Every Town - 50 Years. No Answers. The Cattle MUTILATION Mystery The Government Won't Explain
Episode Date: May 1, 2026The Truth Behind Cattle Mutilations — And Why The Government Won't Talk About It 🗣 Go to Zocdoc.com/EVERYTOWN to find and instantly book a top-rated doctor today. 👀 Watch This Episode On Yo...utube: https://youtu.be/1z7RhItAo8E 👁 Check out our movie AN ANGRY BOY: https://www.anangryboy.com 💀 MERCH: https://scary-mysteries-merch.dashery.com 💀 Scary Mysteries SECRET VAULT: https://www.patreon.com/c/scarymysteries/collections 🎧 Our Other Podcast Scary Mysteries: https://open.spotify.com/show/3ZooEZMoZ421WdsOVJhVkT 👁 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/andrew.fitzg 👁 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@andrewfitzgerald 👁 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/scarymysteriesofficial 👁 X: https://x.com/ScaryMysteries1 🗣 Business Inquiries, questions and comments hit us up at scarymysteries1@gmail.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to the I Can't Sleep Podcast with Benjamin Boster.
If you're tired of sleepless nights, you'll love the I Can't Sleep podcast.
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That's I Can't Sleep with Benjamin Boster.
Every town has a dark side.
Somewhere in the American West, a rancher walks out to his field one morning and finds one of his cattle dead.
Nothing too unusual about that, I mean animals die, but this one, it's different.
The flesh, around its face, it's been removed.
And not eaten by an animal, but stripped away with skill, like a scalpel sliced into it clean.
cleanly and with intention.
Its tongue, well, that's gone.
Same with the eyeballs.
But otherwise, it's been left untouched.
And on top of that, there's not a single drop of blood anywhere in sight.
And the precision of it all, it's unnatural.
And that makes the rancher feel uneasy to say the least.
And this is what a cattle mutilation looks like,
and they've been happening for over 50 years.
They found the first one in 1967, then hundreds, then thousands, spread around Colorado,
Nebraska, New Mexico, and eventually across the entire world.
And no matter where it happened, it was always the same scene.
No blood, no tracks, no explanation.
And the government, it appears, has never been particularly interested in providing one.
Now, hey guys, it's Andrew, and thanks for tuning in to every town where today.
We're digging in to one of the strangers.
and most unsettling rural mysteries this country has ever produced.
By the end, you may feel reassured,
or you may feel like something still doesn't quite add up.
So let's dig in.
This is the cattle mutilation mystery.
Nobody can explain.
Cows found mutilated, some of them cut with precision
and their bodies seemingly untouched with no bloodshed.
Okay, so let's start at the beginning of where this all started.
Reports of livestock found strangely mutilated, while they date back all the way to the late 19th century.
But the modern wave, the one that truly cemented cattle mutilations in American culture, began in the 1960s.
In the case, most people point to first happened in 67, over in Alamosa County, Colorado,
and it involved a three-year-old horse named Snippy.
The snippy belonged to rancher Harry King, and on September 9th,000,
night of that year, the king found her dead in a pasture after she'd gone missing two days earlier.
And what he found didn't make much sense at all.
Snippy's head and neck had been completely stripped of its flesh, so nothing left but bare white
bone. And meanwhile, the rest of her body was completely untouched, though the brain was gone.
And the flesh that had been removed appeared to have been taken with unusual precision, almost
surgical. And above all else, there was no blood anywhere at the scene. Like this had happened
somewhere else, and the horse was then dropped into that field. Among others, Alamosa County
Sheriff Ben Phillips checked it out, and he stated publicly that nobody could determine what had
caused the injuries. So lightning strikes, predators, UFOs, basically anything and everything,
all entered the conversation as possible culprits. As you would imagine, the story spread fast.
The Denver Post picked it up. The San Luis Valley Courier ran headlines hitting at something unnatural.
The UFO's circles were buzzing and they loved it. And some investigators in that crowd even drew
connections to Project Blue Book, the U.S. Air Force program that investigated over 12,000 UFO
reports between 1952 and 69, though no official link was ever established.
And the timing of it all made everything feel even more charged. The UFO
sightings were surging across the country around then. The Cold War had people primed for
the unexplained as government secrecy was a real undocumented thing at this point that people
were aware of. The counterculture was amping up, looking for anything other than the old way of
life to follow. So when Snippy turned up the way she did, it didn't take long for the story to
take on a life of its own. And within just a few years, ranchers across Colorado and neighboring
state started reporting eerily similar discoveries. Cows found dead in their fields with tongues
removed or eyes taken out. Organs have been excised with precision and with most of them,
again there was no blood, no tracks, no concrete explanation. Raise your hand if you've been
putting off a dental cleaning, an annual physical or some nagging thing you keep googling at 1am.
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Between 1973 and 79, reports of cattle mutilation surged across the American West
and the epicenter was Colorado.
Then it spread.
Nebraska, New Mexico, Montana,
Wyoming, Kansas, state by state, the same story kept repeating itself.
It started in Kansas in the summer of 73.
On June 14th, a 700-pound heifer was found on Ray Vizner's farm near Mundan.
The right ear had been removed and its rear quarter butchered.
The sheriff on scene ruled out predators immediately.
There was little to no tearing or ragged edges that you'd expect from an animal eating another.
The cuts here appeared smooth and precise, more consistent with a sharp blade than teeth or claws.
Just four days later, a second cow turned up on the Lowell Darcy Farm just 20 miles away.
Same exact story, too.
The right ear was gone, some precise cuts.
Then a third in August in South County.
Then a fourth in Cloud County on August 30th.
Then in October, well, three cows in Harvey County were found with their sexes.
organs removed. By December 13th, Kansas law enforcement had formally investigated 40 mutilations,
most of them concentrated along land near U.S. Highway 81. And on December 20th, as if to underline
just how widespread this had all become, state Senator Ros Doyen reported a mutilation on his own
ranch. We had one up north where we believe the animal was paralyzed and was alive when it was being
mutilated. An eye and an ear, the tongue, the rectal area was taken out.
The pattern kept going into 1974, when a Nebraska cow was found mutilated and completely
drained of blood, then another, then another. Some estimates suggest over 10,000 reported
cases nationwide across that decade alone. The exact number is disputed, but the panic was
absolutely real. And so much so that sheriff's departments, they were completely overwhelmed and
couldn't handle it all. So ranchers formed watch groups and started patrolling their land at night with
rifles in hand. And what made it all so unsettling was how consistent the descriptions were
across thousands of miles and hundreds of separate incidents. Soft tissue removed with apparent
precision, no visible blood, no predator tracks, carcasses sometimes left untouched by scavenged
for days, and occasional reports of strange lights or helicopters seen in the area beforehand.
Almost nightly, when this was going on, we could pick out a very brilliant, huge, brilliant
in the sky. We had a newsman take pictures of it with a very high-powered lens, but all we got out
of this was the movement of it and the light showing very brilliant.
In Nebraska, 1975, multiple counties declared states of emergency over these livestock murders.
One sheriff publicly speculated about cult involvement, believing that it was the only logical explanation.
That in order to conduct their rituals or whatever, a wave of people were getting surgical tools and going out onto farms and slicing the cattle up.
They then drain their blood and take it somewhere else to do something with it.
it. Radio stations around the country hosted call-in shows where ranchers from different counties
compared notes. Local papers published photos and eventually the national media started paying
attention. And with every new show and every new story, the mystery it only deepened.
And some people who didn't farm or live in those worlds thought that maybe board ranchers
were doing it to their own animals just to see themselves in the paper.
But for them, well, this wasn't any fun or form of entertainment.
It was financially devastating.
A single cow would represent thousands of dollars.
Losing multiple animals meant real hardship.
Plus, this was so widespread.
I mean, maybe one ranch with something weird happening.
That would make sense, but there were hundreds.
The fear of it all eventually turned into anger.
If predators were responsible, well, why were there never any trouble?
tracks. If it was humans, why no tire marks? If it was disease, why were different yet specific
organs affected every single time? And why did so many carcasses seem untouched by scavengers
when every other dead animal on the same land got picked clean within days? Well, nobody had any
answers, and that absence of answers was its own kind of terror. On March 24, 1978, a dead bull was
found in New Mexico displaying all the classic signs. Rectum and sex organs removed with what
appeared to be a sharp, precise instrument. But it was what was found inside the animal that made
this case different from anything investigators had seen before. The liver and the heart,
they were white, completely white, and both organs had deteriorated to the texture and consistency
of peanut butter. They'd become slop. So without it,
a doubt, whatever had happened to this animal, it hadn't died the way animals normally die.
The samples from the heart along with bone and muscle tissue were then sent to the Los Alamos
scientific laboratory for analysis. But this place matters because for those unfamiliar,
Los Alamos is not your average research facility. This is one of the most classified and secured
scientific institutions in the United States. The same lab that played a central
role in the Manhattan Project. The fact that cattle mutilation samples were ending up there at all
raised eyebrows for a few different reasons. And what the lab found was strange. Naturally occurring
claustridium bacteria was detected in the heart, but no conclusions could be drawn from it.
More puzzling was what the liver analysis revealed. The tissue was completely devoid of copper
while containing four times the normal levels of zinc, potassium, and phosphorus.
The scientists couldn't explain it, and so no cause of death was ever determined.
But do you really take such a high security institution like this at their word,
or where they may be covering up something?
And why were they the ones who were requested to analyze the remains in the first place
and didn't allow anyone else to?
Those are all questions worth asking.
And then there were the helicopters.
Across hundreds of separate accounts, one detail kept appearing that had nothing to do with aliens or cults.
Ranchers reported low-flying unmarked aircrafts hovering over their fields at night,
often in the same areas where mutilated cattle were found the following morning.
In dark helicopters, the kinds with no markings on them.
In the atmosphere of the Cold War, this was gasoline on a fire.
Because here's the thing.
Black helicopters weren't just a conspiracy theory.
The U.S. military genuinely conducted classified training exercises all across the western United States.
And surveillance operations existed, and classified programs existed.
Ranchers already feeling ignored by authorities had every reason to wonder
whether something official and secret was happening on their land without their knowledge.
And the more that everyone thought about it, well, the more that actually made sense.
that maybe their own government was quietly monitoring livestock and testing out some sort of biological warfare experiments.
After all, it wouldn't be the first time the government tested on unwilling participants.
Just look into MK Ultra, where they dose people with LSD or the Tuskegee experiments.
And how about Operation C spray, where in 1950, the U.S. Navy sprayed bacteria over San Francisco Bay to test how
biological agents might spread over a city.
The residents there had no idea, and at least one death was attributed to it.
I'm sure there's many more we don't know about, and perhaps the cattle mutilations is one of
them. But if the government theory doesn't suit your fancy, well, there's another one that people
grabbed onto tightly, and they believe this was all being caused by aliens. By the mid-1970s, UFO culture
it wasn't fringe anymore, it was mainstream.
Books about alien abductions were bestsellers.
And sightings were being reported on local news stations almost nightly.
The idea that extraterrestrials were actively studying humans and animals
and worked its way into everyday conversations across America,
and cattle mutilations fit that narrative almost perfectly.
The missing organs could be biological samples.
The absence of blood suggested some kind of advanced
extraction technology that human medicine simply didn't have yet. The precision of the cuts
implied intelligence, not instinct, not hunger, but deliberate and calculated purpose. UFO researchers
were arguing that extraterrestrials were now systematically studying Earth's food chain,
harvesting cattle DNA and mapping biology. And in reality, it was a theory that answered
every question the official explanations couldn't.
And it wasn't just an American phenomenon at this point.
Similar mutilation reports started surfacing in Argentina, Brazil, the United Kingdom, and Australia.
Each one described in almost identical terms by people who had never heard of each other
and had no reason to be telling the same story.
The UFO theory had momentum.
But not everyone was looking to the skies for answers.
Some investigators were looking a lot closer to home.
because around the same time a darker theory had started circulating in law enforcement circles,
one that didn't involve aliens or government programs, one that pointed into something far more
human, cults.
Now, I touched upon it earlier, missing reproductive organs, blood drained completely,
and cuts that looked deliberate and ceremonial.
But to a lot of people, including some in law enforcement, well, that looked ritualistic.
But there was a fundamental problem with that theory that nobody could get around.
Despite thousands of reported mutilations spread across more than a decade in multiple countries,
authorities never uncovered a single coordinated cult network responsible for widespread livestock killing.
There was not one confirmed ritual organization ever tied to the phenomenon.
In fact, not a single person was ever caught doing this, which just seemed impossible.
Now, that didn't kill the theory entirely, but just like the others, it didn't prove it either.
By 1979, the political pressure had become too great to ignore, and federal authorities were forced to act.
The FBI then launched a formal investigation officially titled Operation Animal Mutilation, led by Agent Kenneth Rommel.
Investigators then gathered reports and consulted veterinarians and pathologists.
as well as agricultural experts.
And they reviewed physical evidence
and then spent the better part of a year
trying to get to the bottom
of what had been terrifying ranchers
across the American West for nearly a decade.
The conclusion was far less dramatic
than anyone had hoped for.
When the FBI released its findings in 1980,
the reports were blunt.
No evidence of organized cult activity,
no proof of extraterrestrial involvement,
no confirmation of any government,
biological harvesting program or experimental weapons. Instead, investigators pointed to something
far more mundane, predation, scavenging, decomposition, and environmental factors. The report noted that
most carcasses weren't discovered until hours or even days after death, by which point natural processes
had significantly altered the bodies in ways that could easily be misread as something more sinister.
And for the ranchers who have been losing animals for years and getting no answers,
well, that explanation felt dismissive at best and insulting at worst,
like they were being told they didn't know what they were looking at on their own land.
But the thing about it is, when you really dig in,
a science actually deserves a closer look.
When a large animal dies in an open field, the transformation begins immediately.
Within minutes of death, circulation stops completely.
and blood begins settling into the lowest parts of the body through a process called liver mortis,
pooling that often is invisible from the outside at all.
Within hours, bacteria already living inside the digestive tract, starts breaking down tissue from the inside out.
Gases accumulate, the body bloats.
And as that internal pressure builds, the skin stretches and tightens until it splits.
often along perfectly straight lines where the tension is highest.
And to anyone who doesn't know what they're looking at,
well, those splits can look remarkably like surgical incisions.
And then there's the soft tissue removal,
not so many witnesses described as precise and deliberate.
Eyes, lips, tongue, the anal region.
These are the areas scavengers target first
because they require the least amount of effort to access.
Birds can remove eyes cleanly and completely.
The small mammals can extract a tongue through the mouth without leaving any obvious tearing around it.
Insects begin colonizing moist tissue almost immediately after death.
As the surrounding skin dries out, it retracts and curls inward, creating edges that look unnaturally smooth and clean.
The apparent lack of blood has an equally straightforward explanation.
And after death, blood is no way.
longer under pressure. It coagulates, settles, and in dry climates, soaks into the soil quickly.
And what looks like complete draining of an animal's blood is often simply the body doing exactly
what bodies do after death. Multiple veterinary studies conducted throughout the 1970s and
80s supported all of these conclusions. But here's the thing about human perception. If you walk up to an animal
expecting to see chaos and instead find what looks like precision and intention,
but your brain will fill in the gaps every single time.
The 1970s were a perfect storm for something like this story to take hold,
and television was expanding rapidly.
Sensational headlines drove newspaper circulation,
and talk radio thrived on mystery and speculation.
Each new mutilation report reinforced the narrative that was already forming.
Once that narrative was established, it became almost impossible to see anything outside of it,
even reality.
For the general public, once a pattern gets established, future events get interpreted through that pattern.
It's like an unavoidable filter.
So if one rancher describes a cut as surgical, the next rancher walks up to his dead animal
already looking for surgical cuts.
If one sheriff mentions helicopters, others suddenly start noticing aircraft they've previously
paid no attention to.
That doesn't mean the ranchers were fabricating anything.
It means human beings are pattern-seeking creatures,
especially when confronted with unexplained loss.
Livestock isn't abstract property.
It represents income, food, and stability.
Finding a dead animal under strange circumstances
triggers real fear, and fear amplifies ambiguity.
And when ambiguity is sitting right in front of you
with no explanation attached, extraordinary theories rush in to fill that space.
But here's where it all gets genuinely interesting.
Because despite the strong scientific explanations that account for the majority of cases,
while small number remains stubbornly difficult to categorize.
There are reports of animals found very shortly after death,
before significant scavenger activity should have been possible,
yet still displaying the same tissue removal.
There are also cases where multiple animals were found in close proximity,
exhibiting identical patterns.
There are anecdotal accounts of unusual chemical traces or elevated radiation levels near certain carcasses as well.
The reality is that in rural investigations across that era,
documentation standards varied enormously.
Some early reports lacked proper necropsies, which are animal autopsies.
others were handled by local authorities with no forensic training whatsoever.
Details got exaggerated, memories shifted over time, so all of that is real and worth acknowledging.
But even the most committed skeptics will quickly admit that in a data set spanning decades and multiple continents,
not every single case has a clean and tidy explanation.
That doesn't mean aliens, doesn't mean cults or government programs, but it does leave a narrowing
space where genuine uncertainty still lives and probably always will.
You remember when I mentioned some people believing that the farmers were possibly doing it to their
own animals? Well, turns out that actually did happen in several documented instances,
mutilations, and they were staged. Insurance fraud schemes are a tale as old as time,
and some of these farmers deliberately killed their own livestock and then altered the carcasses
to simulate mysterious circumstances.
And pranks have most certainly occurred as well.
And in isolated cases,
individuals seeking attention or hoping to reinforce UFO narratives
tampered with dead animals.
But these cases were sporadic,
and they do not account for the majority of reports.
Still, though, they complicate the big picture.
By the early 80s, the reports,
they began to decline across the board.
The panic simply lost.
momentum the way these things tend to do, gradually, quietly, and without resolution. But it never
went away. In 2002, ranchers in Argentina's La Pampa Province began reporting dozens of mutilated
cattle displaying the same patterns described in the United States decades earlier. Missing
jaws, missing eyes, circular cuts around reproductive organs. Local media quickly connected the
cases to UFO activity after residents reported strange lights in the sky.
Veterinary investigators eventually concluded that most of the damage was consistent with natural
scavenger activity and decomposition. But for the ranchers who found those animals first,
that explanation felt a lot less obvious standing in the field looking at what was in front of them.
In 2008, similar reports surfaced in New Mexico and Colorado, the same regions where the original
panic began. In 2019, a ranch in Sylvie's Valley, Oregon reported five young bulls dead over
several months, each found in remote pasture land with soft tissue removed in almost no visible blood.
The owner told local news that scavengers had avoided the bodies for days, the same detail
that ranchers have been reporting since the 1970s. State investigators, though, they pointed to natural causes.
The same story, different decades.
That's really the uncomfortable reality
this whole phenomenon leaves you with.
After years of investigations,
federal inquiries, and thousands of reported stories,
most cases are eventually explained by natural processes.
Some are almost certainly misinterpretations,
and a few may have involved human interference of some kind.
But a small number remained genuinely unsolved.
The evidence is just incomplete and the details don't line up the way they should.
And no explanation, natural, governmental, or otherwise fully accounts for all of them.
George, maybe the cover-up was in our best interest, maybe not.
Maybe the government underestimated the intelligency of American people and decided we just couldn't handle it.
But let me tell you this.
The truth is still the truth.
And nothing can change that.
Not the military, not the government, and not me.
And maybe that's enough to keep the mystery alive, or maybe that was always the intention.
Because if there's one thing the powers to be of proven they're good at, whoever they are,
it's making sure that whenever inconvenient questions start getting asked,
the conversation gets complicated enough that nobody knows what to believe anymore.
And after 50 years, nobody still does.
So that's going to do it for this week's episode of Everytown.
I appreciate you tuning in.
If you want more insane true crime stories, well, we got a ton.
So subscribe and go check some others out.
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So if you have any stories you want us to cover, send us an email, which you can find down in the description.
Remember to come on back next week for another episode of every town filled with scary, strange and mysterious stories.
Because you never know.
Maybe your town will be next.
