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Archive for June, 2008
Mystery deepens as fifth human foot washes up. Seems there has been an abundance of severed feet, all unclaimed. A fifth human foot in a year has washed ashore off the coast of British Columbia, and this time it’s a left one. Police said two people out for a walk spotted the left foot floating in water off Westham Island on Monday morning. Delta Police Constable Sharlene Brooks said officials are working with the B.C. Coroner’s office to see if this foot is linked to any other partial remains recovered in the province. Westham Island is at the mouth of the Fraser River, about 15 miles south of Vancouver. “A passerby noticed a shoe floating in the water, pulled it in and notified police,” Brooks said. “We’re treating it as a criminal investigation.” While the similarities to the other found feet is strong, she said there’s no indication this foot is related to the other cases. “We’re certainly not discounting the possibility that this may be linked to the other recovered feet, but it’s just too premature and very speculative for us to even entertain that right now,” she said. The last foot was found May 22 on Kirkland Island in the Fraser River, about one mile away from Monday’s discovery. The first in the series was found nearly a year ago on Jedidiah Island in the Strait of Georgia. Within days, another right foot was found inside a man’s Reebok sneaker on nearby Gabriola Island. The third was found in the same area, on the east side of Valdez Island in early February. The origin on any of the remains is still unknown. They also said something along the lines that they are not CSI and it may take some time to find the owners. you can read the rest hereĀ
From the Sydney Morning Herald we get this bizarre incident. Well, at least it seems like a bizarre attack to me, I guess its not that bizarre in Cambodia where boys are taught to never piss off the little fish. This one puffer looks livid
A Cambodian teenager was recovering in hospital after a puffer fish attacked him in the groin, local media reported on Tuesday. The Khmer-language Koh Santepheap daily ran a picture of the unnamed 13-year-old in a hospital bed with heavy strapping around his testicles, saying he was lucky to be alive. The paper quoted the boy’s father, Sok Ly, as saying the fish had become enraged when it was accidentally trapped in the boy’s net and, when it was freed, had attacked the boy’s scrotum. Cambodian legend has it that the bite of the fish is even more dangerous than its poisonous spines, especially for boys, and Cambodian boys are traditionally advised not to swim in waters where the fish is common. The victim, from Prek Pneuv commune outside Phnom Penh, was expected to recover from yesterday’s attack, the paper said, but the extent of the damage had yet to be determined. |
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