
October 3, 2013: Fukushima, Bigfoot, Animal Mutilations, and Government Knowledge of ETs - Linda Moulton Howe
The conversation shifts to Bigfoot when Linda replays a 1978 audio recording of alleged Sasquatch howls captured by a woman in Snohomish, Washington, who watched two eight-foot-tall creatures at her gravel pit. Linda connects this to a witness who in 1977 saw a silver disc descend over the same forest, discharging blue-suited beings followed by a Sasquatch. A sheriff deputy later found massive five-toed prints and a bloodless mutilated deer at the site.
Linda then presents her most provocative material on cattle mutilations and resurrection technology described by abductees. She shares testimony from a retired Defense Intelligence Agency officer who claimed his 23-year career involved monitoring territorial conflicts between three competing extraterrestrial groups on Earth, entities that have been genetically harvesting this planet for over 270 million years.
Key Moments
Jimmy Chilcutt's dermal-ridge Bigfoot evidence: Howe recounts how police fingerprint expert Jimmy Chilcutt examined a 14-inch 1967 Northern California cast and identified dermal ridges that ran in patterns unlike any human or zoo primate, concluding it could not be faked.
Bigfoot tied to UFO/EBE encounters: Howe links Sasquatch sightings to the Steve Bismarck case in Snohomish, where Bigfoot was reported following blue-suited extraterrestrial biological entities amid disks, lights, animal mutilations, and ground markings.
Bell holds map to two buried Bigfoot bodies: Bell tells Howe - apparently for the first time - that a former guest known as 'Bugs' shot two Bigfoot, buried them out of fear of prosecution, and Bell still possesses the map to where the bodies are.
Melba Ketchum's Sasquatch DNA: chain-of-custody problem: Howe explains why Melba Ketchum's claim of Sasquatch as Homo-sapien-plus-lemur hybrid was widely criticized: formal labs withdrew when she disclosed the subject, and the paper-chain protections against contamination cannot be verified.
Sheriff Tex Graves: 236 mutilation sites in one Colorado county: Howe describes meeting retired Logan County Sheriff Tex Graves in 1979, who had personally investigated 236 cattle mutilation sites and laid out 266 color Polaroids on the floor for her - context for thousands of mutilations across Colorado in a five-to-ten-year window.
