“Metatron created the super-electron for the ordering of nucleogenesis so that a balance and correspondence can exist between the dynamic phases of an infinite number of co-existing universes and the Living Light.”
“The surgical cuts are a mystery. I've never seen something like that. You've got to be a person who's pretty skilled like a surgeon to do this.”
- Herminio Martinez, 74, long-time rancher in San Luis, CO
Back in 1979 when I was producing the TV documentary A Strange Harvest as Director of Special Projects at KMGH-TV, the CBS station in Denver, my crew and I filmed several animal mutilation sites near San Luis and in Walsenburg to the northeast and Trinidad directly east.
June 30, 2017 San Luis, Colorado - The San Luis Valley of Colorado between Alamosa and Trinidad and Walsenburg has been one of the places in the United States that has had persistent cycles of cattle, horse and other animal mutilations since the 1960s. The first case to make worldwide headlines was a 3-year-old Appaloosa mare named Lady. She was owned by Berle and Nellie Lewis. Each evening Lady went back to the ranch for water where her mother, Snippy, was corralled. But on September 8, 1967, Lady did not show up. The next day the ranchers found the mare on her side near the edge of a small, flat clearing in the chico bush. Her neck and head had been stripped of flesh and all her major chest organs had been bloodlessly removed. The ranch owner said, “That neck was cut so smooth it couldn't have been done even with a sharp hunting knife.”
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“I was driving on the Garden State Parkway in New Jersey when the top of a pine tree appeared in the air keeping pace with my car.”
- Craig G., 43, Information Technologist, Connecticut
Highly strange aerial craft first had the camouflage of being the top of pine tree to driver on Garden State Parkway, NJ, before UFO morphed into bubbling "mercury" and then went straight up in the sky and disappeared.
June 30, 2017 New Jersey - On June 10, 2017, I received the following email from 43-year-old Craig G., now from Connecticut. But he was born August 31, 1974, in Queens, New York. His parents moved to Hillsdale, New Jersey, and Craig graduated from Pascack Valley High School in 1992. Then he pursued a B. A. in Fine Arts from William Paterson University in Wayne, New Jersey. Eventually he flourished in computer information technology, which has been his profession for the past eighteen years. But he has always been haunted about what happened on the Garden State Parkway one morning driving to work in 2002.
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“The word 'classified' on the very first page means nothing to any military guide. There's no such classification as 'classified.' That is really sort of a giveaway that the person has no idea what they're talking about.”
- Peter Capwell Thomas, retired U. S. Navy NT 5,
accoustic and operations analyst for 26 years, Waterford, Virginia
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“These people disappear right in the midst of many others,
and nobody ever sees them leave.”
- David Paulides, Founder CanAm Missing Project and Missing 411 Investigator
In 2011, retired police officer David Paulides launched the Can(ada)Am(erica) Missing Project, which catalogs cases of people who mysteriously disappear — or are found — across North America. David has released six books in his popular Missing 411 series, and now in 2017, a documentary film, Missing 411: The Movie, co-directed by his son, Ben Paulides. See Websites below.
July 28, 2017 Denver, Colorado - The New York City Police Department has a Missing Persons Squad dedicated to searching for people. Last year, more than 13,000 were reported missing in New York City.
ABC's Nightline did a news feature about the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children that has had reports as high as 2,000 missing young people a day. Of those, about 115 children each year fall into the “stranger abduction” cases.
Last year of 2016, the National Center reported it had some 20,500 cases of missing children. 90% were endangered runaways; 6% were family abductions; 2% were young adults ages 18 to 20; 1% were lost, injured or missing children; and 1% were non-family abduction. It's in that small 1% category that there are mysterious cases with characteristics like David Paulides's 411 Missing profile. But David's statistics show that most of the missing people he investigates disappeared near — and sometimes reappear dead — near large bodies of water.
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