Battle Mountain, Nevada
Injured Sasquatch with severe burns
The Battle Mountain Complex Fire started on August 6, 1999 –
Range fires started by lighting strikes in Nevada during dry weather. The area was a mining district and had a lot of mining tunnels and shafts. Dry conditions and a large number of junipers and other shrubs in the mountain caused the fire to quickly explode into a group of brush fires that would be called the Battle Mountain Complex Fire.
The BFRO received a report even before the fires got bigger on August 7, 1999:
Battle Mountain, Nevada
The anonymous witness reports seeing a large animal walking on all fours that did not move like a bear, but rather like an ape. The fire fighters captured the animal injured by fire and called a veterinarian and a physician. Various US Departments were on scene including Fish and Wildlife, Interior and Land Management and do not talk about what they saw.
The creature measured about 7.5 feet tall, had long arms with human-like hands and feet; his face was a cross between human and ape. The creature was male, and had hair covering his entire body except the chest area, where the chest and hands had a sparse amount of hair.
The being attempted to communicate with rescuers once he realized that they were trying to care for him. The patient had 2nd and 3rd degree burns on 45 percent of his body. Doctors and vets were on scene to give care. The patient was taken to an undisclosed location, locally.
There were 20-25 witnesses around the scene. This report was given by an anonymous government worker, who believes a ‘cover up’ was in the making.
By Monday August 9, the Battle Mountain Complex Fire covered 180,000 acres and consisted of 13 different fires.
Ten days later the witness called the BFRO investigator on August 19, 1999, and spoke to Doug.
The
witness went by the pseudonym ‘Marty’ and is a full-time worker for a US
federal agency who was present at the scene. He is a trained EMT and was helping with the
fire fighting efforts. The phone conversation
lasted for about 70 minutes.
Marty states that the patient was seen walking on the vicinity of 20 firefighters and when he became surrounded, ‘he just gave up’, knowing he was captured. The patient sat down on his buttocks. The firefighters upon examining him saw severe burns on his hands, feet, legs and trunk. Medical emergency services arrived soon after on scene, there were a MD, a vet and paramedics.
Due to the human appearance of the patient, the vet allowed the physician to do most of the work. The patient was administered morphine and Demerol. The patient was placed on a spine board which was too small, then on a regular ambulance stretcher. The sides of the stretcher were left down and the feet were hanging off the end.
The patient was calm and an IV was started to administer fluids (Ringer’s lactate or DW5). The patient communicated with moans, groans and responded to touch: pats or strokes seemed to calm him. There were no firearms, and the patient did not need any restraints. The patient was particularly responsive to a female Native American person on scene who was ministering him.
The patient was loaded on board a utility truck, not an ambulance, and was transported off to an undisclosed location. The utility truck was used to hide the Sasquatch from public view and news reporters. The total time between initial contact with the patient and transportation was about three hours.
Other details about the encounter: no urination, vomit or defecation were noted at the scene. The patient did not eat anything during that time. Blood and serum dripped from the patient’s sores, as well as when the cut down was performed to insert the IV line. Some hairs were shaved to insert the needle.
The patient emanated a strong natural odour, similar to an equine odor. The patient was strong jawed with a heavy boned forehead. His head was about twice the size of a human head, the hand had five digits with a movable thumb. Marty insisted that his identity is not to be revealed.
The BFRO investigator asked the witness if someone could return to the site later on, to search for any blood and hair samples. Marty stated that the entire site was bulldozed and there was nothing left of the scene.
Source: The Locals, Thom Powell, pp.219-225
Documented by Eastern Canada Sasquatch Organization
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