Newborn Heifer Mutilation in Anderson, California, on August 7, 2004

The Harry and Carole Hawes ranch in Anderson, California, had a cow mutilation in 1999; now a newborn female calf has been mutilated. Further south in Red Bluff, the Jean and Bill Barton ranch has experienced many cattle mutilations over the past decade.
The Harry and Carole Hawes ranch in Anderson, California, had a cow mutilation in 1999; now a newborn female calf has been mutilated. Further south in Red Bluff, the Jean and Bill Barton ranch has experienced many cattle mutilations over the past decade.

August 11, 2004  Anderson, California - Since the 1950s, unusual deaths that law enforcement and ranchers have called "animal mutilations" have been reported around the world. Both domestic animals and wild game have been affected, especially horses and cattle. Ranchers and law enforcement have long been puzzled because animals are found with the same pattern of hide and tissue removed - usually without blood - from the head, sexual organs, and rectum. There are no signs of struggle or tracks around the dead animals, not even the animal's own tracks. That peculiar fact provoked law enforcement to wonder if perpetrators came in and out of pastures using aerial craft.

 

Click here to subscribe and get instant access to read this report.

Click here to check your existing subscription status.

Existing members, login below:


© 1998 - 2024 by Linda Moulton Howe.
All Rights Reserved.