Kit Metzger quickly swiped through the pictures on her iPhone, trying not to linger too long on the gruesome images.
Metzger, who heads the approximately 90,000-acre Flying M Ranch had just come inside after a day spent discussing prairie dogs and grassland restoration.
Now, she was talking about a different topic entirely.
The smartphone screen showed pictures of Metzger’s cows, but some were barely recognizable with chunks of skin or other body parts removed. After being killed and mutilated, her animals had been left on the ranch.
From Internet searches of similar mutilations and discussions with the local livestock inspector, Metzger wonders whether the killings are somehow related to satanic or other sacrificial rituals.
“I can’t tie it to anything but that’s a clue,” she said.
Other ranchers in places like Colorado and Missouri have experienced similar livestock mutilations, but have been unable to come up with any sort of explanation. Theories about religious or even extraterrestrial connections were tossed around, but not proven. No arrests have been made.
“IT’S JUST REALLY STRANGE”
Metzger’s photographs show cattle with their eyeballs taken out, their ears or lips cut off and circular chunks sliced from their bodies where their inner organs were removed.
The cuts are clean and precise, as if made by a sharp scalpel, she said.
From her own research and analysis of the dead cows, Metzger said the killers appear to inject them with a painkiller, sedative or muscle relaxant-type drug that makes the animals go limp. Then they insert some sort of tube into the artery and wait until the cows’ hearts pump all of the blood out of their bodies. There is rarely any blood on the ground around the carcass, leading Metzger to believe the people are somehow collecting it. Those same techniques, including the draining of blood, have been found in cattle mutilation cases in New Mexico and Colorado.
“It’s just really strange” she said.
The killings at Flying M Ranch have been going on for years — the first happened in the early 70s — and Metzger said she has tried everything to catch the perpetrators, but to no avail. She hopes that going public with the story will finally make the killers stop and leave her ranch alone.
“This is getting to the point where it’s getting ridiculous,” she said.
The killings always seem to happen around certain dates — mid-July, October and right around Easter, Metzger said.
Flying M has tried sending out ranch staff to watch over the cattle at night and set up cameras near water tanks and entryways into pastures. But most of the time they have only gotten images of headlights and haven’t been able to trace tire tracks on the ground, Metzger said. They have contacted officials with the Forest Service, the Coconino County Sheriff and the Arizona Game and Fish Department, who are all on the lookout.
Besides the strange and creepy nature of the cow deaths, they also have dealt a financial blow to the ranch. Metzger estimated that the four or five cows that tend to be killed in this way each year are worth about $16,000 to the ranch. If the cows were pregnant, that’s thousands more that is lost. Plus, calves left alone will have problems developing without being on their mother for their first year, she said.
On top of that, it’s Flying M’s gentler cows that tend to become victims because people can more easily walk up to them and drug them, Metzger said, adding that several of their favorite cows have been killed.
So far, Flying M’s neighbor and fellow Diablo Trust member Bar T Bar Ranch hasn’t experienced any similar cow killings, said Judy Prosser, the ranch’s owner and president of the Diablo Trust. She guessed that it might be because her ranch is harder to access than Flying M.
ELK VICTIMS, TOO
Recently, the mutilations have been found among elk as well. Last August, officials with the Arizona Game and Fish Department came upon three dead elk near Flying M Ranch, northeast of Anderson Mesa. The animals’ lips and sexual organs had been cut out of them, said Larry Phoenix, Flagstaff field supervisor with the department. It looked like somebody had driven out cross country and then dumped the animals, where they were found by officials, he said.
“It was something we hadn’t seen in a really long time,” said Phoenix, who has worked for the department in this region for about 20 years.
There isn’t any evidence showing how the animals died, he said. The department looked into whether the killings could be related to Satan worship, but hasn’t found any direct connection, Phoenix said.
“It’s just one of the possibilities based on the lips and the sexual parts being missing, but there is no hard evidence that leads us down that path,” he said.
The case is still ongoing, he said.
As for what Flying M will do with Easter coming up later this month, “we’ll be on the lookout,” Metzger said.
(8) comments
implant wireless heart monitors.
Has The Daily Sun finally "Jumped the Shark" and gone full tabloid? Ms.Cowen is the Health and Science reporter? Perhaps she should have done at least a cursory search of the scientific literature on this topic before submitting for publication. Here is a 1989 article from The Canadian Veterinary Journal: "Maggots, mutilations and myth: Patterns of postmortem scavenging of the bovine carcass" http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1681190/ What's next, a story that Obama is a Martian?
"The cuts are clean and precise, as if made by a sharp scalpel," Doesn't sound like a maggot infestation. It sounds like a very expensive, repeated prank.
I'd say more cameras would help. Different angles, etc so as to catch these folks. It'd be a lot cheaper than the continuing loss of the cattle.
To the azdailysun staff, why are articles from 2001 and 2002 showing up in the 'popular' column? Is someone having fun with Google search or testing a bot/script on the webpage?
I feel sorry for this rancher and im glad the public at least knows this is happening in our area. Claiming all these cattle were scavenged postmortem is a real stretch; this rancher is losing dear cows and money. It's also highly strange that all the blood is missing and none of the blood is on the ground. Who could pull that off in the middle of the night?
@JK
Anyone who has spent their life ranching knows what maggots can
and cannot do.
Maggots do not drain blood and leave almost the entire carcass untouched,
except for select organs....
OVERNIGHT.
Maggots take at least a day just to hatch.
It is an insult to hardworking
no-nonsense ranchers and reporters willing to brave such mockery to call this
"tabloid journalism".
The reporter made no claims,
they reported it for what it is-
an unsolved,troubling,depressing expensive mystery.
Funny I did grow up on a cattle ranch. Read the research paper before you dismiss the research. And its not just maggots. Read it. Learn something, you might be surprised.
Satanic cult worship. Blood/organs taken for the different ceremonies. Stake out the entry roads during a full moon because the blood has to be taken at the time of full moon. Police need to contact other state agencies on this problem for tips---it occurs across the country.
Welcome to the discussion.
Log In
Keep it Clean. Please avoid obscene, vulgar, lewd, racist or sexually-oriented language.
PLEASE TURN OFF YOUR CAPS LOCK.
Don't Threaten. Threats of harming another person will not be tolerated.
Be Truthful. Don't knowingly lie about anyone or anything.
Be Nice. No racism, sexism or any sort of -ism that is degrading to another person.
Be Proactive. Use the 'Report' link on each comment to let us know of abusive posts.
Share with Us. We'd love to hear eyewitness accounts, the history behind an article.