Friday, January 17, 2014

CRYPTOLINK: New laws needed to save Bigfoot's life?

A word about cryptolinks: we are not responsible for the content of cryptolinks, which are merely links to outside articles that we think are interesting (sometimes for the wrong reasons), usually posted up without any comment whatsoever from me. 


Two men who claim to have shot and killed Bigfoot. Rick Dyer (bottom right) on camera supposedly shooting the one seen at left in San Antonio in September 2012. Justin Smeja, who shot two in California in 2010, telling his story on Spike TV´s "$10 Million Bigfoot Bounty,"
Two men who claim to have shot and killed Bigfoot. Rick Dyer (bottom right) on camera supposedly shooting the one seen at left in San Antonio in September 2012. Justin Smeja, who shot two in California in 2010, telling his story on Spike TV's "$10 Million Bigfoot Bounty,"



Should killing Bigfoot be a crime?

Although it is in a couple of Washington counties, that's not the case in Texas, where an 8-foot shaggy beast was supposedly bagged in some San Antonio woods by Sasquatch hunter Rick Dyer.

“You don’t need a hunting license to kill something that doesn’t exist,” said Mike Cox, a spokesman for the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department.

San Antonio police declined to comment.


Dyer, though, has commented plenty, after a recent release of photos snared attention across the media. He said he nailed Walmart pork ribs to a tree to lure a couple of Sasquatch, one of which he shot and killed in September 2012. He promises that scientific proof, including DNA results and autopsy video, will finally be unveiled on Feb. 9, at a news conference with a Washington university.


Then the plan is to take the taxidermied body on a national tour.


I am not giving you a piece of bear meat,” he says on a YouTube video posted on his Facebook page. ",,, I’m giving you a real, dead Sasquatch. ... I have the body, and I will show you.”
Read on...

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