; The News Tribune Published: November 1st, 2007 Tacoma, WA - November 17, 2007 Chi and Hennessy were butchered. Cut clean in half. And it wasn’t the work of animals. “Anyone who’s sliced a turkey can see it wasn’t a bite mark,” said Chi’s owner, Skip Anderson, who lives near Point Defiance Park. He had the 18-pound cat for seven years before it was killed Oct. 30, 2005. Then, earlier this month, on Oct. 17, a neighbor’s cat, was found slain in much the same manner, just a few hundred feet from where Chi’s body was discovered. Anderson started to worry a killer might be stalking the area. No blood was found at the scene of either body, he said Wednesday. Veterinarian Craig Smith, who founded the Tacoma Cat Hospital in 1993, examined both animals. At first glance, he said, it looked like they’d been attacked by a dog or a coyote, but a closer examination of the skin edges showed the tell-tale signs of a blade. “What we’re looking for is little ‘v’ cuts along the edge,” Smith said. If it they had been torn apart “you’re not going to find a clean edge, you’re going to find a shredded edge.” Both cats had bite marks around the head and neck, though, leading Smith to speculate someone might have allowed them to be killed by a dog before the mutilation. Also, a predator would have most likely eaten more of the cats’ vital organs. “From a logical perspective, you wouldn’t think a predator would leave the good stuff,” Smith said. Hennessy’s owner did not want to speak to a reporter or be identified, Anderson said. If someone is killing cats in the Point Defiance neighborhood, the question is why. Anderson, a 56-year-old retired naval officer, suspected an incident involving a neighbor led to Chi’s death two years ago, but Hennessy’s recent death doesn’t seem to have any connection, he said. “My wife and I have six cats,” he said while giving a tour of his home, “but that one isn’t one of them and that one isn’t one of them either.” Especially as it gets colder, the Andersons often have six or seven extra feline friends over for “sleepovers.” Hennessy only visited once or twice. “I can’t account for the additional cats except to explain it’s warm, we keep food out, and we have an open-door policy,” he said. Smith, the vet, said Anderson “is very committed to his pets. You can see it in his eyes when you’re talking to him.” Tacoma City Councilwoman Julie Anderson responded to a e-mail Skip Anderson sent out about the incidents. “I ask the City Manager to please pass along this report to the Tacoma Police Department, as well as Animal Control Officers, for investigation and follow-up,” she wrote. “If the death or the mutilation was caused by a person, then s/he is indeed very dangerous and needs to be identified soon.” Skip Anderson thought Chi’s death was related to a noise complaint he made against a neighbor. He admits he doesn’t have any hard evidence. “But you know it here,” he says, tapping his heart. A police report shows one of the men arrested after Anderson’s complaint threatened a police officer, saying, “I work at Tacoma General O.R. and I hope I see you there soon.” Someone with medical knowledge and who wasn’t squeamish about blood and guts was a likely suspect, Anderson figured. In the meantime, Anderson is offering a $500 reward for information that leads to the killer’s conviction. He worries that someone who’s killing cats today might later turn his attention to humans. Anderson asked that tips be passed to him through The News Tribune. Ian Demsky: 253-597-8872 Ian.demsky@thenewstribune.com |
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Authorities Looking For Person Who Mutilated Three
Dogs BY JOSH MROZINSKI WYOMING COUNTY BUREAU CHIEF 11/15/2007 EATON TWP. — Three dogs have been found dead and skinned in Marsh Creek off Jenks Road, and police are looking for answers. “The (dogs’) bodies were definitely mutilated,” said Tina Walter, an investigator with the Humane Society of Lackawanna County. “They were brutally killed.” About 10 days ago, a woman saw an animal in the creek near a bridge while she walking on Jenks Road, about one-half mile south of the Route 29 roadside rest, said Walter. Walter said the woman could not distinguish the species of the animal because it was small. On Friday, the woman was walking on Jenks Road and saw a second animal in the creek. She determined the second body was a dog and it was near the first animal, which was later determined to also be a dog. Walter received reports on Monday of the two animals in the creek and began an investigation. She went to the scene and found what appeared to be a female dog and two puppies, each about a 1 year old. “All three of them were spayed and neutered, so we believed they were someone’s dogs,” Walter said. “All three dogs are of the same breed.” Investigators believe the dogs are shelties (Shetland sheepdogs) but cannot be certain because the animals have no skin, she said. A necropsy was performed on the dogs on Tuesday by Dr. Joseph Pannick, of Veterinary Medical Center in Blakely. Investigators believe the dogs’ skin and noses were removed with a sharp object. “They’ve been caped like a deer would by a hunter,” Pannick said. “All of them were brutally killed.” He said the dogs died from abdominal trauma, had fractured ribs, as well as surgical cuts and incisions. The brain of one dog was also mutilated, Walter said. “There is no way to determine when they were skinned, but all three dogs were traumatized,” Walter said. “This is definitely the worst case of animal cruelty I’ve seen.” A person or persons involved in the death of the animals could face three counts of animal cruelty, which each carry a maximum sentence of two years in prison, Walter said. The Humane Society of Lackawanna County is investigating the crime in cooperation with the Wyoming County district attorney’s office. “We have had an occasional case of cruelty to animals before but not mutilation like this,” Wyoming County Chief Detective David Ide said. Anyone with information is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 996-COPS or the Humane Society at 585-0510. jmrozinski@timesshamrock.com ©The Citizens Voice 2007 |
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Reeling After Longtime Pet Found Dead, Missing Spleen by Rod Antone Yakima Herald-Republic 114 N. 4th Street Yakima, WA 98901 Phone: (509) 248-1251 Toll Free: 1-800-343-2799 May 09, 2008 The mystery involving Peanut hasn't been solved entirely, but investigators are pretty sure they know how the pet died. When neighbors discov-ered Debbie Zorrozua's dog on her front lawn along 85th Avenue earlier this week, the 10-year-old dachshund mix was missing its spleen. What struck her veterinarian was that the spleen seemed to have been surgically removed. There was even suspicion that Peanut might have died at the hands of humans. But based on preliminary necropsy results from animal experts at Wash-ington State University, Peanut probably died by a large dog or coyote shaking it by its neck, said Zorrozua's veterinarian, Dr. Lutz Harfst. The family pet had puncture wounds in the neck area and damaged vertebrae. The WSU results, however, did not provide a definitive explanation as to why the dog had been cut open and its spleen removed. "We may never know what happened regarding that," Harfst said. Zorrozua said she was heartbroken when neighbors found Peanut dead and that she had her beloved pet buried at her mother's ranch. Then her ex-husband offered to hire a private investigator to find out what happened. Her vet offered to look at Peanut's body himself. Harfst said he was struck by the fact that the incision into Peanut was clean and not "ripped into" like he would have expected from an animal attack. Because he doesn't have much experience in necropsies, he sent the dog to the WSU Animal Sciences Department for further examination. Yakima pet Detective Dave Kellett said late Friday that based on the preliminary findings from WSU, police are leaning toward classifying the cause of death as damage from a predator rather than injuries from mutilation. "Throughout history, (injuries caused by) predators have been mistaken for mutilation. We see that here," Kellett said. "In fact, it might even be two different animals. Peanut could have been killed by a larger animal and then its spleen removed by a smaller animal, maybe even a bird." Earlier in the day, he noted that this is the season for increased attacks by predators. The West Valley area where Zorrozua lives also is known for coyotes. With coyote attacks, Kellett said, there can be a lack of blood and puncture wounds. Coyotes often lap up blood and cause wounds with their teeth that can look like knife wounds. But he, too, was puzzled by the veterinarian's report of a precise removal of the spleen. Zorrozua's friends and family are offering a $1,200 reward for information involving Peanut's death. Anyone with information can call her ex-husband, Rick, at 961-8105. "The general public just doesn't understand what we're going through right now," Zorrozua said. * Rod Antone can be reached at 577-7628 or rantone@yakimaherald.com. |
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Bizarre Calf
Mutilations Found on Colorado Ranch (AP) SAN LUIS, Colo. — A creepy string of calf mutilations in southern Colorado has a rancher and sheriff's officials mystified, and a UFO chaser thinks extraterrestrials are involved. Four calves were found dead in a pasture just north of the New Mexico state line in recent weeks. The dead calves had their skins peeled back and organs cleared from the rib cage. One calf had its tongue removed. But rancher Manuel Sanchez has found no signs of human attackers — such as footprints or ATV tracks — or animal attackers — such as pools of blood. Sheriff's officers tell The Pueblo Chieftan they're baffled. It's led to speculation the mutilations are the work of aliens. An area UFO chaser, Chuck Zukowski of Colorado Springs, says another calf was found dead near Trinidad earlier this year, its ears removed. Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. |