From: jai@kryton.ngdc.noaa.gov (Joy A. Ikelman) Newsgroups: alt.paranet.ufo Subject: Horse Mutilations in England Message-ID: <1993Jun25.134356.7712@ucsu.Colorado.EDU> Date: 25 Jun 93 13:43:56 GMT Sender: news@ucsu.Colorado.EDU (USENET News System) Organization: National Geophysical Data Center, NOAA, Boulder, Co Lines: 123 Originator: jai@kryton Nntp-Posting-Host: kryton.ngdc.noaa.gov Any readers in the United Kingdom care to comment? Have UFOs been mentioned at any time with these incidents? Not to trivialize this terrible thing, but I betcha I could write a doozy of an article on cattle mutilations based on the interesting logic found below. ;-) Clipped from the Denver Post, Thursday, June 24, 1993 HORSE HORROR: MORE THAN 30 ATTACKED SAVAGELY THROUGHOUT ENGLAND by John Danton New York Times, (c) 1993 Alton, England. This is a lush country. Gently rolling hills and valleys are bathed in the blossoms of foxglove and honeysuckle and Jacob's ladder, and the green of the fields is so bright it shimmers over everything--the sheep, the winding wooden fences, the stonge farmhouses and red-brick cottages. But something is wrong in Hampshire. Over the past three years, more than 30 horses have been attacked savagely. The attacks, which actually date back more than 10 years but now are occurring more often and turning fatal, have happened in open fields and inside stables, in broad daylight and on moonlit nights. In at least half the cases, the horses genitalia have been slashed or mutilated. The police have set up an "incidents room" with 10 officers, who have handled 3,800 frantic calls, employed a computer to search for patterns in the crimes, and turned to a psychiatrist to come up with a psychological profile. They arrested numerous people to question them--27 at last count, all men--and turned information over to the crown prosecutor in one case. But still the sadistic attacks continue. They have sown panic among the owners of 55,000 horses in the country. Even more distressing, they have multiplied through what police believe are copycat attackers and spread to other countries. There have now been attacks on horses in Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Cornwall, Dorset, Essex, Glamorgan, Kent, Oxfordshire, Shropshire, Surrey, Wiltshire, and Yorkshire. "The attacks have become more and more horrible," Sally Grover said. "And it's done by somebody who knows about horses. We've had attacks where the ovaries have been cut out in a mare, and not everyone knows where the ovaries are," she said. In March, Grover helped organize the Hampshire Horse Watch, part of a growing network of horse owners who patrol one another's pastures and paddocs on the lookout for suspicious strangers. Who could be responsible for the attacks? "I've no idea, Grover said. "Who could get inside a mind like that? It's the same sort of a person who would murder a child." Nearby, Betty Cabrol, who lives in a cottage bedecked with flowers, was having tea with a female crime prevention officer. They were theorizing about the attacks. "What we're sure of, it's a horse person," she said. "To be able to control them like that , you need a certain knowledge. What's hard to understand is how anyone could be so strong and so quick." The policewoman said gently, "If we had a pattern to it, that would help. But there's no pattern." Dr Richard Ryder, head of the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, also is a psychologist. As in Peter Shaffer's 1973 play, "Equus", in which a stable boy worships and blinds horses in a sexual frenzy, he sees patients "with a sexual interest in horses--both men and women." Turning to the Hampshire case, he said, "The possibilities range from someone who is relatively normal, acting out a revenge for some perceived slight--say, a groom was fired perhaps--to a pranoid psychotic who has delusions about horses and believes they are deeply threatening and, of course, with sexual perversion along the line." His analysis fits in with the thinking of the police. They think some of the "attacks" are everyday natural accidents magnified by hysteria. But they don't deny the existence of a "horse ripper" and feel he is among the six men they already have questioned. One case is especially strong, they say. "My view is, I'm reasonably confident we've spoken to him," said Detective Chief Inspector Des Thomas, who heads the probe. Thomas is an expert on horse abuse, reading up on everything from the "hamstringing" done by villagers to vex local squires 200 years ago to Patagonian practices. And the motive? "You have people who rape a woman and then turn against the woman for what they've done," Thomas said. "Here we may have a person who has sexual attraction to a horse who then feels disgusted with himself." John Archer, author of "By a Flash and a Scare: Incendiarism and Animal Maiming 1815-1870," says animal maiming isn't new. Historically horse attacks occurred during economic stress, he said, like the 1849-1852 agricultural depression, and were thought to contain an element of class revenge, since "horses were viewed as symbols of wealth. Of course that wouldn't explain the sexual attacks. Nowadays the psychiatric explanations move to the fore." "Maybe a lot of these horses are owned by wealthy people, young girls riding through the villages. Before you had an act of symbolic murder, transferred murder. The laborer couldn't actually murder the large landowner so he got the horse. Could this be a case of transferred rape?" -- end of article -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Joy Ikelman | "Any significantly advanced technology jai@luna.ngdc.noaa.gov | is indistinguishable from magic." (all disclaimers apply) | (Arthur C. Clarke) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~