It is not small and
easily cuts two inch deep slashes. More important though is two
other key facts here. It kills and does not eat. And it is hanging
around to challenge dogs. This is surely behavior conforming to the
giant sloth which we have already investigated and described.
All cats generally
avoid contact and they do eat their victims. They also avoid dogs
because they know that dogs will form a pack and bring a human hunter
along to finish the job after they are cornered. That is why human
contact with the wild in daytime is so slight. They know better.
Thus we can safely rule out anything we expect and know.
On the other hand,
there were tracks unremarked and that needs to be addressed. Size
matters here and claw marks should be in evidence. An alternative
explanation could be a small bear although it is clear that these
dogs are been stalked. Otherwise, after the first encounter, the
dogs would be avoiding the creature. Thus it is something that has
their number and is set on killing a few. That is what has everyone
quite rightly spooked.
Unseen
Beast Brutally Killing Dogs in Missouri Town
JANUARY 15, 2013
GREG NEWKIRK
Since
Thanksgiving, residents of Neosho, Missouri have been living in fear
of a mysterious beast stalking their forest and viciously attacking
their pets. The attacks have so far claimed the lives of two dogs,
and the community has banded together to hire professional trackers
over fears that the next set of incidents may happen to them.
Reta
Liles is the owner of two dogs that have been attacked, one more
fortunate than the other. Her golden lab, Buddy, was found dead,
while her dog Punk’n survived with a set of ferocious battle
wounds.
“Two
slashes across her back, and in some places, it’s two inches deep,”
Reta told the KSN
Local News. ”It
was bad. She was laid open from side to side.”
So
far, at least 8 canine companions from the Mint Lane neighborhood
have been the victims of the unexplained attacks, and it hasn’t
just been the smaller breeds with the nasty run ins. Larger, more
powerful dogs like pit bulls and mastiffs have been found wounded
as well, prompting concern that whatever is behind the attacks is
big, mean, and very scary.
“This
thing needs to be relocated or eradicated or something. I don’t
want to see any of my kids or my neighbors get tore up,” Reta said.
Leanna
Williams, Reta Liles neighbor and the president of the Faithful
Friends Animal Advocates, went so far as to write
a piece for the Neosha
Daily News about
the creature.
My neighbor (and friend) had called me to say her Puggle, Punk’n, had been seriously injured with deep lacerations, across her back that started at her rib cage on one side and went all the way to her belly on the other side, as if something had tried to open her up like a can opener. [...]
This animal seems to attack for “sport.” It does not drag off or eat whatever it attacks but just leaves it to die. We are concerned about letting our dogs (or family members) spend time outdoors, especially at night, although these attacks have been at all times of day. When our family and grandchildren were here for the holidays, all were uneasy about going out and for good reason. Some neighbors have small children (smaller than these dogs), and are concerned about allowing their children outside to play until we know this thing is gone.
So
far, whatever creature is to blame has not yet been seen, and the
local game commission has stated that they won’t step in until
visual evidence of the beast is presented to them, believing that the
animal in question could be a coyote. Residents, however, don’t
agree.
“Thought
it was a mountain lion because of the depth of the tracks and so
forth,”
Liles said.
The
community had banded together to install a few game cameras in hopes
of capturing photographic evidence of the beast once and for all.
Has
the Chupacabra migrated to snow-covered Missouri? Can a coyote really
take down a pit bull in a battle to the death? Or has a bob cat
recently gotten a taste for dogs? Let us know what you think on
twitter @WhoForted,
join the coversation on our
official Facebook page,
or chime in down in the comments section!
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