Mutlilation update...

Spermaceti

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FINAL REPORT ON UTAH MUTILATION FROM NIDS:

Investigation of the Unexplained Death of a Cow in N.E. Utah on October 16, 1998

Colm A. Kelleher, Ph.D.
George E. Onet, D.V.M., Ph.D.
Eric W. Davis, Ph.D.

National Institute for Discovery Science

On October 16, 1998 a three-year-old registered polled Hereford cow was found dead by the owner who had seen the animal in good health the previous day. The animal’s left eye and periorbital tissue was removed as well as part of its left ear. A full necropsy followed by toxicological, histological and chemical analysis was done on the animal. The following noteworthy features were found:

(1) Both the left periorbital tissue and left ear were removed with a sharp instrument(s) as confirmed by two and three veterinary pathologists respectively;

(2) No evidence of high heat or cautery was obtained from these cuts;

(3) No signs of struggle and no tracks were found near the animal;

(4) An unusual, formaldehyde-containing blue gel-like substance was found on the eye, the ear and the anus of the animal; using headspace gas chromatography mass spectrometry analysis, the blue gel-like substance was shown to contain 300–3000 m g/g of 2,6-bis-dimethylethyl-4-methyl phenol, a synthetic molecule with anti-oxidant and anti-viral properties, as well as contaminants of normal putrefaction breakdown products from cow tissue;

(5) The animal’s heart was shredded, yet its pericardium was intact;

(6) The animal tested positive on two different pregnancy tests, yet there was no fetus present at the time of necropsy and no sign of a recent spontaneous abortion;

(7) It is suspected that the animal’s blood contained high levels of potassium chloride;

(8) The animal had extremely low liver copper levels and low Vitamin A levels;

(9) Severe hemorrhaging under the hide around the neck of the animal was observed;

(10) The animal was normal for routine bacteriology, virology and toxicology scans. In summary, the totality of the data obtained from the necropsy, combined with the histological, toxicological, bacteriological and chemical analyses suggests that the animal did not die a normal death. For the full, detailed report, click here.

CATTLE MUTILATIONS

For years, cattle farmers and private owners alike have found dead cows on their land with signs of missing body parts surgically removed, lacking blood on the ground or in the animal itself, lacking foot prints in either the dust, snow or mud leading up to or away from the animal, often including a lack of its own prints. There almost always is a lack of predatory consumption of the cow for weeks after the death, as opposed to a few days under natural death circumstances. These sort of deaths have become so common place among ranchers throughout the US for so many years now that most don't even bother reporting the odd death to the police anymore. Though some horses, elk and select other large animals have fallen victim to the Classic Cattle Mutilation (CCM), by far more cattle have been chosen for this bizarre dissection ritual than any other animal on earth. Cattle have been found, thousands of miles apart from each other on the same day, with identical markings of a CCM.


Click on photos to see larger image

Missing eye and or hide around the socket. The hide and flesh underneath has been completely stripped from the jaw down to the bone.

A square or oval patch of hide has been removed from the chest and the udders have been carefully removed.






The rectum area is absent...cored out of the cow a foot or more deep and as big around as a coffee can.

As the cow owner walks upon his or her dead animal, the following is a list of things they will probably find.


1. Missing eye and or hide around the socket.

2. One ear and sometimes the tongue is often missing.

3. The hide and flesh underneath has been completely stripped from the jaw right down to the bone.

4. A square or oval patch of hide has been removed from the chest and the udders have been carefully removed.

5. The rectum area is absent...cored out of the cow a foot or more deep and as big around as a coffee can.

6. All of the areas lacking any sign of blood either in or around the wound itself or on the ground.

7. Upon examination by a CCM expert, blood is often found to be missing throughout the entire animal.

8. No sign of tire, foot or animal track is found around the animal.

9. The animal is often found at a distance that should allow a warning to the owner of a struggle, though none is ever heard.

10. The animal is often found somewhat embedded in the ground in cases where soft ground is there, indicating the cow may have been dropped to where it lays.


Though in the past, a few have speculated that the mutilations are the work of Cult activity, this seems unlikely in that the few cases of animal abuse by this small sector of the population is easy to identify. Cult activity involving killing an animal usually involves a smaller animal that is easier to handle and is often a crude and messy scene. Bullet or knife holes are usually found in these cases, where as the CCM never shows sign of bullet or knife puncture wounds. Furthermore, necropsies have shown that surgical precision cutting with extremely sharp instruments have been used on the animals, and in other cases Coagulation necrosis of the skin at the incision areas have indicated high heat cutting has taken place. 200 to 300 degree temperatures applied to the areas indicate laser type technology.

As of late, the discovery of trace amounts of Bovine Hemoglobin have been found on the dead animal. Bovine Hemoglobin is a component of blood. The presence of hemoglobin indicates that a processing of the whole blood has occurred. The usual procedure for isolating hemoglobin from whole blood is rather complex. It involves separating red blood corpuscles from the lighter plasma components by centrifugation. The plasma is siphoned off and ether is added to the corpuscle paste, causing the cells to burst. Another centrifugation removes the ruptured cell envelopes and leaves a clear red solution of hemoglobin. With mutilated cows, every other component of the blood is totally disintegrated with the exception of the hemoglobin. It's turned into its elemental form.

Most scientists recognize the importance of this find because if you know how hemoglobin is produced in the pure form, you know that it entails a number of very, very precise and rather prolonged biochemical steps. In other words, you can't just do this in a matter of a few minutes. It is something that is only accomplished in a biochemical laboratory. Because we just can't do this... pick up a cow, drain or disintegrate all the blood in it, produce pure hemoglobin, and then drop it back down... this becomes not only a scientific investigation into the physical findings, but increased questions as to who is doing it and how.


In the U.S., animal mutilations have been found in almost every state in the union. In 1967, mutilation waves were reported in Pennsylvania and Kansas and were followed by a Midwest wave in 1975-76, with cases occurring in 15 states, from South Dakota and Montana to New Mexico and Texas. In a two-year period from 1975 to 1977 in two Colorado counties alone, there were nearly two hundred reports. It is estimated that nationwide, there are at least two thousand a year.

Many animal mutilations seem to remain unreported because of the direct financial costs induced by necropsies and laboratory examinations, the financial repercussions from bankers who have outstanding loans against the herd, the ranchers' fear about being ridiculed by the community, and the ranchers basic nature of being self-reliant and independent. Many others simply want to avoid the attention and publicity.

Endeavors to explain the cause of animal mutilations displaying strikingly similar patterns led to a variety of theories, but few pertinent answers. Among such assumptions was also the involvement of satanic cults. However, despite the large numbers of cases and the participation of official investigators, no person has ever been arrested for crimes related to such deaths.

If you find yourself looking over any deceased animal showing any of the signs described in the above 1 through 10 list, please contact Oregon UFO Review through our e-mail link and make sure to leave a phone number where we can contact you. With a Mutilation, it is important to get to the deceased animal sooner than later for quality samples to be taken for examination.
 
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