107 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
107 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
Jeff Walker #64 @7317
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Wed Jun 26 22:43:38 1991
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þ Ask_UFO #101
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Dt: 18-Apr-91 13:02
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By: Don Ecker
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To: All
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Re: The `HARVEST' Continues
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This file was provided to the ParaNet<sm> Information Service by
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UFO Magazine. All rights are reserved. You may distribute this file
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freely as long as this header remains intact.
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Date prepared: 4/18/91
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Contributed by: Staff UFO Magazine
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=================================================================
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UFO Magazine Vol. 5 No. 4 ( Coping With Abduction )
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The `Harvest' Continues
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ANIMAL MUTILATION UPDATE
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by Linda Moulton Howe
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In 1989, there were so many cattle mutilations in southern Idaho
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that Bear Lake County Sheriff Brent Bunn told me, "We haven't seen
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anything like this since the 1970s." Sheriff Bunn sent me 16
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neatly-typed "Investigation Reports" about cattle mutilations that
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had taken place in his county between May and December. Over half
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occurred in a remote valley called Nounan. Only eighty people live
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there. Ranching is their main income source, and cattle are
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precious. Disease and predators are old and well-understood
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enemies.
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What descended on Nounan, Idaho in the summer and fall of 1989
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was not understood-and it scared people. Bloodless and precise
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cuts-that's what bothers people. Officer Gregg Athay wrote in his
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mutilation report, "There were no visible signs of the cause of
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death. It appeared that only the soft tissues (nose, lips and
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tongue) were gone off the head and four nipples off the bag. Again
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there was no blood on the hair and ground."
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No veterinarian report was made on that cow. But a month earlier,
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Dr. Charles Merrell at the Bear Lake Animal Hospital examined a
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dead Hereford cow. Dr. Merrell wrote after his examination: "Some
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time between approximately 8 p.m. (August 31, 1989) and 7 a.m. 1
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September, the anus, vagina to include uterus and ovaries and all
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four teats (one teat deeply incised, the others shallow cuts) were
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removed by knife cuts around these tissues. There were no signs of
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injury and no blood to be found on the ground. " A neighbor,
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Bernice Laughter, said she saw lights in that area about 2 a.m. on
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September 1.
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Disks reported
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Throughout the history of animal mutilations, since 1967, there
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have been numerous eyewitness accounts of large, glowing disks or
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"silent helicopters " over pastures where dead animals are later
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found. One Waco, Texas rancher said he encountered two four-foot
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tall, light green-colored "creatures " with large, black, slanted
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eyes, carrying a calf which was later found dead and mutilated. In
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1983, a Missouri couple watched through binoculars as two small
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beings in tight-fitting silver suits worked on a cow in a nearby
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pasture. The alien heads were large and white in color. Nearby, a
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tall, green-skinned "lizard man" stood glaring with eyes slit by
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vertical pupils like a crocodiles's. Several hypnosis sessions with
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various UFO abductees have produced information suggesting that the
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alien intruders are using the tissues and blood fluids for genetic
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experimentation and sustenance.
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One Missouri woman, who has experienced repeated encounters with
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small grey beings that have large, black eyes, sid the creatures
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told her, "We use substances from cows in an essential biochemical
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process for our survival." In the 1989 continuing harvest, over
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half of the Idaho mutilations were young calves. One mutilated
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calf, found December 24, north of Downey, Idaho, was found lying on
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its back with the navel, rectum and genitals neatly cut out of the
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steer's white belly. No blood was found anywhere. (See photo, p.
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18.) This steer calf was taken for an autopsy to Dr. Chris Oats,
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D.V.M., at the Hawthorne Animal Hospital. Dr. Oats checked all the
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vital organs and was unable to determine the cause of death. During
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the autopsy, a sharp cut was found in the right chest area, and Dr.
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Oats discovered that a main artery had been severed under the chest
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wound.
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She was surprised that "the steer had lost a large amount of
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blood, but [she] could not understand where it went to. " There was
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no blood on the steer or on the ground. Dr. Oats also determined
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that the steer had not been dragged by the neck or tied up around
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the feet.
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Residents of southern Idaho weren't alone in their fear and con-
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fusion about the mutilations. William Veenhuizen woke up on July
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17,
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1989 to find his finest cow mutilated about 100 yards from his
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farmhouse in Maple Valley, Washington, southeast of Seattle. The
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six-year-old female was due to calve in about three weeks. But
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mutilators had cut away a smooth oval section of the cow's mouth,
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removed a section of jaw with teeth, excised the tongue and cut out
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the entire udder, vagina and rectal area. The calf was still inside
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the belly.
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Something woke Mr. Veenhuizen up around I a.m. that day, he
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remembers. He even put his shoes on and went outside, but he
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couldn't see or hear anything out of the ordinary. He was so upset
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after the mutilation, he started keeping the rest of his animals
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inside the barn. "A neighbor said to me that coyotes did it," he
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said, "but I said the coyotes don't have that sharp a knife."
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