Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Are YOU the animal killer in Superior Twp (MI)?

If so your life will be FORFEIT if I'm out there while YOU are.

I WILL be HUNTING you until you are caught. I will take to the very woods you're working in. I fear neither you nor death. You are in MY backyard now and you WILL feel my vengeance should I find you. I have kevlar, do you? I'm a trained survivalist, are you? I can use night vision eqipment, can you?

I know what comes next. So do police but they won't come out and say it




Sheriff intensifies probe of dead dogs
2 more animals found; detective assigned to case
Monday, March 27, 2006
BY TRACY DAVIS
News Staff Reporter
The carcasses of two more dogs, including a puppy whose legs and neck were bound with twine, were found Sunday in Superior Township, prompting the Washtenaw County Sheriff's Department to assign a detective to the case.

Seven dogs have been found dead in the past week and a half in the same vicinity. The two dogs found Sunday - a pit bull puppy and a cocker spaniel that was shot in the back of the head - were not decapitated as earlier ones had been.

It is not clear how the puppy died, but it had twine wrapped around its neck and feet, Tanya Hilgendorf, executive director of the Human Society of Huron Valley, said this morning. She said the two dogs had been dead for some time.

The dogs were found a few feet away from one another near LeForge and Geddes roads, near where another Rottweiler was found Saturday.

The Humane Society has had an animal cruelty investigator working the case full time, and the Sheriff's Department was expected to assign an investigator today at the request of Superior Township Supervisor William McFarlane.

"We're going to provide them with some additional investigative expertise,'' said Sheriff's Cmdr. Dave Egeler.

"What concerns most of us is they are going after people's dogs. What's next? Humans?'' asked Terry Morgan, who lives near the area where the dead animals have been found.

McFarlane said he and many other area residents are concerned about the case.

"It appears some of it is certainly related to trapping,'' he said. "But I'm not sure it's all related to trapping. ... Hopefully, (an additional investigator) will bring an end to it and bring this person to justice.''

Dozens of animals have been found dead in the area since January. Humane Society officials were first called when skinned coyote carcasses were discovered along the road and in trash bins in Superior Township. Three similar reports followed, and in mid-March, the decapitated body of a Rottweiler was found, its feet bound.

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